Mitch Owens was a city councillor and interim mayor of
Gloucester, Ontario,
Canada. Born in
Hazelridge, Manitoba he joined the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police in 1944. That same year he served on the
St. Roch, during a part of its historic voyage through the
Northwest Passage. After time working in the Arctic and in
London he moved to the
Ottawa region in 1953, and settled in the rural area south of the city. He went into business as the owner of a
trailer park.
He was elected to council in 1966, and served four years as deputy reeve. In 1980 he ran for a seat on the
Regional Municipality of Ottawa-Carleton, but lost by six votes. He was appointed mayor in July 1984 after mayor
Fred Barrett died in office. He was challenged in the 1985 elections by aldermen
Harry Allen and
Royal Galipeau, with Allen emerging victorious by just over a thousand votes. In 1988 he returned to council, defeating Harold Keenan.
Gloucester city council voted in 1990 to rename Regional Road 8, where Owens lived, to
Mitch Owens Road, after residents along the lengthy street signed a petition to have it renamed. Owens retired from politics prior to the 1991 elections at age 70.
References
- Deveney, Abby. "Electoral Changes Mark New Political Era For City; New Residents Key in 3-Way Mayoral Fight." The Ottawa Citizen. Nov 5, 1985. pg. E.24
- Foley, Dennis. "Both in and Out of Politics Mitch Owens Fought his Share of Battles." The Ottawa Citizen. Sep 13, 1992. pg. A.8
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