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UPDATED: Mussatto retakes City of North Vancouver

City of North Vancouver Mayor Darrell Mussatto has won a fourth term and picked up enough council allies to give his slate a majority vote for the next four years. Mussatto won with 5,488 votes, 52.
CNV hall

City of North Vancouver Mayor Darrell Mussatto has won a fourth term and picked up enough council allies to give his slate a majority vote for the next four years.

Mussatto won with 5,488 votes, 52.5 per cent overall, beating challenger Kerry Morris who finished with 4,598 votes (44 per cent). Amalgamate North Van candidate George Pringle finished with 375 votes (3.6 per cent).

New to council is Holly Back, who ran with the support of Mussatto. The five incumbents who ran for re-election — Craig Keating, Linda Buchanan, Don Bell, Rod Clark and Pam Bookham — all soundly won their seats.

Mussatto led from the time the first poll closed but the atmosphere in city council chambers, where he and supporters gathered on election night, remained tense all evening.

The festive atmosphere in Morris’ Lower Lonsdale campaign headquarters turned downcast around 8:30 p.m. as word spread among his wall-to-wall supporters that their dissenting voice against development had come up short.

Despite the defeat, Morris urged his supporters to continue to fight against Mussatto’s agenda and request the mayor recuse himself in certain situations. “If not, the development frenzy will continue and there will be very little you can do about it,” Morris said.

While some Morris supporters blamed the loss on the long reach of the incumbent’s campaign, Morris accused Mussatto of running a “dirty tricks campaign.”

“Even if we didn’t win the day, in an unfair game, I think the community said very loudly what it didn’t want,” Morris said.

Pringle suggested his showing was largely due to strategic voting. “I think things polarized heavily to one or the other (Mussatto/Morris), knowing it was going to be a close race,” he said.

Asked what the result said about the hopes for amalgamation with the District of North Vancouver, Pringle responded, “Nothing.”

“Obviously it wasn’t a factor for the voters because it didn’t sway any votes one way or the other.”

Pringle vowed he’d return to council every Monday night “with a brand new blog and new icons and everything.”

Glad to have the election behind her, Back said she is excited to begin working with all council members, regardless of where they stood during the election.

“Even though, during the election, it looked like there were slates or teams, I’ve known most of those people for years and years so I look forward to working with all of them,” she said. “It will be nice to have four years of getting some work done and having a little fun with it too.”

Back said she is most looking forward to dealing with the eventual rebuild of the Harry Jerome Recreation Centre and hopes to see the project designed and a payment plan in place so shovels can be in the ground before her four-year term is up.

Mussatto declined to be interviewed by the North Shore News following his win.

Eligable voter turnout for the city hit 28 per cent, a  jump from 2011’s 21.6 per cent.

 

Here are unofficial City of North Vancouver results:

 

Craig Keating – 4,485

Linda Buchanan – 4,646

Don Bell – 4,491

Pam Bookham – 4,392

Rod Clark – 4,354

Holly Back – 3,588

 

Non-elected candidates:

 

Kathy McGrenera – 3,515

Bill Bell – 3,346

Amanda Nichol – 3,316

Matt Clark – 3,113

Tony Valente – 3,102

Dorothy Bell – 2,900

Iani Makris – 2,095

Joe Heilman – 2,087

Via Fearnley – 1,805

John Harvey – 788

Dave Janis – 326

Ron Sostad – 231

 

Elected to represent the city at the North Vancouver school board are:

 

Susan Skinner – 4,576

Megan Higgins – 4,487

Christie Sacré – 3,016

 

Non-elected school board candidates:

 

Mary Tasi – 2,618

Antje Wilson – 2,302

Tanya Lahulek – 2,286

Bill Vassilis Papandreou – 1,535