Communauté urbaine de Québec explained

Québec Urban Community
Settlement Type:Dissolved Region
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name:Canada
Subdivision Name1:Quebec
Established Title:Established
Established Date:1970
Established Title2:Dissolved
Established Date2:2001 into the megacity
Timezone:EST
Utc Offset:−04:00
Image Blank Emblem:File:Logo of the Quebec Urban Community.svg
Blank Emblem Type:Logo

The Communauté urbaine de Québec (also known as the Québec Urban Community) was a regional municipal body that existed in the area around Quebec City from 1970 to 2001.

Formation

Rationale for reorganization

In the late 1960s, the Government of Quebec saw increasing problems arising in the governance of the urban areas of Quebec City, Montreal and Hull because of the system of municipal organization in effect at that time:

The current remedies involving intermunicipal agreements, amalgamation and annexation were seen as being inadequate, as they were discretionary and piecemeal in nature. The Province opted to establish "urban communities" in all three areas, which would possess mandatory and optional powers appropriate to each. A particular concern in the Quebec area was the large presence of government agencies whose exemption from property taxes created a significant revenue shortfall to the municipalities, together with the need to strengthen intermunicipal cooperation to deal with the situation. This was confirmed in the debate on the implementing bill, where then Minister of Municipal Affairs Robert Lussier stated that the reform was "aimed at economies of scale through administrative centralization, and at reducing futile rivalries between municipalities." The move was supported by all MLAs in the Quebec area, including former Premier Jean Lesage and former Créditiste member Gaston Tremblay.

This was not the first consolidation effort the Province had undertaken at the local level, as local school boards had already gone through something similar in the early 1960s. Officials at the local level had already begun discussions as early as 1965 on possible ways to establish joint activities, but nothing concrete had emerged by the time the Province unveiled its draft bill in June 1969. Although Quebec City itself was favourable to the provincial proposal, there was significant opposition from the other municipalities in the area, but such tension tended to fade away over the five years following the CUQ's creation.

Creation

Effective January 1, 1970, the Communauté urbaine de Québec (English: Québec Urban Community) ("CUQ") was established,[1] which governed the area surrounding Quebec City on the north shore of the St. Lawrence River. Together with the CUQ, the Commission de transport de la Communauté urbaine de Québec (English: Québec Urban Community Transit Commission) ("CTCUQ") and the Bureau d'assainissement des eaux du Québec Métropolitain (English: Greater Québec Water Purification Board) ("BAEQM") were also established. Each of the three covered different groups of municipalities:

Evolution

Evolution of Québec area municipalities served by new agencies (1970-2001)
Historical countyMunicipalities in 1970 At formation (1970) Municipalities in 2001
CUQ CTCUQ[2] BAEQM[3]
Beauport
Courville
Giffard
Montmorency
Sainte-Thérèse-de-Lisieux
Villeneuve
Cap-Rouge
Charlesbourg
Charlesbourg-Est
Notre-Dame-des-Laurentides
Orsainville
Lac-Beauport
L'Ancienne-Lorette
Lac-Saint-Charles
Loretteville
Charlesbourg-Ouest Quebec
Duberger
Neufchâtel
Saint-Émile
Parish of L'Ancienne-Lorette Sainte-Foy
Sillery
Val-Bélair
Val-St-Michel
Vanier
Saint-Augustin-de-Desmaures
Montmorency No 1 County Boischatel

In the years following the establishing of the CUQ, various changes occurred among the constituent municipalities:

When the CUQ was created, the remaining territory of Quebec County was not affected, which included unorganized territory and the municipalities of Lac-Delage, Lac-Édouard, Saint-Dunstan-du-Lac-Beauport, Saint-Gabriel-de-Valcartier and Stoneham-et-Tewkesbury. In 1981, they were divided between the new regional county municipalities of Le Haut-Saint-Maurice and La Jacques-Cartier.

Governance

Council

The CUQ was governed by its council, which consisted of the mayor of each constituent municipality.[11] It had a chairman and a vice-chairman, and, where a representative from Quebec City held one of the positions, the other had to be from one of the other municipalities.[12]

Executive committee

It also had an executive committee, which had similar functions to a board of control found in Ontario.[13] Its members were independently appointed for four-year terms by the constituent municipalities by sector:

CUQ Executive Committee membership by sector
Sector MembersMunicipalities[14]
1 3
2 1
3 1
4 1
5 1
  • Beauport
  • Courville
  • Giffard
  • Montmorency
  • Sainte-Thérèse-de-Lisieux
  • Villeneuve

Effective January 1, 1994, the executive committee was abolished,[15] and the chairman, 1st vice-chairman and 2nd vice-chairman of the council were declared to be the Mayor of Quebec, a representative from Beauport, Charlesbourg or Sainte-Foy, and a representative from the remaining municipalities (in any order).[16]

2002 municipal reorganization

See also: 2000–06 municipal reorganization in Quebec. Effective January 1, 2002, the CUQ, together with its constituent municipalities, were amalgamated to form the Ville de Québec,[17] which subsequently became part of the new Communauté métropolitaine de Québec.[18]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Québec Urban Community Act. S.Q.. 1969. 83. https://www.bibliotheque.assnat.qc.ca/DepotNumerique_v2/AffichageFichier.aspx?idf=103424.
  2. S.Q. 1969, c. 83, Sch. B
  3. S.Q. 1969, c. 83, Sch. D
  4. An Act respecting the City of Québec and the Town of Duberger. S.Q.. 1970. 69. https://www.bibliotheque.assnat.qc.ca/DepotNumerique_v2/AffichageFichier.aspx?idf=103293.
  5. . December 26, 1970. Letters Patent. Gazette Officielle du Québec. 102. 52. 75567560.
  6. An Act to amend the Charter of the City of Québec and respecting the amalgamation of the City of Québec and of the Town of Neufchâtel. S.Q.. 1970. 68. https://www.bibliotheque.assnat.qc.ca/DepotNumerique_v2/AffichageFichier.aspx?idf=103292.
  7. . April 21, 1973. City of Québec. Gazette Officielle du Québec. 105. 16. 24432444.
  8. . December 29, 1973. Letters Patent. Gazette Officielle du Québec. 105. 52. 76757678.
  9. An Act to regroup certain municipalities in the region of Québec. S.Q.. 1975. 91. https://www.bibliotheque.assnat.qc.ca/DepotNumerique_v2/AffichageFichier.aspx?idf=102618.
  10. . May 28, 1983. Ville de Cap-Rouge. Gazette Officielle du Québec. 115. 21. 2477.
  11. S.Q. 1969, c. 83, s. 39
  12. S.Q. 1969, c. 83, s. 47
  13. S.Q. 1969, c. 83, ss. 23-33
  14. S.Q. 1969, c. 83, Sch. A
  15. L.Q. 1993, c. 67, s. 4
  16. L.Q. 1993, c. 67, s. 5
  17. An Act to reform the municipal territorial organization of the metropolitan regions of Montréal, Québec and the Outaouais. L.Q.. 2000. 56. II. http://www2.publicationsduquebec.gouv.qc.ca/dynamicSearch/telecharge.php?type=5&file=2000C56A.PDF., s. 5
  18. L.Q. 2000, c. 56, Sch. VI and VI-A