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David Collenette
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== Politics == Collenette was one of only three cabinet members to endorse [[Jean Chrétien]] in the [[1984 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election]], along with [[Charles Caccia]] and [[Roméo LeBlanc]].<ref>{{Cite book|title=Divided loyalties : the Liberal Party of Canada, 1984-2008|last=Jeffrey, Brooke.|date=2010|publisher=University of Toronto Press|isbn=978-1-4426-6018-2|location=Toronto|pages=13|oclc=762397337}}</ref> He also supported Chrétien in the 1990 leadership campaign.{{fact|date=January 2023}} ===Minister of National Defence=== As Minister of Defence, Collenette oversaw the reorganization, restructuring and re-engineering of the department as part of the federal government's deficit cutting. During this time the Canadian Forces were involved in challenging assignments in the Balkans, Haiti and Somalia.{{fact|date=January 2023}} During his tenure, Collenette was at the centre of the controversy over the establishment of a public inquiry into the [[Somalia Affair]] investigating war crimes committed by Canadian Soldiers during deployment in 1992 by the Mulroney Progressive Conservatives. The Chrétien government later decided to curtail the inquiry.{{fact|date=January 2023}} In October 1996, Collenette resigned from cabinet citing a letter that he had written on behalf of a constituent. An access to information request revealed Collenette broke ethical guidelines by writing the letter to the [[Immigration and Refugee Board]].<ref name="desb">Desbarats, Peter. "Somalia cover-up: A commissioner's journal", 1997.</ref> Collenette cited this violation as his official reason for resigning from cabinet but his resignation also served to remove him from the ongoing Somalia Affair controversy.<ref name="desb" /><ref>Collenette Resigns Defence Post. Canadian Encyclopedia. Last Accessed 4 March 2015. [http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/collenette-resigns-defence-post/]</ref> ===Minister of Transport=== After a few months on the back benches, he was re-admitted to Cabinet in July 1997 and was appointed [[Minister of Transport (Canada)|Minister of Transport]]. In this portfolio his most important decisions were those that led to the merging of [[Canadian Airlines]] and [[Air Canada]], the divestment of [[CN Rail]] operations in Northern Manitoba to the favour of [[OmniTRAX|Omnitrax]], and the pseudo-commercialisation of Port Authorities under the [[Canada Marine Act]].{{citation needed|date=January 2014}} He also successfully argued in the late 1990s for the first substantial increase in funding for [[Via Rail]] since cuts in 1981, 1990 and 1994. On 11 September 2001, the [[Federal Aviation Administration]] (FAA) closed down U.S. airspace after a series of [[September 11 attacks|terrorist attacks]] on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Collenette acted swiftly and shut down Canadian airspace in order to take in diverted U.S.-bound international flights, launching [[Transport Canada]]'s [[Operation Yellow Ribbon]]. Ultimately, 255 flights carrying 44,519 passengers were diverted to 15 Canadian airports{{citation needed|date=January 2014}}. In the time that has followed, Collenette has applauded the way Canadians responded to the crisis. He, Chrétien, U.S. Ambassador to Canada [[Paul Cellucci]], and other provincial and local officials presided over Canada's memorial service to mark the [[Memorials and services for the September 11 attacks|first anniversary of 9/11]] at [[Gander International Airport]] in Newfoundland and Labrador. There, he helped Chrétien unveil a plaque, commemorating the acts of kindness seen for the diverted passengers not just in [[Gander, Newfoundland and Labrador|Gander]], but across the country. === Regional Minister Responsible for the Greater Toronto Area === As regional Minister for the Greater Toronto Area 1997–2003, Mr. Collenette oversaw federal infrastructure funding that resulted in the largest single expansion of cultural institutions in Canadian history at the Royal Ontario Museum, the Art Gallery of Ontario, the Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts, the National Ballet School, the Royal Conservatory of Music, the Roy Thompson Hall and the Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art. He also initiated the second tranche of GTA infrastructure funding for $1 billion towards major GO Transit improvements, including the reopening of CN Bradford to Barrie line. Mr. Collenette promoted the concept of a rail link between Pearson Airport and downtown Toronto and under his leadership, planning, acquisition of property and a Solicitation of Interest the project was implemented. The highly successful link was subsequently built by Metrolinx and opened in 2016. Collenette also designated the Oak Ridges Moraine portion of the Pickering Airport lands administered by Transport Canada, as open greenspace in perpetuity. These lands eventually became part of the Rouge National Urban Park, opened in 2015. === Retirement === Chrétien was pressured into resigning as prime minister and party leader by supporters of former finance minister Paul Martin. As Collenette was considered a staunch Chrétien loyalist it was not surprising that he was dropped from cabinet when Martin became prime minister in December 2003. Collenette initially planned to stay on as a backbench MP, however he was then informed that his riding nomination would not be guaranteed. On 29 January 2004, Collenette announced his retirement from politics and went on to work in academia and as a consultant in the private sector.
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