Coquitlam City Council

Coquitlam City Council
Type
Type
Leadership
Mayor
Richard Stewart
since December 1, 2008
Structure
Length of term
4 years
Salary$66,018.69 (councillors)
$169,607.40 (mayor)[1]
Seats
8 councillors and 1 mayor
Elections
Last election
October 15, 2022
Next election
October 17, 2026

The Coquitlam City Council is the governing body for the City of Coquitlam, British Columbia, Canada.

The council consists of the mayor and eight councillors.

The councillors are councilors-at-large elected for the entire city.

Coquitlam City Council members

2022–present
Elected in the 2022 municipal elections

  • Richard Stewart, Mayor
  • Craig Hodge, Councillor
  • Teri Towner, Councillor
  • Brent Asmundson, Councillor
  • Dennis Marsden, Councillor
  • Trish Mandewo, Councillor
  • Steve Kim, Councillor
  • Matt Djonlic, Councillor
  • Robert Mazzarolo, Councillor

2018–2022 [2]

  • Richard Stewart, Mayor
  • Craig Hodge, Councillor
  • Chris Wilson, Councillor
  • Teri Towner, Councillor
  • Bonita Zarrillo, Councillor (until 2021)
  • Brent Asmundson, Councillor
  • Dennis Marsden, Councillor
  • Trish Mandewo, Councillor
  • Steve Kim, Councillor

2014–2018

  • Richard Stewart, Mayor
  • Brent Asmundson, Councillor
  • Craig Hodge, Councillor
  • Dennis Marsden, Councillor
  • Terry O'Neill, Councillor
  • Mae Reid, Councillor
  • Teri Towner, Councillor
  • Chris Wilson, Councillor
  • Bonita Zarrillo, Councillor

2011–2014

  • Richard Stewart, Mayor
  • Brent Asmundson, Councillor
  • Craig Hodge, Councillor
  • Neal Nicholson, Councillor
  • Terry O'Neill, Councillor
  • Mae Reid, Councillor
  • Lou Sekora, Councillor

In the 2013 provincial election, two sitting councillors, Linda Reimer and Selina Robinson, were elected to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia. Reimer initially speculated in the press about continuing to perform both roles, or simply taking an unpaid leave of absence from her city council duties until the 2014 municipal election, to spare taxpayers the expense of a by-election;[3] the council ultimately decided on July 8, 2013 to hold by-elections to replace them.[4]

References

  1. ^ "Council Remuneration". City of Coquitlam. Retrieved January 1, 2026.
  2. ^ City of Coquitlam Mayor and Council
  3. ^ "Reimer, city hope to avoid byelection". Coquitlam Now, May 24, 2013.
  4. ^ "Council votes to hold Coquitlam byelection" Archived 2013-07-15 at the Wayback Machine. The Tri-Cities Now, July 10, 2013.