Karen Leibovici

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Karen_Leibovici an entity of type: Thing

Karen Leibovici (born May 27, 1952) is a politician from Edmonton, Alberta. Following a career as a social worker, Leibovici was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta in 1993, representing Edmonton Meadowlark as a member of the Alberta Liberal Party. She held that seat for two terms until her defeat in 2001. While MLA, she held the positions of labour critic, health critic, intergovernmental affairs critic and caucus whip. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Karen Leibovici
rdf:langString Karen Leibovici
rdf:langString Karen Leibovici
xsd:date 1952-05-27
xsd:integer 5161679
xsd:integer 1077503491
xsd:date 1952-05-27
rdf:langString Karen Leibovici in 2013
rdf:langString Adam Zepp
rdf:langString Social Worker
rdf:langString Member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta
rdf:langString Edmonton City Councillor, Ward 1
rdf:langString Edmonton City Councillor, Ward 5
rdf:langString Leroy Chahley, Wendy Kinsella
rdf:langString New single-member ward
rdf:langString Stephen Ivan Zepp
rdf:langString Michael Oshry
rdf:langString Dual-member wards abolished
xsd:integer 2001 2010 2013
xsd:integer 1993 2001 2010
rdf:langString Karen Leibovici (born May 27, 1952) is a politician from Edmonton, Alberta. Following a career as a social worker, Leibovici was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta in 1993, representing Edmonton Meadowlark as a member of the Alberta Liberal Party. She held that seat for two terms until her defeat in 2001. While MLA, she held the positions of labour critic, health critic, intergovernmental affairs critic and caucus whip. In the 2001 Edmonton municipal election she was elected to city council, and was subsequently re-elected in 2004 and 2007 for Ward 1 and 2010 for Ward 5. She has served as chair or vice chair of the community services, executive and transportation and public works committees, and the Edmonton Police Commission. While on the city council, Leibovici was a board member for the Federation of Canadian Municipalities for nine years, and was acclaimed as the president in 2013. She was influential in spearheading the city's 10-year plan to end homelessness, revitalizing retail in west Edmonton, and through the Federation of Canadian Municipalities, brokered a $53 billion infrastructure plan with the federal government for funding municipal projects across the country.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4875

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