Linda Sloan

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

Linda Sloan (born June 27, 1960) is a Canadian politician and municipal councillor in Edmonton, Alberta. Sloan graduated from the in 1982 and began work as a registered nurse. She soon became involved in the (which she led from 1992 until 1997), the , and the . In 1997, she ran for the Legislative Assembly of Alberta in the riding of Edmonton Riverview as a candidate for the Liberal Party of Alberta. She defeated her closest rival, Progressive Conservative Gwen Harris by more than 900 votes. Linda Sloan is married with two children. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Linda Sloan
rdf:langString Linda Sloan
rdf:langString Linda Sloan
rdf:langString Listowel, Ontario, Canada
xsd:date 1960-06-27
xsd:integer 10591168
xsd:integer 1107925997
xsd:date 1960-06-27
xsd:integer 2
rdf:langString Ward 1
xsd:integer 150
rdf:langString Member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta
rdf:langString Member of the Edmonton City Council
rdf:langString Husband
rdf:langString Andrew Knack
xsd:integer 2001 2013
xsd:integer 1997 2004
rdf:langString Linda Sloan (born June 27, 1960) is a Canadian politician and municipal councillor in Edmonton, Alberta. Sloan graduated from the in 1982 and began work as a registered nurse. She soon became involved in the (which she led from 1992 until 1997), the , and the . In 1997, she ran for the Legislative Assembly of Alberta in the riding of Edmonton Riverview as a candidate for the Liberal Party of Alberta. She defeated her closest rival, Progressive Conservative Gwen Harris by more than 900 votes. While in the legislature, Sloan served as Liberal opposition critic for social services, child welfare, and disability programs. In this capacity, she supported extending adoption rights to same-sex couples and sponsored a private member's bill calling for the creation of a children's advocate who would report directly to the legislature. When Liberal leader Grant Mitchell resigned in 1998, Sloan became one of four candidates to replace him. Nancy MacBeth won on the first ballot. Sloan declined to seek re-election in 2001, and ran for city council in 2004. She finished second of nine candidates in Ward 1 (behind incumbent councillor and Sloan's former Liberal caucus colleague Karen Leibovici) and was elected. While on city council, she has served as councillor responsible for the Senior Citizens portfolio. Linda Sloan is married with two children.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5926

data from the linked data cloud