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Denis de Belleval

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Preceded by
  
Andre Harvey

Role
  
Politician

Political party
  
Parti Quebecois

Party
  
Parti Quebecois

Profession
  
Civil Servant

Succeeded by
  
Marc-Yvan Cote

Name
  
Denis Belleval


Denis de Belleval wwwassnatqccaMediaProcessaspxassetANQVigi

Born
  
June 4, 1939 (age 84) (
1939-06-04
)

Denis de Belleval (born June 4, 1939) is a former politician and administrator in the Canadian provinceof Quebec. He was a Parti Québécois member of the National Assembly of Quebec from 1976 to 1982 and was a cabinet minister in the government of René Lévesque. He has also held several administrative positions, including a two-year tenure as the president of Via Rail.

Contents

Denis de Belleval Une occasion manque selon Denis de Belleval Le Devoir

Early life and career

De Belleval was born in Quebec City, Quebec. He has a Bachelor of Arts degree in Philosophy (1960) and a master's degree in the social sciences with a focus in public administration (1965), both from the Université Laval. He met future prime minister Brian Mulroney while attending university and remained friends with Mulroney for many years thereafter. In 1964, De Belleval was a co-founder of the Union générale des étudiants du Québec (UGEQ).

De Belleval took doctoral studies in political science at the London School of Economics from 1965 to 1967. After returning to Quebec, he served as executive assistant to the deputy minister of education from 1967 to 1969. He held other government positions related to development and planning from 1970 to 1974 and was the assistant deputy minister of transport from 1974 to 1976.

Legislator and cabinet minister

Public Service minister

De Belleval was elected to the Quebec legislature in the 1976 provincial election, defeating Liberal incumbent André Harvey in the Charlesbourg division in the Quebec City area. The Parti Québécois won a historic majority government in this election, and de Belleval was appointed to René Lévesque's first cabinet on November 26, 1976, as minister of the public service and vice-president of the treasury board. The Lévesque cabinet included representatives from different sides of the political spectrum, and de Belleval was regarded as one of its more conservative members.

On March 2, 1978, Lévesque shifted the vice-presidency of the treasury board from de Belleval to Jacques Léonard. He said the change would allow de Belleval to better focus on upcoming negotiations with civil servants, nurses, and teachers. De Belleval took part in difficult wage negotiations with the Syndicat des Fonctionnaires Provinciaux du Québec in mid-1979; at one stage, the civil servants took part in rotating walkouts and de Belleval threatened to lock out entire government departments.

De Belleval argued in April 1978 that Quebec's hiring laws should be modified to facilitate the entry of more anglophones into the civil service. He added that the anglophone community would need to be more active in engaging with the civil service than in years past. In the winter of 1979–80, he said that the Quebec government would not object to civil servants taking part in the upcoming referendum campaign on sovereignty.

Separate from his duties as the public service minister, de Belleval also proposed a reciprocity formula that allowed English Canadians moving to Quebec from other provinces to enroll their children in English-language schools, in return for the other provinces making similar arrangements for their own minority language communities. The provincial cabinet had previously been divided on the issue of English-language education, and Lévesque agreed to de Belleval's formula as a compromise.

Transport minister

De Belleval was named as transport minister after a cabinet shuffle on September 21, 1979. In December of the same year, he issued a five-year transit plan for Montreal valued at just under one billion dollars. The plan called for expanded subway lines, the integration of commuter lines between Montreal and its suburbs, and a new electric train system on existing lines. After some delays, the project was re-launched with assistance from the federal government in February 1981. In the same period, de Belleval oversaw grants for three traffic projects in the Quebec City area and pledged $8.5 million to complete an expressway interchange for the city.

In September 1980, de Belleval announced that the Quebec government had purchased an eleven per cent stake in the Nordair airline and was supporting efforts from a group led by Quebecair president Alfred Hamel to purchase Nordair from Air Canada. The Canadian federal government questioned the legality of this purchase and subsequently announced an indefinite delay of the airline's sale. De Belleval later issued an alternate proposal that Nordair purchase Quebecair in a "reverse takeover" that would lead to a merger. These plans were ultimately unsuccessful, and the airlines were not merged.

Government backbencher

De Belleval was re-elected without difficulty in the 1981 provincial election as the Parti Québécois won a second majority government across the province. He was dropped from cabinet on April 30, 1981, and afterwards served as a government backbencher; the journalist Graham Fraser has suggested that his demotion was prompted by an intense argument with Lévesque at a cabinet meeting in late 1980. It was rumoured that he might return to cabinet in 1982, after he submitted a twenty-page policy paper proposing a "solitary fund" for development to be administered jointly by business, labour, and the state. He was not promoted, however, and he resigned his seat in the legislature on December 7, 1982, to accept a job in the private sector.

Administrator

De Belleval served as vice-president of Lavalin International from 1983 to 1985, working in Algiers. He returned to Quebec in 1985 when the government of Canada appointed him as president and chief executive officer of Ports Canada. Some critics described the appointment as patronage, citing de Belleval's longtime friendship with prime minister Brian Mulroney. De Belleval rejected this charge.

De Belleval oversaw federally owned harbour land in Montreal and Quebec City during his time as president of Ports Canada. The crown corporation posted a fifty-two million dollar profit for 1985, six million lower than the previous year; de Belleval blamed a fall in grain shipments for the discrepancy.

Via Rail

The Mulroney government subsequently appointed de Belleval as president and chief executive officer of Via Rail, with a term starting on July 1, 1987. Following his appointment, de Belleval pursued an expansion strategy for Via's services and said that he wanted to "[build] a modern railway for the 21st century." In September 1989, he announced the opening of a maintenance centre in Montreal valued at $139 million. During the same period, he acknowledged that Via had often ignored the needs of Western Canada and pledged to correct this in the future. He was able to announce that Via had increased its ridership by ten per cent in 1988, following years of decline.

Rumours circulated in early 1989 that the Mulroney government was planning significant cuts to passenger rail. De Belleval responded with a forceful appeal in defense of the sector, arguing that rail service was vital to Canada's transport needs and rejecting suggestions that public money would be better spent on road construction or upgrades to air travel. Promoting long-term strategies such as a high-speed link between Montreal and Toronto and increased tourist travel, de Belleval urged the Mulroney government to maintain its existing levels of support. He also launched a cross-Canada tour in support of passenger rail, before being ordered to stop by Mulroney.

De Belleval's efforts were ultimately unsuccessful, and the Mulroney government announced in April 1989 that it would cut Via's subsidy by five hundred million dollars over the next four years. De Belleval resigned his position a week later at the request of federal transport minister Benoît Bouchard. At a press conference, de Belleval said that the Mulroney government's funding cuts were incompatible with his plans for the company. Via later made massive cuts to its passenger service lines across the country.

1990 to present

De Belleval was appointed as director general of Quebec City, the top administrative position in the city, in May 1990. He served in this position until 1995. He was then the province of Quebec's delegate-general in Brussels from 1996 to 1999, before returning to serve another term as director general of Quebec City from 2001 to 2006.

A longtime friend of prominent Quebec politician Lucien Bouchard, de Belleval was present when Bouchard was hospitalized in late 1994 to receive treatment for a life-threatening battle with necrotizing fasciitis, a flesh-eating disease.

In the fall of 2007, De Belleval began work on a Ph.D. in public administration from the Université du Québec.

De Belleval strongly criticized a 2011 deal between Quebec City and Quebecor to oversee a future amphitheatre in the city. He described the city's deal with Quebecor with a phrase translating as "worthy of a banana republic" and announced in April 2011 that he would seek to nullify it via a court challenge.

References

Denis de Belleval Wikipedia