November 12, 2015
Burlington,ON
It is true – the city is losing Scott Stewart – he will become the Deputy Chief, Administrative Officer, Infrastructure, Development and Enterprise Services for the city of Guelph. His start date is very early in December. Stewart will commute to Guelph for the first while
We have lost a good one – at a time when we can least afford such a loss at this level.
Less than four years ago the city had three General Managers – we got down to one and now that one is leaving.
City Manager James Ridge now has to look at his senior level corporate structure and decide how he wants to organize his staff. And he is going to have to look really hard to find someone of Stewart’s calibre.
There are two people at the Director level who could move into the job Stewart has held but both are critical to the operations they now run.
The city has a number of people who are doing exceptionally well and can be expected to grow into Director level jobs – most need three to five years to mature in their jobs and develop their leadership skills.
James Ridge has been with the city long enough to have gained the measure of most of his staff compliment but what is known about his past experience does not include this level of management reorganization.
He has developed good working relationships with his staff; his personality is such that he works well with people –
is able to draw the best out of most people.
The challenge for Ridge is going to be to get city council to do the job they were elected to do – the previous city manager Jeff Fielding soon realized that this Council was never going to do very much and he pretty well rode rough shod over them.
That isn’t Ridge’s style – his armed forces experience has taught him what a chain of command is and he expects those he serves to do their jobs. There is some heart ache coming his way.
If this had to happen to him – a year from now would have been better.
As he was passed over for the City Managers position in Hamilton and Burlington, the writing was on the wall that he would move on. Who could blame him.
A tremendous leader, should have been promoted.
Best wishes to Scott in his new role.
He will be missed for his direct, analytical, get things done approach.