A punk band, Lungbutter, raised the tempo for the fervent crowd, until Rickett finally hit the stage for a vituperative rant about the frustrations of small-town radicalism. He had recently lost his first bid for city council by a narrow margin, and was being sued for publishing a photo of a busker’s buttocks on the cover of his independent magazine, What’s Up, Chuck?
Rickett attacked the town council and police for harassing him, and drew laughs when he noted that the suit against What’s Up, Chuck? named a local dog, the official “owner/publisher” of his peripatetic zine. By the end of the night, the party would rove across the city, a bed would be thrown down a stairwell, and several diehards would pay tribute to their leader by adorning local paths with sick.
Rickett’s first task as a councillor was to face up to the invective he’d been spewing at his colleagues. Since starting up his zine in 1997, he had regularly lambasted council for its lack of vision and its pro-business, law-and-order agenda. Once, after being rejected for a position with Stratford’s youth committee, he singled out then-councillor Mathieson for criticism: “I had attended every meeting,” Rickett wrote, “which is more than can be said for other members of the committee, such as councillor Dan Mathieson. But I’m sure he’s a busy guy.”
“Water under the bridge now,” says a slightly sheepish Rickett. “We’ve been elected to work together to get business done. I apologized for some of the stuff I’ve written that went a bit too far. Me and the mayor get along great.”
“Chris had often lampooned me,” says the mayor, “and while some of the comments were very much satire, some of them were pretty personal. Chris and I have had lots of conversations about his comments; he’s apologized for them. You gotta move on; I’ve learned that in politics.”
Mathieson and Rickett are moving on in a big way. Between Rickett, his best friend Sam Dinicol, twenty-five, who was also elected in 2003, and the mayor, who is only thirty-four, Stratford has one of the youngest city councils in Canada. And contrary to what many predicted, the city continues to run smoothly, infused with new energy and fresh ideas.
Rickett alone sits on more than a dozen local committees. He has shepherded the creation of a skate park, initiated an experiment to run Stratford’s buses on biodiesel fuel, and successfully lobbied the city to agree to reduce greenhouse gases by 20 percent in ten years.
Which isn’t to say everything is perfect. The council includes local business people and councillors in their seventies, so there is bound to be debate. One particularly divisive argument looms concerning a proposed downtown Wal-Mart. Rickett would no doubt love to see Wal-Mart banned but he has come to learn the importance of compromise.






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