Age, Biography and Wiki
Michael Applebaum (Michael Mark Applebaum) was born on 10 February, 1963 in Montreal, Canada, is a Canadian former politician. Discover Michael Applebaum's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 61 years old?
Popular As |
Michael Mark Applebaum |
Occupation |
Businessman, Real estate agent |
Age |
61 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Aquarius |
Born |
10 February, 1963 |
Birthday |
10 February |
Birthplace |
Montreal, Canada |
Nationality |
|
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 10 February.
He is a member of famous Businessman with the age 61 years old group.
Michael Applebaum Height, Weight & Measurements
At 61 years old, Michael Applebaum height not available right now. We will update Michael Applebaum's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
Physical Status |
Height |
Not Available |
Weight |
Not Available |
Body Measurements |
Not Available |
Eye Color |
Not Available |
Hair Color |
Not Available |
Who Is Michael Applebaum's Wife?
His wife is Merle Applebaum
Family |
Parents |
Not Available |
Wife |
Merle Applebaum |
Sibling |
Not Available |
Children |
Not Available |
Michael Applebaum Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Michael Applebaum worth at the age of 61 years old? Michael Applebaum’s income source is mostly from being a successful Businessman. He is from . We have estimated
Michael Applebaum's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2022 |
Pending |
Salary in 2022 |
Under Review |
House |
Not Available |
Cars |
Not Available |
Source of Income |
Businessman |
Michael Applebaum Social Network
Timeline
Applebaum campaigned ceaselessly on cutting government waste. He once tracked down a blue-collar worker who spent a day hiding in a luncheonette while collecting $21 an hour. He emphasized the fiscal responsibility and integrity that came with his business experience: "I’ve been in business, and it doesn’t matter if you steal a dollar or you steal $100,000. You’re not allowed to take a penny."
On March 30, 2017, he was sentenced to a year in prison and two years probation for his role in extorting $60 000 worth of bribes from real estate developers as borough mayor in Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce between 2006 and 2012.
On January 26, 2017, Applebaum was found guilty of eight corruption-related charges.
On June 6, 2017, Applebaum was granted parole after serving two months or one-sixth of his sentence after expressing remorse for his criminal actions at his parole hearings. He was released on condition that he do 20 hours of community work per week.
In May 2017, the city of Montreal authorized lawyers to take court action to retrieve a $160 000 departure allowance that Applebaum received from the city when he resigned as mayor. In June 2018, changes in provincial regulation has allowed the city to try and retrieve a $108 000 departure bonus paid out to Applebaum as well.
After Applebaum's conviction, the Organisme d’autoréglementation du courtage immobilier du Québec (OACIQ) revoked Applebaum's license to sell real estate in Quebec on April 30, 2017. It would reject Applebaum's application to reinstate the license when he got out on parole. In July 2018, Applebaum would appeal the decision in Quebec Court, arguing that his crimes did not involve his real estate practice. Applebaum would withdraw the court appeal in October 2018 when the Judge refused to delay hearing of the case.
On June 17, 2013 he was arrested and indicted on 14 charges including fraud, conspiracy, breach of trust, and corruption in municipal affairs He resigned the following day. On January 26, 2017, Applebaum was found guilty of eight of these charges. On June 6, 2017, Applebaum was granted parole two months after serving one-sixth of his sentence.
Supporters of Applebaum saw him as a hard working borough mayor who always did his best to get things done, pointing to the construction of the Benny sports centre, a community health centre, and plans for a cultural centre in a badly under-served sector of the Loyola district. Local community groups saw him as thin-skinned and viciously partisan, running over all who he saw as political opponents. Applebaum rejected any criticism as always coming from the same "five or six or seven people" that ran against him in elections. In 2013, fellow Union Montreal councilor Warren Allmand said that he encouraged Applebaum to react more constructively to citizen suggestions, and was critical of Applebaum's perceiving differences of opinion as attempts to dislodge him from power.
Applebaum was investigated by Quebec's anti-corruption police squad (UPAC) for being involved in a "stratagem of corruption" involving 10 real estate transactions and municipal contracts signed during his 2002-2012 tenure as borough mayor in Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce. He would be arrested at his home on June 17, 2013 on 14 charges related to two of these investigations; he was found guilty on January 8, 2017 on 8 charges, including fraud against the government, breach of trust, conspiracy, and corruption in municipal affairs.
Applebaum was arrested by Quebec's anti-corruption unit UPAC at his home on June 17, 2013. He initially faced 14 charges including fraud, conspiracy, breach of trust, and corruption in municipal affairs. The charges stem from alleged acts which occurred before Applebaum became mayor. Officials said they relate to real estate projects between 2006 and 2011 when Applebaum served as borough mayor. Charges were also simultaneously laid against former city councillor Saulie Zajdel and Jean Yves Bisson, a city bureaucrat.
On June 18, 2013 Applebaum announced his resignation of Mayor of Montreal, maintaining that the allegations against him were unfounded. He hired Marcel Danis, a criminal lawyer and former federal Member of Parliament, as his defence attorney.
In October 2013, charges against him were widened to encompass ten major real estate transactions between 2002 and 2012 in Côte-des-Neiges. His preliminary hearing was scheduled for June 2015, immediately before Zajdel's trial.
He resigned from his position as chair of the executive committee on November 9, 2012, although he retained his position as mayor of Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce borough.
Following Tremblay's resignation on November 5, 2012, Applebaum was believed to be a strong contender to win Union Montréal's nomination as its new mayoral candidate. However, he was passed over in favour of councillor Richard Deschamps.
He subsequently left Union Montréal to sit as an independent councillor and submitted his name as an independent mayoral candidate. He argued that in light of the corruption crisis facing the city, notably among the ruling Union Montreal party, the interim mayor should be independent of party affiliation. In the final city council vote on November 16, 2012, Applebaum won 31 votes to Deschamps' 29. He won in part by reaching out more actively than Deschamps to the opposition Vision Montréal and Projet Montréal parties and the bloc of independent councillors who resigned from Union Montréal in the same period, most notably by promising to share seats on the Montreal Executive Committee in a non-partisan coalition. Applebaum pledged not to run for mayor in the 2013 municipal election, indicating that he would instead run for another term as borough mayor of Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce.
Residents would express similar environmental concerns in 2011 about zoning for a parking lot at a planned community health centre (CLSC) to be built by the province across the road from the park would eat up greenspace and cause traffic problems. Construction on the community health centre began in 2012.
Applebaum would become the second most powerful person in Montreal on April 6, 2011 when he was promoted by Tremblay to chair of the executive committee and given control over the city's finances. He replaced Claude Dauphin who resigned over allegations of spying on top bureaucrats as Tremblay's government faced increased scrutiny for corruption. His other responsibilities included urban planning and buildings, borough relations, human resources, administrative services, and corporate communications. Applebaum shrugged off the administrations problems as media exaggerations, and set a financial goal of cutting the city budget of $4.5 billion by $170 million and holding tax increases to the rate of inflation. He attributed his promotion to the sound management of his bourough.
Mayor Gérald Tremblay made Applebaum a full member of the executive committee in January 2009, assuming the sports and recreation portfolio and the difficult portfolio of snow removal. He quickly became vice-chair.
In 2007, the borough council moved already approved plans for a sports center on the residential development of Benny Farm across the street to Benny Park because of lack of space. Residents supported the construction of a sports complex, but objected to the new location and the rezoning of the entire park for institutional construction, arguing it would make the greenspace a target for further development. In 2009, construction on the sports center began and plans for an ultra-modern library in the same park announced, further angering residents concerned about greenspace. The sports centre would open in 2011.
The closure of the Fraser-Hickson Library in 2007 also proved contentious. The foundation that owned and ran the spacious stone library requested $4 million in public money to help renovate the site. Despite a petition with 13 000 signatures and a tradition of volunteers to keep the library running, Applebaum refused the idea arguing that it would be more cost effective to include a library in the cultural centre. In the 2009 election, opposition Vision Montreal candidate David Hanna accused Applebaum of neglecting to save the old library. Although signs announcing the construction of the new facility went up before the 2009 municipal election, construction would not begin until 2013. Applebaum would explain delays by the city's careful review of technical documents to assure that bids for the project do not come in higher than expected. The new building would open to positive reviews in 2016, four years behind schedule.
By 2006, Applebaum was instructing his newly hired aide Hugo Tremblay to sell tickets to Union Montreal party cocktail fundraisers to promoters seeking zoning changes for their real estate projects. A box called "the hat" would be circulated at these events to collect outrightly illegal anonymous cash donations. The "pret-nom" (borrowed-name, straw man, proxy-name) scheme would be used to make it appear that large donations from a single individual came from a number of people so as not to appear to exceed Quebec's individual legal donation limits of $100. Ticket stubs would be used by Applebaum to compile lists of donors and their phone numbers for extorting "extra political effort", Applebaum's euphemism for bribes; Applebaum would then arrange to have his aide solicit and collect the bribes in cash and split the money in his car.
By 2002, Applebaum's overall remuneration for committee work and expenses had grown to $102,868. Fellow councillors Jeremy Searle and Francine Senécal publicly criticized Applebaum in 2005 and 2008 for potential conflict of interest over his continued work as a real estate agent and property manager while also sitting on the boroughs secretive CCU (zoning committee). Applebaum once threatened to sue a citizen who pointed out that he should give up his real estate job if he wanted to sit on the CCU. He would only give up his realtor job and CCU position upon being appointed as a full member of the Montreal Executive Committee in 2009. Applebaum would also repeatedly reject proposals from councilor Warren Allmand to open CCU meetings to the public and to provide documentation on CCU zoning recommendations to the public before being adopted by the borough council. Allmand, formerly both the member of Parliament for NDG and Solicitor General of Canada, decried the lack of transparency in borough rezoning procedures. Councillors would often not know what they were voting on because they did not have time to review the CCU's complex zoning recommendations.
Between 2002 and 2009, Applebaum would rise through the ranks of Mayor Gérald Tremblay's government, being handed increasing responsibilities. In 2002, he was named associate member of the Montreal Executive Committee to help decentralize services to the newly created borough of Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce. After the 2005 elections, he was appointed president of the commission of transport, the environment, and infrastructure.
In 2001, Applebaum joined other city councilors in forming the Union Montreal party under mayoral candidate Gérald Tremblay, a businessman and former Quebec Liberal cabinet minister. Applebaum and Tremblay would go on to win the 2001 election on a platform of halting the forced merger of Montreal with suburban municipalities and decentralizing power to newly created Montreal boroughs during the 2002–06 municipal reorganization of Montreal. In 2002, Mayor Tremblay would appoint Applebaum to the newly-created position of borough mayor for Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce. He would also now sit as chair of the borough's zoning committee (in French, Comité consultatif d'urbanisme) or CCU. They would be reelected handily in 2005 and 2009, each with almost 50% of the vote.
Later that year, he was elected city councilor by a margin of 31 votes in the former Notre-Dame-de-Grâce district of Montreal as a member of Jérôme Choquette's Parti des Montréalais. In 1998, he was re-elected by a large margin as a member of Nouveau Montréal, an opposition slate headed by former Montreal police chief Jacques Duchesneau. As a councilor, he relinquished his businesses and became a real estate agent at the Royal LePage realty firm to supplemented his low public salary. He maintained a brisk, focused business, selling 48 properties in his first year alone.
Applebaum was first elected city councillor for Notre-Dame-de-Grâce on November 6, 1994 as a member of the now defunct Parti des Montréalais. In 2001, he would become a founding member of the Union Montréal party and rise to prominence as part of Mayor Gerard Tremblay's administration, serving as borough mayor of Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce from January 1, 2002 to November 21, 2012, and becoming chair of the city's powerful executive committee in 2011. He would be appointed interim mayor by city council after leaving the party as increased scrutiny of corruption within the administration prompted Tremblay's resignation.
In 1994, Applebaum become known locally as "the rink activist" for campaigning to save a popular local outdoor hockey rink from closure at MacDonald Park in his Snowdon neighborhood. He negotiated a compromise solution that had the city maintain the installation while local volunteers maintained the ice.
Applebaum also alienated community groups looking to revitalize the Empress Theatre, a heritage site owned by the borough and sitting unused since a 1992 fire. In 2010, provincial funding to revitalize the theatre as a home for Geordie Productions, Black Theatre Workshop, and the McGill Music Conservatory fell through. Ownership reverted to the borough and the Applebaum administration set up a competitive bid process in 2012 that pitted community groups against each other. The winning bid went to Cinema NDG on condition that it find funding for its film house project. As of November 2017, after several deadline extensions, funding has yet to be secured by the project.
Applebaum married in 1984. He and his wife Merle have three children.
Michael Mark Applebaum (born February 10, 1963) is a Canadian former politician who served as interim Mayor of Montreal between his appointment by the city council on November 16, 2012 and his resignation on June 18, 2013. He was the first anglophone to hold the post in over a century.
Applebaum was born into an Orthodox Jewish family in Montreal on February 10, 1963, the third child of Ray and Moishe Applebaum. He was raised in Saint-Laurent and went to Winston Churchill High School, where he was a quiet student. He spent Grade 7 in a French immersion program at the English-language school, but never mastered the language.
Applebaum always wanted to become a very wealthy businessman and never expected to go into politics. At the age of 13, he began working at his eponymous family shoe store founded by his grandfather in 1913. He studied commerce at Dawson College CEGEP, dropping out because he lost patience with a business teacher who regularly arrived late for class. He opened his first clothing boutique at 18 while at Dawson. He later opened a number of other businesses and took over the family shoe store.