1999 in Canada
| Years in Canada: | 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 | 
| Centuries: | 19th century · 20th century · 21st century | 
| Decades: | 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s | 
| Years: | 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 | 
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Events from the year 1999 in Canada.
Incumbents
Main article: 1999 Canadian incumbents
Crown
- Head of state (monarch) – Queen Elizabeth II (consort – Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh)
 
Federal government
- Governor general – Roméo LeBlanc (until October 7) then Adrienne Clarkson (viceregal consort – Diana Fowler then John Ralston Saul)
 - Prime minister – Jean Chrétien
 
Provincial governments
Lieutenant governors
- Lieutenant Governor of Alberta – Bud Olson
 - Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia – Garde Gardom
 - Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba – Yvon Dumont (until March 2) then Peter Liba
 - Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick – Marilyn Trenholme Counsell
 - Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland – Arthur Maxwell House
 - Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia – James Kinley
 - Lieutenant Governor of Ontario – Hillary Weston
 - Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island – Gilbert Clements
 - Lieutenant Governor of Quebec – Lise Thibault
 - Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan – Jack Wiebe
 
Premiers
- Premier of Alberta – Ralph Klein
 - Premier of British Columbia – Glen Clark (until August 25) then Dan Miller
 - Premier of Manitoba – Gary Filmon (until October 5) then Gary Doer
 - Premier of New Brunswick – Camille Thériault (until June 21) then Bernard Lord
 - Premier of Newfoundland – Brian Tobin
 - Premier of Nova Scotia – Russell MacLellan (until August 16) then John Hamm
 - Premier of Ontario – Mike Harris
 - Premier of Prince Edward Island – Pat Binns
 - Premier of Quebec – Lucien Bouchard
 - Premier of Saskatchewan – Roy Romanow
 
Territorial governments
Commissioners
- Commissioner of Yukon – Judy Gingell
 - Commissioner of Northwest Territories – Helen Maksagak (until March 26) then Daniel Joseph Marion
 - Commissioner of Nunavut – Helen Maksagak (from April 1)
 
Premiers
- Premier of the Northwest Territories – Jim Antoine
 - Premier of Nunavut – Paul Okalik (from April 1)
 - Premier of Yukon – Piers McDonald
 
Events
January to June
- January 1 - An avalanche destroys a school gymnasium during New Year's celebrations in Kangguspoo in far northern Quebec, killing 9.
 - February 9 - Brian Tobin's Liberals are re-elected in Newfoundland
 - April 1 - Nunavut becomes the newest territory. Paul Okalik becomes the first premier
 - April 6 - A disgruntled employee kills four people, then killed himself in OC Transpo of Ottawa
 - April 28 - W. R. Myers High School shooting:Taber, Alberta, a 15-year-old boy, who has recently been withdrawn from public school to escape bullying, walks into W.R. Myers High School and shoots two students with a .22 rifle, killing one (Jason Lang) and injuring the other.
 - May 1 - Sponsorship scandal: The federal government issues a $615,000 contract for a report from Groupaction into its own activities.
 - May 11 - Chevron announces a major natural gas find in the Northwest Territories
 - May 17 - The Saskatchewan government awards David Milgaard after he was jailed for 23 years for a murder he did not commit
 - May 20 - The Supreme Court expands gay spousal rights
 - May 27 - Julie Payette becomes the first Canadian to board the International Space Station
 - June 3 - Ontario election: Mike Harris's PCs win a second consecutive majority
 - June 3 - Canada and the United States sign a treaty to divide the Pacific salmon fishery
 - June 4 - An agreement on split-run magazines prevents looming trade war with the United States
 - June 7 - Bernard Lord's Conservatives win a surprise election victory in New Brunswick
 - June 10 - The Reform Party of Canada votes to become the Canadian Alliance
 - June 17 - Canadian citizen Stanley Faulder is executed in Texas, despite diplomatic complaints by the Canadian government
 - June 21 - Bernard Lord becomes premier of New Brunswick, replacing Camille Thériault
 - June 30 - A British Columbia court strikes down Canada's child pornography laws
 
July to December
- July 27 - Nova Scotia election: The Conservatives win a majority government in Nova Scotia
 - August 16 - John Hamm becomes premier of Nova Scotia, replacing Russell MacLellan
 - August 20 - The Supreme Court rules that Quebec cannot secede unilaterally, but that Canada is obliged to recognize a clear yes vote
 - August 20 - Eaton's files for bankruptcy
 - August 24 - Onex announces a plan to buy and merge Air Canada and Canadian Airlines
 - August 25 - Dan Miller, as interim leader of the NDP, becomes premier of British Columbia, replacing Glen Clark who resigned on the 21st
 - September 15 - Louise Arbour appointed to the Supreme Court replacing Antonio Lamer
 - September 19 - Saskatchewan election: Roy Romanow's NDP wins only a minority but forms a coalition with the Liberals to maintain control of the Legislative Assembly
 - September 25 - The federal government refuses requests for aid by the six remaining Canadian NHL franchises
 - October 5 - Gary Doer of the NDP becomes premier of Manitoba, replacing Gary Filmon of the Conservatives
 - October 7 - Adrienne Clarkson becomes Governor General
 - October 8 - Bill Clinton dedicates the new Embassy of the United States in Ottawa
 - October 15 - Robert Mundell wins the Nobel Prize for economics
 - October 19 - Air Canada, backed by other airlines, announces a takeover bid for Canadian Airlines
 - November 3 - Beverley McLachlin becomes the first female chief justice of the Supreme Court
 - November 5 - A Quebec court decides that Onex's bid for Air Canada is illegal
 - November 5 - Quebec sign law is overturned
 - November 21 - Nimiq 1 Canada's first direct broadcast digital TV satellite launched by a Proton K Blok DM-3 rocket from the Tyuratam launch centre in Kazakhstan.
 - December 8 - Air Canada takes over Canadian Airlines
 - December 11 - The verdict in the Just Desserts shooting case is handed down. Two of the accused are found guilty, the third is acquitted.
 - December 14 - Montreal resident Ahmed Ressam is arrested in Seattle and found with large quantities of explosives
 
Arts and literature
New works
- Bonnie Burnard: A Good House
 - Wayson Choy: Paper Shadows: A Chinatown Childhood
 - Matt Cohen: Elizabeth and After
 - Antonine Maillet: Chronique d'une sorcière de vent
 - Russell Smith: Young Men
 
Awards
- Giller Prize for Canadian Fiction: Bonnie Burnard, A Good House
 - See 1999 Governor General's Awards for a complete list of winners and finalists for those awards.
 - Books in Canada First Novel Award: Andre Alexis, Childhood
 - Gerald Lampert Award: Stephanie Bolster, White Stone: The Alice Poems
 - Geoffrey Bilson Award: Iain Lawrence, The Wreckers
 - Marian Engel Award: Janice Kulyk Keeger
 - Norma Fleck Award: Andy Turnbull and Debora Pearson, By Truck to the North: My Winter Adventure
 - Pat Lowther Award: Hilary Clark, More Light
 - Stephen Leacock Award: Stuart McLean, Home from the Vinyl Cafe
 - Trillium Book Award English: Alistair MacLeod, No Great Mischief
 - Trillium Book Award French: Andrée Christensen and Jacques Flamand, Lithochronos ou le premier vol de la pierre
 - Vicky Metcalf Award: Joan Clark
 
Music
- Céline Dion, Alanis Morissette, and Shania Twain win major Grammy Awards
 
Television
- September 13 - The first episode of the children's series Mona the Vampire is broadcast on YTV
 
Sport
- February 13 - The last hockey game is played at Maple Leaf Gardens as the team moves to the new Air Canada Centre.
 - April 16 - Wayne Gretzky retires from ice hockey.
 - July 23–August 8 - The Pan American games are held in Winnipeg.
 - November 13 - Lennox Lewis defeats Evander Holyfield to become the Heavyweight Champion of the World.
 - November 28 - At the 87th Grey Cup the Hamilton Tiger-Cats defeat the Calgary Stampeders at BC Place Stadium in Vancouver.
 
Births
- February 19 - Quinn Lord, actor
 - April 8 - Jacob Guay, singer
 - April 27 - Brooklynn Proulx, actress
 - July 9 - Claire Corlett, actress
 - August 22 - Dakota Goyo, actor
 - July 14 - Dawson Dunbar, actor
 - September 7 - Michelle Creber, actress
 - September 22 - Erin Pitt, actress
 - October 29 - Olivia Waldriff, actress
 - November 30 - Gage Munroe, actor
 
Full date unknown
- Maya Burhanpurkar, scientist
 - Natasha Calis, actress
 - Veronica Penny
 
Deaths
January to March
Harry Somers, 1947
- January 8 - James William Baskin, politician and businessman (born 1920)
 - January 10 - Walter Harris, politician and lawyer (born 1904)
 - February 8 - Denise Leblanc-Bantey, politician (born 1949)
 - February 18 - Neil Gaudry, politician (born 1937)
 - February 22 - Isidore Goresky, farm labourer, teacher and provincial politician (born 1902)
 - March 3 - Gerhard Herzberg, physicist and physical chemist (born 1904)
 - March 9 - Harry Somers, composer (born 1925)
 - March 15 - Guy D'Artois, army officer (born 1917)
 - March 23 - Osmond Borradaile, cameraman, cinematographer and veteran of First and Second World War (born 1898)
 - March 24 - Edmund Tobin Asselin, politician (born 1920)
 
April to June
- April 4 - Greg McConnell, indie rock musician (born 1964)
 - April 5 - Paul David, cardiologist and founder of the Montreal Heart Institute (born 1919)
 - May 2 - Douglas Harkness, politician, teacher, farmer and former Lieutenant Colonel in the Royal Canadian Artillery. (born 1903)
 - May 23 - Owen Hart, wrestler (born 1965)
 - June 8 - Gordon Towers, politician and Lieutenant-Governor of Alberta (born 1919)
 - June 17 - Stanley Faulder, murderer and first Canadian citizen to be executed in the United States since 1952 (born 1937)
 
July to December
- July 1 - Edward Dmytryk, Canadian-born American film director (born 1908)
 - July 16 - Alan Macnaughton, politician (born 1903)
 - August 12 - Jean Drapeau, lawyer, politician and Mayor of Montreal (born 1916)
 - September 24 - Robert Bend, politician (born 1914)
 - October 14 - Ian Wahn, politician and lawyer (born 1916)
 - October 31 - Greg Moore, racecar driver (born 1975)
 - December 2 - Matt Cohen, writer (born 1942)
 - December 4 - Bert Hoffmeister, army officer (born 1907)
 - December 10 - Rick Danko, musician and singer (born 1943)
 - December 20 - Hank Snow, country music artist (born 1914)
 - December 23 - Wallace Diestelmeyer, figure skater (born 1926)
 
See also
External links
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