Background
She grew up in the Regent Park neighbourhood of Toronto. With her family settling there first before a move to the suburbs.
She grew up in the Regent Park neighbourhood of Toronto. With her family settling there first before a move to the suburbs.
She is a city councillor in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. She is councillor for the Toronto Centre-Rosedale electoral district (Ward 27). She was re-elected in 2014.
A real estate agent and business owner, she is the former owner of a Timothy"s franchise in Toronto"s Church and Wellesley Village, and the owner of the KWT (formerly the XEXE) contemporary art gallery at Bathurst and Richmond Street West.
Wong-Tam, who is a Canadian of Chinese origin, came out as a lesbian in high school, at the age of 16 and has been an activist for both LGBTQ and Asian Canadian community issues, serving on the Chinese Canadian National Council and helping to found Asian Canadians Foreign Equal Marriage and the Church and Wellesley Village"s business improvement area. In 2011, she cooperated with Toronto"s Lesbian Gay Bi Transport Youth Lincolnshire to create an award, named in memory of Toronto artist Will Munro, to honour LGBT youth involved in community arts projects in Ontario.
Wong-Tam "listed her home address in the registration but gave the contact number as her Coldwell Banker real estate office on Yonge Saint" Wong-Tam was the registered owner of the site until August 31, 2010. In the 2010 election, Wong-Tam was endorsed by the Toronto and York Labour Council.
She was also supported by neighbouring councillor Adam Vaughan, street nurse Cathy Crowe and author Michele Landsberg.
She also noted that she did not renew her New Democratic Party membership, saying: "I think all (council) rookies are saying the same thing - they don"t want to be pigeon-holed."
Unofficial results as of October 26, 2010 03:55 Department of Administration and Management.
Prior to the Toronto City election, it emerged that Wong-Tam had provided support for the political advocacy group Queers Against Israeli Apartheid (QuAIA). In an interview with the Toronto Sun newspaper, she said that she lent her cr card to register the group"s website because no one in the group owned a cr card. Wong-Tam, in a post-election interview with the Toronto Sun, says that she is "really looking forward to working with the Mayor" and that she supports Mayor Rob Ford"s campaign pledge to scrap the personal vehicle tax and the land transfer tax