Background
Wong was born in Hong Kong and he studied at the University of San Diego.
黃志華
Wong was born in Hong Kong and he studied at the University of San Diego.
University of Toronto.
He was a municipal councillor for the city of Markham from 1997 to 2004 and served as a York Region Councillor from 2006 to 2009. He received a Bachelor"s degree in math and Master"s in computer science from the University of Missouri. He was a lawyer (University of Toronto) and founding director of the Metropolitan Toronto Southeast Asian Legal Clinic.
He was a partner in his own practice, Wong and Chun.
In 1997 Wong, ran for the municipal council in Markham, Ontario. He received 1,406 votes defeating his nearest rival by 774 votes.
In the 2000 election, he was elected as one of four regional councillors. In 2003, he spoke against an attempt by the government of China to enact "anti-subversion" legislation in Hong Kong (many recent Chinese immigrants in Markham have dual Canadian/Hong Kong citizenship).
In the 2003 provincial election, he contested Markham for the Liberal Party against David Tsubouchi, a prominent cabinet minister in the Progressive Conservative governments of Mike Harris and Ernie Eves.
Markham had been represented by the Progressive Conservative Party since its creation in 1987, and it was anticipated that Tsubouchi would be re-elected despite a strong provincial swing to the Liberals. Instead, Wong defeated him by 5,996 votes. Wong acknowledged that his candidacy benefited from a large ethnic Chinese immigrant population in the riding.
Not long after his election, Wong held a benefit dinner for the daughters of Geng Chaohui, a recent Chinese immigrant to Canada who committed suicide because of underemployment.
The event raised $30,000, although it was little reported outside of the Chinese-language press On September 25, 2006, Wong resigned his seat in the legislature to run for York Regional Council.
He served in council until March 2009 and took a leave of absence. Wong was expected to return to council in September.
Wong died of liver failure on June 17, 2009 at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto.
He was a Liberal member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 2003 to 2006 representing the Greater Toronto Area riding of Markham. He served as a board member of the Markham Stouffville Hospital Foundation, the Saint John"s Rehabilitation Hospital Foundation and the York Region Police Services Board.