Yves Bérubé
Yves Bérubé was a Quebec engineer, politician and multiple-time minister.Biography
Bérubé was born in Montreal. His father was a journalist. He studied at the Collège de Saint-Laurent, then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he graduated in 1966 with a doctorate in mining engineering. In 1963 he had married Francine Leroux in Montreal.
His career started at the Iron Ore Company of Canada. After obtaining his doctorate, he became assistant, then associate professor at Laval University. During this period, he also taught in France and regularly acted as consultant for several companies and the federal government.
In 1976, he defeated Marc-Yvan Côté and was elected in Matane for the Parti Québécois. He became Minister of Lands and Forests as well as Minister of Natural Resources, then Minister of Energy and Resources when these two ministries were combined in 1979.
He was easily re-elected in the 1981 election. In the new government, he was Minister for Administration and President of the Treasury Board. In the March 1984 cabinet shuffle, he was made Minister of Education, a post he left in December upon the creation of the Ministry of Higher Education, Science and Technology.
As Minister of Energy and Resources, he defended the interest of the Bas-Saint-Laurent and Gaspésie region, eventually getting embroiled in a dispute with federal minister Pierre De Bané over the funding for the establishment of a paper mill in Matane. As Minister of Natural Resources, he presided over the creation of a state corporation for research, prospection and promotion of asbestos, and as President of the Treasury Board, he was instrumental in salary reductions that affection the Quebec public service in the early 80s.
On October 16, 1985, shortly after the resignation of René Lévesque as Prime Minister, Bérubé and two other ministers, Yves Duhaime and Clément Richard, resigned together. In the ensuing shuffle, four unelected ministers were named, the largest number since 1936 and the first time since 1970.
Following his resignation, he worked at SNC-Lavalin, becoming executive vice-president in 1991. The following year, he became president of the Société d'habitation et de développement de Montréal before dying the next year, on December 5, from a brain tumor. He is buried in Notre Dame des Neiges Cemetery. He had two daughters at the time of his death.