Telecommunications pioneer dead at 86: Sudbury entrepreneur Don Steel led by example.

AuthorUlrichsen, Heidi
PositionSMALL BUSINESS

A pioneer of Sudbury's business community died Aug. 19 at the age of 86.

Donald Steel was born in Drake, Sask. in 1928, and was raised in Teeswater, Ont. He settled in Sudbury in 1946, and established Steel Electronics in 1958, which sold two-way radios.

Along with business partner Tom Smith, Steel was at the centre of the newly conceived telecommunications industry.

Steel Electronics maintained the first communications system for the Sudbury detachment of the Ontario Provincial Police and installed the same systems for the Sudbury Regional Police Service and the Sudbury Fire Department.

Steel Electronics and its several subsidiaries went on to do everything from providing region-wide paging to servicing traffic lights to installing communications towers.

Steel founded long-time Sudbury ventures like True Steel Security and Steel Control Services.

He sold Steel Electronics and its subsidiaries to Northern Telephone in 1986, although he eventually became a silent partner to several of these companies. He remained involved in business until his death. "He retired four times, actually," said his daughter, Leslie Steel. "I think we had four retirement parties."

For his contribution to the Sudbury business community, Steel was recognized as Entrepreneur of the Generation during the Northern Ontario Business Awards in 2000. "One has to take risks to achieve success," Steel said, at the...

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