George was elected to the Brant County Board of Education in 1976 and was re-elected in 1978, 1980, and 1982. During this time she served as Board Chair for two consecutive years. She was elected to the Brantford City Council in 1985, winning the first seat in the city's third ward.
She argued in favour of restoring the death penalty at a 1986 meeting of the Association of Municipalities of Ontario.[2]
- Mayor
George was chosen as mayor of Brantford by a council vote in September 1987, after Dave Neumann resigned the office by virtue of being elected to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario. She defeated rival candidate John Starkey by a vote of six to four.[3]
George was mayor of Brantford when Massey Combines Corp. closed down operations in the city, throwing 425 people out of work.[4] Describing the closure as a terrible blow to the community, she worked with federal Member of Parliament Derek Blackburn to find new employment opportunities for those affected.[5] Later in the same year, she worked to obtain a grant from the provincial government to construct an industrial park in the city.[6]
Re-elected to a full term in 1988, George criticized the federal government's cuts to Via Rail service in late 1989.[7] She unexpectedly lost the mayoralty by a significant margin in the 1991 municipal election.[8]
George was instrumental in the decision by Council to construct a new Police Station and to turn a downtown department store into an award-winning library. She worked with a community committee to obtain $2.5M from the Provincial and Federal Governments to complete the restoration of the historic Capital Theater. This restoration led to the newly renamed Sanderson Centre for the Performing Arts being awarded the Prestigious "Theatre Preservation Award" presented by the League of Historic American Theatres. She was also instrumental in obtaining $7M in Federal and Provincial Funding to complete the construction of the Icomm Centre which has subsequently become the home of the Brantford Charity Casino.
In 1999, George chaired a citizen's committee that examined payment for councillors, police board members and appointees to Brantford Hydro.[9] She supported Mike Hancock's successful bid to become mayor of Brantford in 2003 and his bid for re-election in 2006.[10]