|
The 119th Annual Meeting will be held in Ottawa from Thursday May 31st to June 3rd - Location Extended Stay Deluxe Hotel, 141 Cooper St. Details to follow.
From the 118th Annual Meeting: Together We Are Stonger!
Marilyn McGonigal, Co Chair of the Local Arrangements Committee(LAC), and past president of the Provincial Council of Women of Manitoba, prepared the following report, on behalf of the LAC.
118th NCWC Annual Meeting June 2-5 2011 Report of the Local Arrangements Committee
By all accounts the National Council of Women of Canada 118th Annual General Meeting should not have been the huge success it turned out to be. Such meetings take a couple of years to properly organize; acceptable venues are hard to book on short notice; and finding sponsors and quality speakers available at the right times takes a lot of work and luck. In six months a talented, hard working committee of approximately 21 experienced members of the Councils of Women in Manitoba pulled it off.
Our LAC (Local Arrangements Committee) co-chaired by Monika Feist and Marilyn McGonigal, the then presidents of the Local and Provincial Councils of Women, gathered together the experts on hand to chair sub-committees for the Program, Venue, Finance/Budget, Registration, Fundraising/Sponsorship, Communications/Public Relations, Transportation/Billeting, Volunteers/Hospitality and Docket committees.
From November to May, the Committee met 17 times and came up with a Reception hosted by the Lieutenant Governor and his wife, three excellent programs with one lunch and two dinners plus two Saturday afternoon panels free to the public. Additional perquisites for our out-of-province delegates included a bus tour of the city, tours of the Hydro Building and the Museum of Human Rights, a trade show on Saturday with Made in Manitoba Products, a hospitality suite for the weary travellers and an interfaith service Sunday morning.
Two notable outcomes of this annual meeting were the launch of NCWC's Common Program for the next two years on the subject, Women and Mental Health, and a unique Joint Declaration signed by NCWC and Aboriginal Organizations and by delegates and Aboriginal sisters on Saturday afternoon.
Saturday's lunch program started with Ella Amir, Executive Director of AMI-Quebec Action on Mental Illness (formerly Alliance for the Mentally Ill), who spoke on "Who is Caring for the Caregiver". She presented compelling statistics and realities of women as caregivers of their family members in need of care due to mental illness, whether by reason of nature, injury or advancing age. A very informative Panel discussion led by Beverley Goodwin included Ann Pederson, a Director of the BC Centre for Excellence for Women's Health, Roberta Stout, an Aboriginal woman researcher with Prairie Women's Health Centre of Excellence focusing on Aboriginal Women's Health, and Lori Peters, Coordinator of the Provincial Eating Disorder Prevention and Recovery Program in Winnipeg, who spoke on Popular Culture’s Influence on the
Mental Health and Body Image of Girls and Women.
Over the next two years Councils of Women across Canada, supported by the National Council of Women of Canada Education Fund (NCWCEF) will explore the issues and solutions to help provide women with appropriate supports and urge governments to recognize and adopt critical improvements to deal with the needs of caregivers in Canada which will reach crisis proportions in future in an ageing population.
Also on Saturday we heard from Nahanni Fontaine, Special Advisor on Aboriginal Women's Issues for the Aboriginal Issues Committee of Cabinet (Manitoba Government), and Jeannette Corbiere Lavell, President of Native Women's Association of Canada, (NWAC) about the tragic and urgent issue of missing and murdered women in Canada. Barbara Houle, whose daughter was murdered in July 2009, shared her story with us to illustrate the pain and inhumanity of all the stories, for which we thank her. R. B. Russell Vocational High School students in their award winning Community Action Program performed a moving and compelling play they wrote about a classmate who suddenly disappears and how this unresolved mystery affects their lives over many years.
The Federal Government's role in not continuing the NWAC Sisters in Spirit Project which investigated and documented missing and murdered Aboriginal women in Canada was the inspiration for and subject of a Joint Declaration signed by NCWC, AMC (Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs) and NWAC, and delegates and individual Aboriginal women attending the Aboriginal Program Saturday. We made a commitment to work together with Aboriginal Women and the Federal Government on this and other critical and systemic issues of violence against Aboriginal women and girls. The Joint Declaration is a living document and has since been signed by other groups and will be circulated for support across Canada.
The Saturday evening banquet was a highlight with Heather Bishop's story of her intrepid struggles in the feminist movement and her songs inspiring women to continue the battle for equality and human rights. All this in a setting where Jaime Black's inspired art display of red dresses - The REDress Art Project - reminded us of missing and murdered Aboriginal Women.
Friday's Development Organization (DO) buffet and fundraiser organized by Arlene Draffin-Jones was an inspiring evening where we heard what women can do with a little seed money from the DO to get them started or to help existing women's projects far away and at home that promote a better life for women and families.
Sunday started with a special service, led by Carolyn Garlich, where we remembered those that have gone before. Accompanied by Karen Hoeft on the keyboard, we sang 3 songs, and remembered the legacy left behind by these amazing women. Our business meeting ended Sunday at noon, with Denise Mattok as the new President of NCWC.
We were fortunate the venue at the Viscount Gort Hotel came available for our meeting just as renovations were completed. The meeting and events were fully subscribed and well received. The Local Arrangements Committee is very grateful for the energy and expertise of all the committee members and many volunteers who made it possible to show members and friends from other provinces some excellent hospitality and a good time in Manitoba.
LAC members: Maxine Balbon, Peggy Barker, Lori Blande, Joan Butcher, Arlene Draffin-Jones, Catherine Dunn, Monika Feist, Elizabeth Fleming, Helen Garrity, Susan Hancharyk, Karen Hoeft, Barb Kendel, Leona MacDonald, Marilyn McGonigal, Irene McKenzie, Leonore Saunders, Mary Scott, Bonnie Siemens, Rokhaya Soumbounou, Elaine Stevenson, Kelly-Ann Stevenson, Sally Thomas, Carolyn Garlich, Barb Toews.
Appreciation to our Sponsors
We wish to thank the following donors and supporters to the 118th NCWC Annual Meeting, held in Winnipeg June 2nd to June 5th
Major Donors
The Winnipeg Free Press
National Council of Women of Canada Education Fund
The Premier of Manitoba and Manitoba Status of Women
Aboriginal and Northern Affairs
Provincial Council of Women of Manitoba, Inc.
Manitoba Government and General Employees Union MGEU
Manitoba Hydro
Native Clan, Inc.
Councillor Ross Eadie and The Lord Selkirk West Kildonan Community Committee
Canadian Union of Public Employees CUPE
Winnipeg Labour Council
CommTech Office Services
Craig Steffano
Council of Women of Winnipeg
Life Members Association, Councils of Women of Manitoba
University Women's Club of Winnipeg
Murdina Brownlee
Muriel Smith
Leonore Saunders
Mary Scott
Donations to the Door Prizes
Travel Manitoba
Epicure Selections
Lori Blande
Click here to see a list of locations where the National Council of Women of Canada has met since 1894. This is the eighth time it has been held in Winnipeg. | 












  |