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Happy New Year
Our
best wishes for 2007 to all retired teacher organization
Directors, executive members and your families. As 2007 unfolded,
the efforts of ACER-CART on your behalf have begun to bear fruit.
Your support for our initiatives is appreciated
ACER-CART
Policy Action Update
Motions from the 2006 AGM that have been acted upon:
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Investigate the implications of being registered as a charity
under the Income Tax Act. This is continuing, but is looking unlikely due to the
federal requirements for charitable organizations. It may be discussed further
at the 2007 AGM.
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Become a member in the Canadian Caregiver Coalition for 2006-07.
Fees for the ACER-CART Executive Director, Pierre Drouin, were paid. He
continues in his role as a member of their Board of Directors, and is the
secretary-treasurer.
-
Continue to advocate for the implementation of our health care
policies. Ongoing.
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Notice of Motion:
The motion to increase the fee from 20 cents per member to 25 cents will be
brought to the 2007 AGM. NBSRT has already endorsed this change unanimously at
their semiannual meeting.
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A new format for Financial Statements will be introduced at the
2007 AGM.
Affiliations
Common
Front on Pension Splitting
This has grown from three to 23 provincial and national
associations of retirees/seniors representing 2.6 million people.
ACER-CART’s major roles included research of existing policies,
surveys of retirees/seniors, document translation, preparation of
media releases, etc. ACER-CART VP Helen Biales’s presentation to
the Federal Standing Committee on Finance advocating fairness was
much appreciated. After the “Pension Tension Conference” held on
October 3, 2006, a pension splitting bill passed in the House of
Commons. Continued vigilance is needed to ensure the legislation
is not revised, diluted, or deferred.
Congress of National Seniors’ Organizations (CNSO)
With ACER-CART’s assistance in preparing documents, CNSO will
apply for incorporation. Government established a Seniors’
Secretariat of various ministry bureaucrats and is still looking
at the mandate and a method of appointing an advisory council.
ACER-CART Past President Val Alcock is in her second year on the
Coordinating Committee, and Executive Director Pierre Drouin is a
technical advisor.
Incorporation of ACER-CART
The process is complete and letters patent have been granted,
pending approval of some amendments to the ACER-CART Bylaws. A review of these
required changes is underway.
Bylaw Amendments
Directors have participated in the development of a proposed
updating of the ACER-CART
bylaws. This began as part of the work needed to comply with the
requirements of incorporation as a nonprofit corporation. Two
additional amendments have been proposed for the ACER-CART
Bylaws by RTO/ERO. These proposals, to be discussed at the 2007
AGM, are:
a)
to change the number of regions [Bylaw 10-A-1]
from three (Atlantic; Centre; West) to four regions, with the
Centre region split into two (AREQ, QART, QPARSE, SERFNB as
region 2, and RTO/ERO as region 3). The remaining Atlantic
members would be region 1 and the West becomes region 4.
b)
to add a new provision [Bylaw 9-H-11] stating
that voting to amend existing Bylaws IX-I-2 (adopting bylaws,
policies and procedures) or Bylaw X-I-3 (establishing fees to be
paid by member organizations) should be a weighted vote with
Directors casting votes equal to one vote per each dollar of fee
paid by their organizations. Executive members would have one
vote.
Committee Reports
Pension and Retirement
Income Committee (Helen Biales,
Chair)
The
Committee’s main activities revolved around the brief to the
Federal Standing Committee on Finance, and the Common Front on
Pension Splitting. Successful results and the establishment of
strong contacts with representatives from other organizations and
government were the result.
Communications Committee
(Vaughn Wadelius, Chair)
Updating of the
website which has taken place since the last newsletter includes a
redesign of the index page to better feature current items of
interest, a change in the use of the “What’s New?” page to
providing a direct link to the most recent newsletters of member
organizations, updating of the listings on the Members,
Meetings, and Links pages, and using a slide show
format to exhibit the 2006 AGM photos.
It is proposed
that webmasters/administrators of retired teacher organizations’
websites form an electronic/internet group to discuss technical
items of interest. Please confirm with the Communications
Committee chair whether or not there is interest by your official.
The President Comments
(Pat
Brady)
I
hope that all of you had a great Christmas and are looking forward to “the best”
in 2007. Another year of the retirement benefits that we’ve all earned.
My
comments for this issue will be brief as the major activities of
ACER-CART since last I wrote have been thoroughly aired above.
There are two items I will comment on: pension income splitting
and the progress toward an effective national seniors’ consortium.
Through the efforts of many seniors groups, ACER-CART affiliates,
and individual members of our affiliates, the federal government
DID listen and instituted the pension income splitting concepts we
were promoting. The collective actions of all of us did bear
fruit. Sometimes we can influence “city hall”.
Congratulations to all of us and sincere “THANK YOUs” for your
efforts.
The
second issue is our continuing drive to see a national
organization of seniors groups which can speak to governments on
those issues that affect all of us. Progress is being made –
slowly. Val Alcock (our Immediate Past President) and Pierre
Drouin (our Executive Director) have had meaningful input into the
activities of CNSO. The federal government is, very gradually,
working toward the establishment of a Seniors Secretariat.
The
benefit of one national seniors group speaking to one government
minister charged with the welfare of seniors are obvious. The
details, operation, and format are still being considered. One of
the major impediments to seniors having meaningful input to the
federal government is the funding of the national seniors
organization. It is my belief that if the federal government can
afford to fund other national “lobby” groups (arts, status women,
cultural and ethnic organizations) it can certainly find funds to
permit the effective operation of an organization of seniors. We
will continue to press the federal government and opposition
parties on this matter.
Once again, let me wish you a productive and enjoyable 2007.
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