Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Bank Of Canada Names Panel To Pick Short List Of Women For New Bank Note

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Apr, 2016 12:12 PM
    OTTAWA — Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz is appointing a seven-member advisory council to develop a short list of Canadian women who could appear on the next series of bank notes.
     
    The bank has already issued an open call for nominations, which runs to April 15 and has had more than 18,000 submissions.
     
    Poloz says the council will develop a list of three to five candidates and he and Finance Minister Bill Morneau will discuss the names, with Morneau making the final decision.
     
    The council members are: writer Gurjinder Basran; Michael Redhead Champagne, youth activist and founder of AYO! (Aboriginal Youth Opportunities); Margaret Conrad, professor emerita, University of New Brunswick; Francine Descarries, sociology professor, Universite du Quebec a Montreal; Perdita Felicien, world champion hurdler; Merna Forster, historian and author; Dominic Giroux, president and vice-chancellor, Laurentian University.
     
     
    Poloz and Carolyn Wilkins, senior deputy governor, are making the announcement at Roberta Bondar Public School in Ottawa, where students from that school and from Ecole elementaire publique Gabrielle-Roy are showcasing art featuring inspirational women.
     
    "It’s great to see women from different times and places inspiring children today," Poloz said. "We hope that this new bank note will inspire all girls and boys to see themselves as notable—perhaps even one day 'bank-notable' —contributors to Canada."
     
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced last month that a woman would be featured on the next issue of bank notes due out in 2018.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Manitoba NDP Demand Liberals Drop Candidate Over Social Media Comments

    Manitoba NDP Demand Liberals Drop Candidate Over Social Media Comments
    Manitoba New Democrats say a Liberal candidate in the upcoming election should be dropped because of his social media comments.

    Manitoba NDP Demand Liberals Drop Candidate Over Social Media Comments

    Women Advised To Wait 2 Months To Get Pregnant After Travel To Zika Hotspots

    Women Advised To Wait 2 Months To Get Pregnant After Travel To Zika Hotspots
    The mosquito-borne virus has been potentially linked in Brazil to thousands of cases of newborns with abnormally small heads. It's believed mothers may have been infected during pregnancy

    Women Advised To Wait 2 Months To Get Pregnant After Travel To Zika Hotspots

    Charges Laid In Vancouver After Suspect Allegedly Tries To Throw Woman Off Pier

    Charges Laid In Vancouver After Suspect Allegedly Tries To Throw Woman Off Pier
    Police say they were called to the Coal Harbour waterfront, near Canada Place, at about 10 p.m. Monday after reports a young woman was trying to throw a 31-year-old woman off the pier and into the water below.

    Charges Laid In Vancouver After Suspect Allegedly Tries To Throw Woman Off Pier

    Canadian Triathlete Sweetland Changes Things Up Ahead Of Final Olympic Push

    Canadian Triathlete Sweetland Changes Things Up Ahead Of Final Olympic Push
    Like most triathletes, she usually spends the winter in warm climates preparing for the gruelling season ahead — not beside snow-covered British Columbia mountains.

    Canadian Triathlete Sweetland Changes Things Up Ahead Of Final Olympic Push

    Victims Of 'Internet Black Widow' Concerned Over Her Release In Nova Scotia

    Victims Of 'Internet Black Widow' Concerned Over Her Release In Nova Scotia
    Two men preyed upon by an elderly woman known as the "Internet Black Widow" say they fear for public safety as a Nova Scotia prison prepares to release her onto the street.

    Victims Of 'Internet Black Widow' Concerned Over Her Release In Nova Scotia

    Environment Shouldn't Become Arena For Political Fights: Justin Trudeau

    Environment Shouldn't Become Arena For Political Fights: Justin Trudeau
    Trudeau says politicians may have different views and backgrounds, but they can still come together in the fight against climate change.

    Environment Shouldn't Become Arena For Political Fights: Justin Trudeau