Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Sophie Gregoire Trudeau To Open TSX To Mark International Day Of The Girl

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Oct, 2016 11:08 AM
    TORONTO — Sophie Gregoire Trudeau will open the trading day at the Toronto Stock Exchange on Tuesday to mark International Day of the Girl.
     
    She is collaborating with three charitable organizations — G(irls)20, Plan International Canada and FitSpirit — to illustrate how important it is for girls to have equal opportunities to boys.
     
    Farah Mohamed, the CEO of G(irls)20, said it's important for people to realize that investing time and resources into girls pays off.
     
    Mohamed said G(irls)20 "literally invests in girls and women around the world," by training, mentoring and advocating for them.
     
    She said the organization also helps girls launch their own social profit initiatives.
     
     
     
    The organization frames women's and girl's equality differently from other organizations, using financial language. Mohamed says girls are themselves resource in which businesses and governments should invest, noting that they have a high return on investment.
     
    Mohamed says when women earn a salary, they tend to put most of the money they make back into the community, which in turn raises the GDP.
     
    She adds that using this type of language breaks through to people who are more business-minded. "We started out advocating to G20 leaders," she said, "and they're all about the GDP."
     
    Mohamed says it's natural to involve Gregoire Trudeau — who she describes as a "champion for girls and young women" — in the effort.
     
    Gregoire Trudeau has previously worked with Plan Canada as an ambassador for the organization's Because I Am A Girl initiative, and has spoken fairly regularly about issues of gender equality since her husband became Prime Minister.
     
    After opening the TSX, Gregoire Trudeau will lead a discussion with Canadian girls, "showing that girls and women belong in the seats of classrooms, boardrooms, trading floors, Senate, courtrooms, press rooms and corner offices," says a Plan International Canada news release.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Hall Of Fame Figure Skating Coach Ellen Burka Dies At Age 95

    Canadian Hall Of Fame Figure Skating Coach Ellen Burka Dies At Age 95
    Burka, one of the world's most respected coaches and choreographers, died Monday night, according to Skate Canada.

    Canadian Hall Of Fame Figure Skating Coach Ellen Burka Dies At Age 95

    Two Canadians Make Short List For Prestigious Man Booker Prize

    Two Canadians Make Short List For Prestigious Man Booker Prize
    Vancouver-born Madeleine Thien and Montreal native David Szalay were nominated in London early Tuesday along with two American and two British authors also vying for the prestigious award.

    Two Canadians Make Short List For Prestigious Man Booker Prize

    Youth Faces Indecent Act Charge After Alleged Indecent Act At UVic

    Youth Faces Indecent Act Charge After Alleged Indecent Act At UVic
    Police in Saanich, B.C, say a young man has been arrested for allegedly performing an indecent act at the University of Victoria.

    Youth Faces Indecent Act Charge After Alleged Indecent Act At UVic

    Late Summer Weather To Linger In Much Of Canada, Says The Weather Network

    Late Summer Weather To Linger In Much Of Canada, Says The Weather Network
    Autumn will bring near to above seasonal temperatures across much of Canada, according to this year's Fall Forecast from The Weather Network.

    Late Summer Weather To Linger In Much Of Canada, Says The Weather Network

    B.C. First Nations Criticize Trudeau Government For Approving Site C Permits

    B.C. First Nations Criticize Trudeau Government For Approving Site C Permits
    OTTAWA — British Columbia First Nations leaders and activists condemned the federal government's approach to the Site C dam project during a Parliament Hill rally today.

    B.C. First Nations Criticize Trudeau Government For Approving Site C Permits

    British Columbia Foster Parents Lose Appeals To Adopt Metis Toddler

    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia foster family has lost its fight in the province's highest court to keep a Metis toddler they have raised since birth.

    British Columbia Foster Parents Lose Appeals To Adopt Metis Toddler