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Tracey Sauer has gone from serving as the mayor of a 988-person town to the president of a union representing 20,000 Saskatchewan workers.
Sauer is the new president of the Saskatchewan Government and General Employees’ Union (SGEU). She was elected after it was announced that long-time president Bob Bymoen would not run for re-election during the SGEU virtual convention held from April 29 to May 1. Bymoen was in the role for 20 years.
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Sauer has been a union activist and outspoken advocate for health care workers for over 35 years, starting out as a steward in her workplace before going on to hold many roles in the union, including being on the SGEU Provincial Council for 19 years and on SGEU’s Administrative Committee as the NUPGE Vice-President for five years. She comes from SGEU’s Health Sector and has served for the past two years as the Health Sector Chair and the Health Providers Bargaining Unit Chair. She also spent many years on the Health Providers Negotiating Committee and is a graduate of the Harvard University Trade Union Program.
Article content
Tracey Sauer has gone from serving as the mayor of a 988-person town to the president of a union representing 20,000 Saskatchewan workers.
Sauer is the new president of the Saskatchewan Government and General Employees’ Union (SGEU). She was elected after it was announced that long-time president Bob Bymoen would not run for re-election during the SGEU virtual convention held from April 29 to May 1. Bymoen was in the role for 20 years.
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Try refreshing your browser, or New SGEU president Tracey Sauer hopes to build solidarity across Sask. unions Back to video
By News Room
The SGEU has its first new president in a long-time.
Tracey Sauer was elected as leader at the organization’s first-ever virtual convention as she takes over from Bob Bymoen (Beamon) who retired after nearly 20 years in the position.
Sauer has been a union activist and outspoken advocate for healthcare workers for over 35 years. She was also the first woman elected as the mayor of Kelvington.
In a release, Sauer says the union has always been a politically active one and she is letting the government know they are ready to stand up for our rights and fight the longstand injustices to workers that have been highlighted throughout the pandemic.
To the Editor: The Saskatchewan government must acknowledge the crisis-level conditions in provincial correction centres and move quickly to address them, rather than claiming ignorance, says the union representing Saskatchewan corrections workers. “We have spoken out again and again about the dangerously overcrowded conditions in correctional centres,” said SGEU president Bob Bymoen. “Instead of taking action, the government has delayed the opening of facilities in Prince Albert and at Besnard Lake. They also cancelled an approved remand centre for Saskatoon, which has contributed to the severe overcrowding in all facilities. And, the government is surprised that inmates are complaining!” Bymoen was responding to an article in the August 12 issue of the Saskatoon Star Phoenix, “Province to look into inhumane jail conditions,” which referenced a recent letter by inmates at the Saskatoon Correctional Centre that describes conditions there as desperately overcrowded a