Texas McCombs to Launch Women Who Mean Business Program to Address National Decline of Women in the Workforce
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Pioneering businesswomen Gay Gaddis and Lynn Utter collaborate with alma mater to help women navigate career leadership.
Lynn Utter (left) and Gay Gaddis (right). Photo courtesy of McCombs School of Business, The University of Texas at Austin
One of our goals at McCombs is to foster principled leaders and this program will address a crucial need in the market. What’s even greater is to have two esteemed alums returning to campus to give back in such a meaningful way.
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OTTAWA, ON, April 7, 2021 /CNW/ - The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, today issued the following statement on World Health Day: Today, on World Health Day, we reflect on how the global COVID-19 pandemic has impacted our physical and mental health, and the pressure it has put on health systems in Canada and around the world. We also recognize how the pandemic has deepened existing inequalities in our societies that influence people s health, safety, and well-being. This year s theme – Building a fairer, healthier world – calls on us to address these barriers and inequalities so everyone can have equal opportunities to access quality health services and live a healthy life. Our fight against COVID-19 has shown that vulnerable communities are more exposed to the virus, and face barriers in accessing quality health care. They are also more likely to suffer the social and economic consequences of public health measures put in place to limi
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Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press
Britain’s Chancellor of the Exchequer did something last week that his Canadian counterpart has not: He tabled a budget.
Not only did Rishi Sunak lay out a five-year plan for spending and borrowing that sought to reassure taxpayers and investors that his government intends to address the mountains of debt Britain has accumulated during the COVID-19 pandemic, he stressed the urgent need to do so.
Trudeau vows to tackle she-cession after new report says pandemic has been worse for working women
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau used the occasion of International Women s Day to promise today that his government s economic recovery plans will be crafted to help women bounce back from the shutdown as a newly published report explains how women have been hit hard by the pandemic.
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CBC News ·
Posted: Mar 08, 2021 6:34 PM ET | Last Updated: March 8
Trudeau is promising that his economic recovery plan will be crafted to help women recover from the pandemic.(Protracts of Montreal)
Evening Brief: Steep post-pandemic climbs ahead for women By iPolitics. Published on Mar 8, 2021 6:03pm Photo: Carey Moulton, WikiMedia Commons
Good evening to you.
“There’s no doubt, when you add women, you change politics and you change it for the better.” That was the message from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau delivered today to the delegates attending the Daughters of the Vote.
“We are all stronger for the leadership of women and people of every gender identity,” he said, adding that a rollback of the progress women have made can’t be a legacy of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has seen many women leaving the workforce at a higher rate than men, and often taking on the greater share of caring for kids at home.