Vancouver Sun

Austin to be next lieutenant-governor

CEO of Metro Vancouver YWCA will be named to job by Trudeau

- ROB SHAW

VICTORIA Metro Vancouver YWCA CEO Janet Austin is B.C.’s next lieutenant-governor.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is set to make the announceme­nt this morning, just as Gov. Gen. Julie Payette arrives in Victoria for a scheduled tour of the legislatur­e.

Austin has been CEO of YWCA Metro Vancouver since 2002. She’s used her position as the head of one of the province’s most diversifie­d non-profit organizati­ons to advocate for more affordable child care and housing solutions, as well as a larger role for women in leadership positions.

She sits on more than a dozen boards or committees, including the TransLink board as vice-chairwoman, and has volunteere­d her time and expertise to a number of organizati­ons, including the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade, where she served as chairwoman in 2014, and the United Way of the Lower Mainland.

Austin will replace Judith Guichon, a cattle rancher from the Nicola Valley who was appointed B.C.’s 29th lieutenant-governor in 2012.

Under Austin’s leadership, the YWCA more than doubled its operationa­l budget from $12 million in 2003 to $29 million in 2017 and expanded its reach across the region with about 400 employees and more than 700 volunteers.

She has championed the YWCA’s entreprene­urial non-profit model, using revenue generated from the YWCA Beatty Hotel, currently undergoing an expansion, and a health-and-fitness centre in downtown Vancouver to offset the cost of providing the YWCA’s programs and services.

With Austin at the helm, the YWCA doubled its stock of affordable housing for single mothers and children, opening seven new housing communitie­s in Vancouver, Surrey, Coquitlam and North Vancouver.

She also made helping women achieve economic independen­ce a YWCA mission, a strategic focus now reflected in the organizati­on’s programmin­g and advocacy.

Before serving at the YWCA, Austin was the executive director of the Big Sisters of B.C. Lower Mainland. She was also a director of developmen­t services for B.C. Housing, overseeing the developmen­t of housing for seniors and families including social housing, transition housing, homeless shelters and group homes.

Among Austin’s many awards and recognitio­ns are the Queen’s Golden Jubilee Medal in 2002 and the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medal in 2012. In 2016, she was awarded the Order of B.C., the province’s highest honour, by Guichon in Victoria.

Born and raised in Calgary, Austin graduated from the University of Calgary in 1978 with a bachelor’s degree in English.

As lieutenant-governor, Austin will serve as the Queen’s personal representa­tive in B.C., reading annual throne speeches and providing royal assent to provincial laws.

Though largely a ceremonial position, it can also be called upon to decide the fate of the government, as happened under Guichon’s watch.

On June 29, 2017, Christy Clark’s government was voted down on a non-confidence vote by NDP and Green MLAs. Clark tried to convince Guichon to call an election, but Guichon accepted Clark’s resignatio­n and called upon Horgan to form a government.

 ??  ?? Janet Austin
Janet Austin

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