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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1985-3-20, Page 67Increase political output Municipal representatives from.across the province were told to expect more political input from ural women as they work to bridge the gap between town and country and strengthen rural life in general. Speaking at the anal section of the Association of Municipalities of Ontario an- nual conference in Toronto recently, a panel of four women urged local political figures to seek out the advice and talents of women, and support them in their bid to have a say in Municipal political life. Molly McGhee, OMAF special adviser and author of Women in Rural Life, told her audience to expect increased municipal involvement on the part of neral women. "Decisions of local government's have a profound effect on women's lives. I predict that before long women will take much more action in local politics," she said. "So no one should be surprised, say five years down the line, when women become the vocal majority." McGhee said that barriers of the past - low self esteem, lack of information - are crumbling as women seek to express and inform themselves through network groups, for example, and enact their burgeoning desire to have a say in local political decisions. Brenda Ward, a Perth County farmer and executive board member of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture, said that elected municipal representatives have an obligation to first, read McGhee's Women in Rural Life report, and second, work towards implement- ing its recommendations. Politicians must never forget how closely the economic well being of urban areas, and the country at large, is tied into the health of the agriculture sector, she said. "You need us to turn around the countay's economy," Ward stated. She noted that aocessbile, affordable child care services are of utmost concern to rural women. The pressing need for succi programs becomes even more evident in light of statistics which state that 56 per cent of all farm injuries happens to children three years old and under. "How many of these little people are maimed for life because of lack of sufficient child care?" Ward asked. She praised studies being conducted by OMAF into the child care issue, and urged municipal politicians to press for the creation of adequate centres. Patricia Bailey, deputy reeve of the Town of Wingham and co-owner of Sunrise Dairy, spoke from experience when she confessed that the road to rural politics was not an easy one for women. However, qualities like honesty, dedication, and hard work make their own inroads in the political arena. Women, she said, must put these attributes to work for them "How can we be fairly represented unless more women take pari?" she questioned. "All I hear are drains, roads, sewers..." Where, she asks, is the concern for child care programs, and the protest against the elin en- ation of indirect subsidies? Valerie Bolton, executive director of Women Today of Huron County, said the changing role of women can be witnessed in the growth of informal "kitchen sessions" into major movements like the Geneva Park Turning Point conference. Well organized sessions like Turning Point turn to page rya Wise SHOPPERS Shop at. 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