Hear, hear,   lets have more of it.

John Redpath


----- Original Message ----- 
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, December 10, 2003 11:43 AM
Subject: [Futurework] women in public office sometimes different


> I agree.  Women sometimes do govern differently.
> arthur
>
> When the mayor said 'cheese,' everyone in town had a feast
> 10 December 2003
> The Globe and Mail
> Vancouver BC
> As the first female mayor of the northern B.C. town of Houston, Sharon
Smith
> was proud of her accomplishments. So was her husband. So proud that he
> snapped photos of Her Worship wearing the chain of office - and nothing
> else.
> Everything was fine until photos of a smiling Ms. Smith were allegedly
> copied from her home computer during a house party her kids threw, then
> circulated around the mill town of 4,300.
> Now, the risqué shots of the toned and tan mayor are the talk of the town
in
> coffee shops and on mill floors. In a town so small that gossip travels
> nearly as fast as the Internet, the mayor's photos have made quite a
splash.
>
> Ms. Smith, 48, a former nurse, councillor and mother of three boys, is
> mortified - but unrepentant. In a letter to the local weekly paper, Ms.
> Smith said the photos were taken during a private moment with her husband.
> "My privacy has been violated in every sense," Ms. Smith wrote in her
letter
> earlier this month to Houston Today. "These photos are private property
> belonging to my husband and me. I am very hurt and embarrassed."
> She said the photos are stolen property and warned that people who
> "knowingly" possess them are breaking the law.
> Ms. Smith did not return phone calls made to her Houston office yesterday.
> But in an interview with a Vancouver newspaper, Ms. Smith said her husband
> took the photos because "he was proud of the fact that I was mayor.
> "We made sure that we were not infringing on anyone else. It was a private
> moment and that's all it was."
> In one full-length photo (a portion of which appears at left) she is
seated
> naked, with the mayor's medallion draped around her neck.
> Ms. Smith told the Vancouver Province she did not intend to disgrace the
> mayor's office, and has no plans to resign. She said most townspeople
stand
> by her and have offered support.
> However, one former town councillor is aghast at Ms. Smith's behaviour,
> calling it a "catastrophic error in judgment" and demanding she resign.
> Nipper Kettle said that he recognized the location of the photos as the
> mayor's office and that many Houston residents are unimpressed with the
> mayor's defensive reaction.
> Mr. Kettle said Ms. Smith should have apologized to residents rather than
> play the role of crime victim.
> "I pretty much condemn what she's done," said Mr. Kettle, who worked with
> Ms. Smith when both were councillors. "To have pictures on your computer
at
> home is not a big deal, I guess. That's within your rights.
> "But when you go down to the municipal office that is paid for by the
> taxpayers and do those kinds of things and wearing the chain of office,
> that's where people see the wrongdoing here. People are feeling let down
and
> very distraught.
> "It's something that shouldn't have been done because that shows total
> disrespect for the office that you hold."
> RCMP Sergeant Dave Fenson confirmed that police are investigating a theft
> from the Smith home in early November.
> Sgt. Fenson said it's believed someone with access to the computer took
the
> photos. But it's not a break-and-enter.
> Mr. Kettle said that according to town rumour, the photographs were stolen
> during a party thrown by Ms. Smith's sons when their parents were out.
> A young guest playing on the computer burned a disk of the photos and they
> began circulating around town. The RCMP would not confirm this version.
> Meanwhile, town administrator Jack Mussallem described Ms. Smith as a
> hardworking mayor.
> "All I can tell you is that she works very hard on behalf of the community
> and is very diligent about her work."
> An avid outdoorswoman, Ms. Smith was featured in a recent B.C. magazine
that
> showed pictures of her skiing with her family and posing with the carcass
of
> a moose she had shot. In the article, Ms. Smith said she saw herself as a
> role model to kids and women in the community.
> "If you set your goals, set your sights on something you want to do, you
can
> achieve it. You don't have to come from a special family or special
> background; if you want to be there, just work hard and you can do it."
> -----------------------
>
> _______________________________________________
> Futurework mailing list
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> http://scribe.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework


_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://scribe.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to