The Genesis of MURA/ARUM
In 2013, John Dealy, former Dean of 鶹AV’s Faculty of Engineering, and founding Chair of the Retiree Affairs Committe (RAC) of the 鶹AV Association of University Teachers (MAUT) and Ron Critchley, President of 鶹AV Non-Academic Staff Association (MUNASA) met with recently appointed Principal Suzanne Fortier to propose the formation of a University-wide retiree association. The new Principal agreed wholeheartedly with their proposal and recommended that a Campus Community Retiree Committee be set up to study and operationalize the project.
A small workgroup was therefore formed in 2014: the Campus Community Retiree Sub-Committee, whose mandate was to create a unified alliance among 鶹AV retirees from all employment categories, to obtain recognition from the University, to build a sense of community with former faculty and staff, and to be a voice for common concerns, such as post-retirement benefits.
The members of the committee included John Dealy, Ron Critchley, Meira Terk (campus community officer at University Advancement), Kohur GowriSankaran (also known as “Gowri,” then Chair of MAUT-RAC), and two recent 鶹AV retirees: Linda Montreuil and Judy Pharo. They invited members of 鶹AV unions: Service Employees’ Union (SEU) and 鶹AV Non-Academic Certified Association (MUNACA) to provide input throughout the discussion process.
During 2014, the sub-committee members researched best practices regarding executive and board structures, constitutions, and by-laws for retiree associations at other universities. The Association’s By-Laws, Constitution, and a Memorandum of Agreement were drafted and a formal introductory letter announcing the launch of the Association was distributed. During the summer of 2014, MAUT Council, MAUT-RAC, MUNACA, SEU, and MUNASA provided their approval in principle for the proposed University-wide retiree association.
On November 5, 2014, the official launch of the Association took place in the Gold Room of the Faculty Club. Ron Critchley, together with Kohur GowriSankaran, John Dealy and David Roseman (MUNACA) conducted the meeting. Fifty 鶹AV retirees participated in this watershed event in MURA’s history. Kohur GowriSankaran proposed Ginette Lamontagne for the role of President and Henry Leighton as Vice-President (External), and Ron Critchley nominated Wes Cross as Treasurer. Ginette Lamontagne proposed Joan Wolforth as Vice-President (Internal). Participants were invited to volunteer themselves or to nominate other colleagues for a particular role until nearly a dozen members were selected to form the initial interim Board: Nick Acheson, Jane Amro, Sandra Emery, Eleanor MacLean, Kate Maguire, Kathy Mayhew, Judy Pharo, Ross Smith, Judy Stymest, Beverlea Tallant, and Helen Van Eyk.
Over the course of the next few months, the Interim Executive obtained a charter for a non-profit association from the Registraire des entreprises du Québec to formally establish l’Association des retraité(e)s de l’Université 鶹AV (ARUM) / 鶹AV Retiree Association (MURA). In addition, the draft constitution and by-laws were revised, approved by the MURA-ARUM Interim Board and translated into French. An annual fee for membership was set at $25 and a bank account was opened at the Bank of Montreal. In March, a provisional bilingual website was launched.View an informative article about MURA published in the in February, 2015.
The founding MURA meeting took place on June 1st, 2015, with nearly eighty 鶹AV retirees present. This was a major milestone for the University as 鶹AV finally had its own formally registered non-profit university-wide organization, something that a number of universities across Canada had since the 1980’s.The four founding members of the interim Executive (G. Lamontagne, H. Leighton, J. Wolforth and W. Cross) were elected. Members elected to the founding Board were: Nick Acheson, Jane Amro, Michel Ferland, Eleanor MacLean, Kate Maguire, Kathy Mayhew, Judy Pharo, and Beverlea Tallant.
In 2016, MURA-ARUM became the official 鶹AV representative to the (CURAC), a national federation of university retiree associations that represents 40 associations. A forum for all university retirees, CURAC speaks publicly on issues of concern to the over fifteen thousand individual college and university retirees across Canada. CURAC holds annual conferences during which interesting papers and programs are presented and workshops concerning best practices are conducted. The formal relationships that MURA-ARUM has established with the University and the various unions and associations have generated considerable attention as best practices.1
MURA is grateful to the four associations and unions SEU, MUNACA, MAUT and MUNASA who pledged $1000 each in start-up funding. In addition, Kohur GowriSankaran (Gowri), Chair of the MAUT-RAC proposed an agreement to MURA whereby the academic and librarian retirees who were members of RAC, would also become MURA members in exchange for a RAC contribution of $1800 per year for the first two years. This represented almost half of the annual fee paid to RAC by its 180 members. Aside from this financial support, during Gowri’s tenure, MAUT-RAC and MURA established a collaborative relationship by keeping each other fully informed of their proposed activities and jointly hosting several events each year.
To provide a secure financial base for MURA, Robert Huot, the president of SEU Trades (Downtown), proposed a funding formula that would provide MURA with ongoing revenues in exchange for free membership for all of their retirees, present and future. This formula was a fee of 0,25 $ a pay or $6.50 per year for each of the members of the unions and associations. This formula became a benchmark for the negotiation of partnership agreements, which were signed with the three major associations and unions: SEU Trades – Downtown, MUNACA, MUNASA (2016).
In 2016, MURA began discussions with MAUT President Terry Hébert and his colleagues with the goal of reaching a formal agreement. Governance issues were first addressed. It was agreed that MAUT would retain responsibility for representing the specific interests of retired academics to the University while MURA would be responsible for all other retiree-related issues. In June 2017, while talks continued, MAUT provided an interim funding of $4500 to MURA.
Discussions turned to the financial aspects of the agreement under Alenoush Saroyan’s presidency. In solidarity with 鶹AV associations and unions and recognizing MURA’s onerous responsibilities that include maintaining annual Quebec registration as a non-profit organization, covering liability insurance for Board members, underwriting annual financial reviews, paying an annual membership fee to CURAC, and sending representatives to CURAC’s annual conferences, in addition to serving the entire community of 鶹AV retirees, the MAUT Executive Committee adopted the annual $6.50 per member funding formula, albeit retaining part of that amount to fund the Retiree Affairs Committee (RAC). MURA accepted and on January 30, 2018, the agreement was officially signed.
In 2017, MURA-ARUM obtained a seat on the Staff Benefits Advisory Committee (SBAC) and a MURA Board Member, Kathy Mayhew, assumed the responsibility of conveying the perspective of retirees to the committee. The following year, a Statement of Principles was signed with the University Administration that provided MURA with office space and access to rooms for events, as well as a recognized status to collaborate with human resources on retiree issues.
Using social media platforms, MURA communicates its plethora of events (concerts, lectures, visits to museums, walking tours), workshops, including, for example, financial and pension planning, and a variety of other activities (book clubs, cycling excursions, golfing, knitting and restaurant groups). So far, these events and activities have attracted more than 400 retirees who are MURA members. As an Association, MURA-ARUM is committed to expanding its membership, to nurturing its existing activities and relationships, and to creating a vibrant network of active retirees connected to each other and to the wider 鶹AV community.
Ginette Lamontagne, Founding President
July Pharo, Founding Member
1 CURAC's annual conference for 2021 was hosted by MURA at 鶹AV to mark the University's Bicentennial.
Land Acknowledgement and Statement on Equity, Diversity and Inclusion
鶹AV is on land which has long served as a site of meeting and exchange amongst Indigenous peoples, including the Haudenosaunee and Anishinabeg nations. We acknowledge and thank the diverse Indigenous peoples whose presence marks this territory on which peoples of the world now gather. The 鶹AV Retiree Association respects and honours the diverse histories, languages, cultures and experiences of First Nations, Métis, Inuit, and First Peoples of Canada.
We extend this respect and honour to the diversity in our community that includes but is not limited to race, ethnicity, national origin, gender identity, gender expression, sexual orientation, age, disability, socio-economic status, class, and religion. We support the 2020-2025 strategy for EDI from 鶹AV.