Difference between revisions of "Talk:European Centre for Public Affairs"

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6 of 18 DOCUMENTS
 
 
PR Week
 
 
April 23, 2004
 
 
ECPA TO EDUCATE ON CHANGES TO EU
 
 
BYLINE: By Richard Cann
 
 
SECTION: PUBLIC AFFAIRS, Pg. 10
 
 
LENGTH: 116 words
 
 
 
The European Centre for Public Affairs (ECPA) is gearing up for a year of change in the EU with a series of conferences to educate PA practitioners.
 
ECPA executive director Tom Spencer said the conferences would help practitioners understand the impact of changes such as the introduction of new member states and an agreement on the Constitutional Treaty.
 
The first conference, 'Dealing With the New Brussels X', takes place in Brussels from 26 to 28 April. Speakers include DG Enlargement deputy head of cabinet Christian Danielsson, and EP Environment head of the secretariat Francis Jacobs.
 
Further programmes include 'EU Process After Enlargement' in Brussels on 27 May.
 
 
LOAD-DATE: April 26, 2004
 
 
LANGUAGE: English
 
 
PUB-TYPE: Magazine
 
 
Copyright 2004 Haymarket Publishing Services Ltd
 
 
 
 
 
 
7 of 18 DOCUMENTS
 
 
Canadian Corporate Newswire
 
 
November 19, 2003 Wednesday
 
 
Transport Canada: Change in Status of Parc Downsview Park
 
 
LENGTH: 1614 words
 
 
OTTAWA, ONTARIO--Transport Minister and Minister responsible for Parc Downsview Park Inc David Collenette today announced that Parc Downsview Park (PDP) Inc. is now reporting directly to Parliament.
 
Downsview Park is a unique urban park and recreational green space created from the remaining lands of the former Canadian Forces Base Toronto. It is operated by Parc Downsview Park Inc. which is mandated to manage and develop part of the Downsview lands as an urban recreational greenspace to be held in trust and perpetuity for the enjoyment of future generations.
 
"By making Parc Downsview Park Inc. an agent Crown corporation, the Government of Canada is further enhancing the accountability of PDP. Furthermore, PDP will now report directly to Parliament through the Minister of Transport, its designated minister," said Mr. Collenette. "The change in agent status will also pro-vide PDP with increased financial flexibility, enabling it to complete the full development of the park in the shortest time frame," he added.
 
The corporation is still expected to be self-financing, to develop Downsview Park using the revenues from leasing or selling its commercial lands, to retain at least half of the Downsview site as parkland, and to accommodate a continuing military presence on the site. The park, located in Toronto's North York commu-nity, will be more than half the size of the Downsview Lands.
 
The change in status ensures that PDP conducts its business in accordance with Part X of the Financial Administration Act. In particular, each PDP director will be appointed by the appropriate Minister, with the approval of the governor-in-council. Parc Downsview Park Inc. has a twelve-member board of directors. The change in status necessitated the re-affirmation of the current board of directors by order-in-council, and two new members have also been appointed.
 
"I am pleased that the current board of directors, chaired by Dr. David Bell, has agreed to continue to serve in the same capacity," said Mr. Collenette. "In addition, I am happy Mr. Bailey and Dr. Kerbel have agreed to accept positions on the board, and I know their experience will complement the skills of the exist-ing board of directors."
 
"With close to 600 acres of land, Downsview Park represents one of the largest urban redevelopment opportunities in Canada," said Mr. Collenette. "I wish the board well as they undertake their important work which will benefit all residents of Toronto.
 
The Government of Canada is following through on its 1994 Budget commitment to develop and manage the Downsview Lands, while ensuring that it be held in perpetuity and in trust primarily as a unique urban recreational green space for the enjoyment of future generations.
 
Transport Canada is online at  http://www.tc.gc.ca. Subscribe to news releases and speeches at  http://www.tc.gc.ca/listserv/, and keep up-to-date on the latest from Transport Canada.
 
BACKGROUNDER
 
PARC DOWNSVIEW PARK INC. BOARD OF DIRECTORS
 
John S. Bailey is a new appointment to the board of Parc Downsview Park Inc. He was appointed chair-man and chief executive officer of Famous Players in 2000 and served in that position until he retired in March 2003. He also served as President from 1997, chief operating officer from December 1995 and execu-tive vice president from 1992. Prior to joining Famous Players, Mr. Bailey was senior vice-president of finan-cial planning for Paramount Picture Corporation. Mr. Bailey has contributed his expertise to the National Film Board, the Canadian Film Centre and the Toronto International Film Festival.
 
Dr. David V.J. Bell currently serves as professor in Environmental Studies and the Director of the York University Centre for Applied Sustainability. Dr. Bell, a political scientist, received his undergraduate degree from York University in 1965, then his Ph.D from Harvard University in 1969. He has served on the Environ-mental Task Force of the City of Toronto, as a member of the Toronto Sustainability Task Force and the To-ronto Sustainability Round Table. A consultant and advisor to governments at the local, provincial and na-tional level in Canada and to the Government of Jamaica, Dr. Bell has also authored many papers on sus-tainability.
 
Douglas Birkenshaw currently serves as a Senior Associate with Bregman & Hamann Architects in To-ronto and has worked at a number of architectural firms in Canada and abroad. Mr. Birkenshaw has been involved in many projects, including the Renaissance ROM project in Toronto, the Institute for Computing, Information and Cognitive Systems at the University of British Columbia, the Integrated Learning Centre at Queen's University, and the expansion of the Metro Toronto Convention Centre. He has lectured at many universities, written numerous research publications and holds Bachelor Degrees in Architecture and Envi-ronmental Studies.
 
Rina Camarra is currently part of the management of Mastro's restaurant and operates a consultancy business for restaurants in the areas of marketing, promotion and operations. Ms. Camarra is a long-time member of the Italian Chamber of Commerce and is an active member of the Business Improvement Asso-ciation involved in the revitalization of the Wilson Avenue Business areas. She was a member of the Com-munity Advisory Panel involved with the planning and development of the Downsview Lands and has had involvement with a number of local charities.
 
Elizabeth Dowdeswell has pursued a career in the public service which has spanned provincial, federal and international borders. Currently she serves as President of the newly-created Nuclear Waste Manage-ment Organization; a Visiting Professor in Global Health, Genomics and Ethics at the University of Toronto; a Commissioner of the Commission on Globalization; and an associate fellow of the European Centre for Public Affairs. Ms. Dowdeswell is a past Assistant Deputy Minister of Environment Canada, former Under Secretary-General of the United Nations and former Executive Director of the United Nations Environment Program. She holds a Master's Degree in Behavioral Sciences from Utah State University and numerous honourary doctorates.
 
Dr. Jeffrey Gordon Kerbel is a new appointment to the board of directors of Parc Donswiew Parc Inc. He currently serves as the president and chief executive officer of Brampton Brick Limited. Dr. Kerbel holds a degree in veterinary medicine from the University of Guelph and also attended Cornell University. He has served as the chairman of the board of directors of Brampton Brick Limited and director of Richvale York. Dr. Kerbel was awarded Brampton Business Person of the Year in 1992.
 
Reginald W. Lewis holds a Certified General Accountant designation, a diploma in Engineering and is also a member of the Chartered Institute of Secretaries and Administrators. He has previously served as chairman of Defence Construction Limited, chairman of TEDCO and as a board member of CN Tower Lim-ited. He has a long and distinguished military service record with the British Army and then the Canadian Army Active Reserves, in which he was appointed as Chief of Reserves (Major General) in 1985, and Hon-ourary Colonel, Royal Regiment of Canada in 1991. Mr. Lewis, a member of the Order of Canada (1986), and has been actively involved in numerous community and military clubs and associations.
 
John W. McCool holds an Advanced Management Programme degree from Harvard University Graduate School of Business Administration. He has served as President of the Bank of Montreal realty Corporation and is the past President and CEO of the Rostland Corporation, a private real estate development company. Now retired, he works as a volunteer for a number of charitable organizations.
 
Thomas H.B. Symons was educated at the University of Toronto and at Oxford and Harvard Universities. He is a professor and writer in the field of Canadian Studies, contemporary intellectual and rural issues, and international academic and cultural relations. He has served as vice-president of the Social Sciences sand Humanities Research Council of Canada, and as a special advisor to the Secretary of State on post-secondary education and human rights. He is the author of numerous studies and articles dealing with edu-cation, public affairs, heritage preservation, human rights, and international relations. In 1998, Professor Sy-mons received the Governor General's International Award for Canadian Studies. Mr. Symons is a past President of Trent University and a Companion of the Order of Canada.
 
Toni Varone received his bachelor of arts degree from York University, and also attained a bachelor of commerce from the University of Windsor. He is currently completing a bachelor of administrative studies from York University. He is currently president of Varone Group Inc., a group of companies involved in the hospitality, home building and property ownership industries. He is a past chairman of Villa Charities Inc. and Columbus Centre, as well as a past director of the Northwestern General Hospital. Mr. Varone is currently a director of Mount Sinai Hospital Foundation, which is an internationally recognized academic health centre affiliated with the University of Toronto.
 
This news release may be made available in alternative formats
 
for persons with visual disabilities.
 
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT:
 
 
Office of the Minister, Ottawa
 
Amy Butcher
 
Director of Communications
 
(613) 991-0700
 
 
LOAD-DATE: November 19, 2003
 
 
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
 
 
Copyright 2003 PIMS Canada, Inc., doing business as CCNMatthews
 
 
 
 
 
 
8 of 18 DOCUMENTS
 
 
IPS-Inter Press Service
 
 
June 23, 2003, Monday
 
 
EU-U.S.: IRAQ IS HIGH ON U.S.-EU SUMMIT AGENDA
 
 
BYLINE: By Stefania Bianchi
 
 
LENGTH: 965 words
 
 
DATELINE: BRUSSELS, Jun. 23
 
 
Transatlantic relations in general and the post-war reconstruction of Iraq in particular will take center stage when top European Union officials confer with President George Bush in Washington on Wednesday.
 
The EU delegation will be headed by Commission President Romano Prodi and President-in-office of the European Council, Greek Prime Minister Constantine Simitis.
 
It will include Javier Solana, High Representative for the EU's Common Foreign and Security Policy, and Trade Commissioner Pascal Lamy.
 
The summit meeting is being held months after relations between the EU and U.S. were strained be-cause of the refusal of France and Germany - two of the most influential members of the 15-nation union - to support the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.
 
It takes place days after the EU leaders gathered in Thessaloniki, Greece, on June 19-20 and endorsed a draft constitution for the union whose membership will expand from current 15 to 25 next year.
 
A significant element of Europe's first draft constitution that is set to be ratified by all 25 members of the enlarged EU in June 2004 is the union's security and defence strategy.
 
The strategy, to be adopted in December, commits the EU to facing up to its "responsibilities, guarantee-ing a secure Europe and a better world."
 
"To this end, the union will contribute relentlessly to strengthening and reshaping the institutions of global governance, regional cooperation and expanding the reach of international law," according to the Greek Presidency conclusions.
 
"We will support conflict prevention, promote justice, sustainable development, help secure peace and defend stability in our region and globally," the EU pledges in the document.
 
Media reports said Washington was taking the union's security doctrine seriously. "The analysis is good. It will be meaningful when it is applied," a U.S. diplomat told the Financial Times.
 
The EU, on its part, looks forward "to continue discussions with the U.S. on proposals for strengthening relations including ideas that could emerge from the elaboration of the European security strategy," said the document emerging from the Thessaloniki summit.
 
Whereas the U.S. invasion of Iraq caused a rift within the EU, the message emerging from their summit in Greece was rather distinct.
 
The document prepared by the Greek Presidency said the European leaders looked forward to "an im-portant United Nations contribution to the process leading to the formation, as soon as possible, of a repre-sentative Iraqi government, in which the UN can use its unique capacity and experience in post-conflict na-tion building."
 
Jonathan Faull, Director General of the European Commission's Justice and Home Affairs department, told IPS: "The EU and the U.S. must stand side by side to build and improve bilateral agreements and to im-prove the humanitarian situation there."
 
This view was supported by independent experts at a conference last week in Brussels.
 
Pat Cox, President of the European Parliament, said: "We need a healthy transatlantic relationship - Iraq has shown us that. Although we have differences - the U.S. over-estimates and the EU under-estimates - these differences may be worth having and can help the process."
 
Going a step farther, Sascha Mueller-Kraenner, Director for Europe of the Heinrich Boell Foundation, said that the EU must use the reconstruction of Iraq to demonstrate its power on a global scale.
 
He said: "The post-war reconstruction of Iraq and the surrounding region will provide a test case for Europe's ability to project its interests and to provide assistance via the United Nations."
 
"Europe's commitment to help the Iraqi people and to transform the region into a more democratic place must go beyond the provision of humanitarian aid. On the other hand, Europe should not subsidise a U.S.-led military administration," he continued.
 
Mueller-Kraenner's remarks were significant as the Heinrich Boell Foundation is close to Germany's Green Party, whose eminent leader is Germany's Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer.
 
The conference, hosted by the Commission on Globalization, said the U.S.-led invasion had dramatically transformed the geo-political landscape.
 
The Commission is a think tank examining the nature and character of globalization. It has approximately 30 co-chairs and several hundred commissioners drawn from top international business and political institu-tions.
 
Against the changed backdrop, Mueller-Kraenner pleaded for redefining the transatlantic security rela-tionship.
 
"This redefinition should not involve the mere duplication of Europe's post-war security dependency on the U.S.; Europe should ask itself how its own security interests can be guaranteed by a new governance structure in which Europe has a decisive say," he said.
 
Tom Spencer, Executive Director of the European Center for Public Affairs, one of the commissioners of the Commission on Globalization, said the differences between the U.S. and the EU run much deeper than the war in Iraq.
 
"The rough water in the Atlantic is not caused by anything that the Europeans initiated or any inherent defect in Atlantic institutional structures," he said.
 
"Rather it is caused by a change in U.S. self-perception that fundamentally alters the nature of the game. The arguments of recent months have in reality been not about Iraq, but about the exercise of global power."
 
Spencer added: "With the collapse of the Soviet Union, Europe is understandably less important strate-gically to the Americans. The balance of American interest in European integration has clearly shifted, with the European Union now seen as a global competitor to America at all levels other than the military."
 
 
LOAD-DATE: June 24, 2003
 
  
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
 
  
Copyright 2003 IPS-Inter Press Service/Global Information Network
 
 
   
 
   
  
  
 
 
9 of 18 DOCUMENTS
 
  
Canada NewsWire
 
  
December 19, 2002, Thursday
 
 
New Board Members Appointed For Parc Downsview Park Inc.
 
 
SECTION: FINANCIAL NEWS
 
 
LENGTH: 1525 words
 
 
DATELINE: TORONTO, Dec. 19
 
 
Canada Lands Company Limited (CLCL) today
 
announced that it has appointed five new members to the board of its Parc
 
Downsview Park Inc. (PDP) subsidiary. The PDP board oversees the development
 
and ongoing management of Downsview Park on the former Canadian Forces Base
 
Toronto lands in Toronto.
 
    "I would like to thank the outgoing Chairman, Gordon Farquharson, and all
 
other departing board members for their hard work and dedication in bringing
 
Downsview Park well along the path towards becoming one of Canada's premier
 
urban recreational greenspaces," said Marc Rochon, CLCL Chairman. "I would
 
also like to congratulate David Bell, the new Chairman, and welcome all
 
incoming board members onto what promises to be an excellent board."
 
    In addition to the new Chairman, David Bell, the members remaining on the
 
board include Rina Camarra, Reginald Lewis, Gino Matrundola, Betty Steinhauer
 
and Toni Varone. The new members joining the board are Douglas Birkenshaw,
 
Elizabeth Dowdeswell, John McCool, Kathy Milsom and Thomas Symons. Brief
 
biographical notes for the members of the new board are attached to this news
 
release.
 
    PDP was incorporated in 1998 to oversee the development and ongoing
 
management of Downsview Park on the former Canadian Forces Base Toronto lands
 
in Toronto. The park is being developed as a unique urban recreational
 
greenspace, to be held in perpetuity for the enjoyment of future generations.
 
    CLCL is a non-agent federal Crown corporation reactivated in 1995 to
 
create financial and community value from properties no longer required by the
 
Government of Canada. The company is self-financing and implements innovative
 
property solutions to enhance the quality of life in communities where it
 
operates.
 
                        Members Of The New PDP Board
 
    David V. J. Bell (Chair) is the Director of the York University Centre
 
for Applied Sustainability, which inherited the resources and equipment of the
 
Ontario Round Table on Environment and Economy (ORTEE), of which he was also a
 
member. Dr. Bell is presently a professor and former Dean in the Faculty of
 
Environmental Studies at York University, and is a member of the core faculty
 
of the Sustainable Enterprise Academy of the Schulich School of Business. He
 
has taught courses in Sustainable Development, Environmental Politics,
 
Political Linguistics, and Canadian Political Culture. The author of numerous
 
publications, he holds a PhD in Political Science from Harvard University.
 
    Douglas Birkenshaw is a Senior Associate with Bregman & Hamann Architects
 
in Toronto and has worked at a number of architectural firms in Canada and
 
abroad. Projects that Mr. Birkenshaw has been involved with include: the
 
Renaissance ROM project in Toronto, the Institute for Computing, Information
 
and Cognitive Systems at the University of British Columbia, the Integrated
 
Learning Centre at Queen's University, and the expansion of the Metro Toronto
 
Convention Centre. He has lectured at many universities, written numerous
 
research publications and holds Bachelor Degrees in Architecture and
 
Environmental Studies.
 
    Rina Camarra is currently part of the management of Mastro's Restaurant
 
and operates a consultancy business for restaurants in the areas of marketing,
 
promotion and operations. Ms. Camarra is a long-time member of the Italian
 
Chamber of Commerce and is an active member of the Business Improvement
 
Association involved in the revitalization of the Wilson Avenue Business area.
 
She has also been a member of the Community Advisory Panel involved with the
 
planning and development of the Downsview lands for the past two years, and
 
has had involvement with a number of local charities.
 
    Elizabeth Dowdeswell's eclectic public service career has spanned
 
provincial, federal and international borders and has transcended traditional
 
disciplinary lines. She is a Visiting Professor in Global Health, Genomics and
 
Ethics at the University of Toronto, a Commissioner of the Commission on
 
Globalization and an associate fellow of the European Centre for Public
 
Affairs. Ms. Dowdeswell is a past Under Secretary General of the United
 
Nations and former Executive Director of the United Nations Environment
 
Program. She holds a Master's Degree in Behavioral Sciences from Utah State
 
University.
 
    Reginald W. Lewis has been Chairman of Defence Construction Limited since
 
1996 and was previously Chairman of TEDCO and a board member of CN Tower
 
Limited. He has a long and distinguished military service record with the
 
British Army and then the Canadian Army Active Reserves, which culminated in
 
his appointment as Chief of Reserves (Major General) in 1985, and his
 
appointment as Honorary Colonel, Royal Regiment of Canada in 1991. Mr. Lewis
 
is a Certified General Accountant, a member of the Order of Canada (1986) and
 
has been actively involved in numerous community and military clubs and
 
associations.
 
    Gino Matrundola has had an extensive career in professional real estate
 
and is currently President, Chairman and CEO of Titanus Inc. Realtor and
 
Telast Enterprises Inc. Land Holdings. He has served on numerous committees
 
for the Toronto Real Estate Board, the York Region Real Estate Board, the
 
Ontario Real Estate Association, the Canadian Real Estate Association and the
 
International Real Estate Federation. In 1987, Dr. Matrundola was elected and
 
served a term as Member of Provincial Parliament (MPP) for Willowdale. He
 
holds a PhD (Honoris Causa) in International Relations and Diplomacy from the
 
American Graduate School of International relations and Diplomacy, Paris
 
France.
 
    John McCool is the past President and CEO of the Rostland Corporation, a
 
private real estate development company, and formerly President of BMO Realty.
 
Now retired, he works as a volunteer for a number of charitable organizations
 
including the Salvation Army and has provided pro bono services for various
 
community associations and homeowners on zoning matters. Mr. McCool holds an
 
Advanced Management Programme Degree from Harvard University's Graduate School
 
of Business Administration.
 
    Kathy Milsom is President and CEO of Canada Lands Company Limited and its
 
core real estate subsidiary Canada Lands Company CLC Limited. Most recently,
 
Ms. Milsom was President of VESTAR Facility Management (formerly Rose Facility
 
Management) where, within three years, she guided the organization from 
 
start-up to prominence in the highly competitive facilities management
 
outsourcing market. Previously, as Director, Vertical Markets with Johnson
 
Controls World Services Inc., an international facility management services
 
company, she had responsibility for the company's five vertical markets in
 
North America. Ms. Milsom is a professional engineer.
 
    Betty Steinhauer has been active in the not-for-profit field, both as a
 
volunteer and as a consultant, since she founded and became Executive Director
 
of North York's Community Outreach in Education (CORE) in 1978. Her
 
consultancy firm, Betty Steinhauer & Associates Ltd., has assisted a number of
 
non-profit clients with fundraising strategies since it was created in 1984.
 
Ms. Steinhauer has been a member of the boards of numerous community
 
organizations including the Agora Foundation - Laidlaw Foundation, the Family
 
Service Association of Metropolitan Toronto, the North York Business
 
Association, and the North York Volunteer Centre. She is currently working to
 
create The People Bridge Charitable Foundation.
 
    Thomas H.B. Symons is a professor and writer in the field of Canadian
 
Studies, contemporary intellectual and rural issues, and international
 
academic and cultural relations. He is the author of To Know Ourselves, the
 
report of the admission on Canadian Studies, and of numerous studies and
 
articles dealing with education, public affairs, heritage preservation, human
 
rights, and international relations. Educated at the University of Toronto and
 
at Oxford and Harvard Universities, Mr. Symons is a past President of Trent
 
University and a member of the Order of Canada.
 
    Toni Varone is currently Chairman of Villa Charities Inc. and Columbus
 
Centre Inc. and is a former Director of the Northwestern General Hospital
 
Board. His work experience includes the active management of Montecassino
 
Hospitality Group Inc., VGI Properties Limited and Urban Renaissance Homes
 
Ltd. Mr. Varone has a B.A. from York University, attended the B.Com program at
 
The University of Windsor, and is currently completing a B.A.S. degree from
 
York University.
 
VIEW ADDITIONAL COMPANY-SPECIFIC INFORMATION:
 
http://www.newswire.ca/cgi-bin/inquiry.cgi?OKEY=93390
 
 
   
 
   
CONTACT: Please contact: Gordon McIvor, Vice President Public and Government Affairs, Canada Lands Company Limited, 1-888-252-5263, gmcivor(at)clc.ca
 
  
LOAD-DATE: December 20, 2002
 
 
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
 
 
DISTRIBUTION: Attention Business Editors
 
 
Copyright 2002 Canada NewsWire Ltd.
 
 
   
 
   
  
  
 
   
 
   
 
10 of 18 DOCUMENTS
 
 
European Report
 
 
November 13, 2002
 
 
EU/CANADA: SEMINAR TO TRAIN DIPLOMATS IN EUROPEAN MATTERS
 
 
SECTION: No. 2727
 
 
LENGTH: 300 words
 
 
 
   
 
   
From November 3-8, EIS-ECPAB (European Centre for Public Affairs Brussels, part of Europe Infor-mation Service) and the EPC (European Policy Centre) organised in collaboration with the Canadian Gov-ernment and the Canadian Mission to the European Union, a week's seminar for a group of 30 Canadian diplomats being posted to Europe this year. Participants came from 15 EU and enlargement country capitals as well as from Ottawa, and included several Heads of Mission.
 
The seminar programme, entitled "Thinking Europe, Working Together", broadly covered the EU institu-tions and actors, current EU priorities, and the future of Europe - as seen by the EU institutions and Member States and by observers from the media and centres of research. A series of specialist modules covered, amongst others, the following themes: EU external relations; trade and development; justice and home af-fairs; and research and development co-operation.
 
Canada's Ambassador to the European Union, Jeremy Kinsman, said: "It is essential to our goal of building a more dynamic partnership with the European Union that we understand the dynamics and direc-tions of the Union's political and economic decision-making. The course will enable Canada to work better with our European partners." Some 60 speakers, among them senior EU and Canadian officials and execu-tives from major corporations, as well as civil society organisations and think tanks, addressed the partici-pants throughout the week.
 
The organisers were pleased that the pilot programme enabled them to bring the EU's institutional and conceptual labyrinth closer to Canadian diplomats working in Ottawa and around Europe.
 
Contacts: Lucyna Gutman-Grauer, EIS-ECPAB Tel: (+32) 2/737 7710
 
Marie-Laure Tortel, The EPC Tel: (+32) 2/286 9375
 
  
LOAD-DATE: November 12, 2002
 
  
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
 
 
Copyright 2002 Europe Information Service
 
 
   
 
   
  
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12 of 18 DOCUMENTS
 
 
Canada NewsWire
 
 
October 24, 2002, Thursday
 
 
Elizabeth Dowdeswell to Lead Study of Approaches to Manage Used Nuclear Fuel
 
 
SECTION: FINANCIAL NEWS
 
 
LENGTH: 1220 words
 
 
DATELINE: OTTAWA, Oct. 24
 
 
Elizabeth Dowdeswell has been appointed President
 
of the newly-created Nuclear Waste Management Organization (NWMO) which will
 
investigate long-term approaches for managing Canada's used nuclear fuel.
 
    Ms. Dowdeswell's appointment was announced today by Richard Dicerni,
 
Executive Vice President of Ontario Power Generation who is also Chair of the
 
Board of Directors of the NWMO. "The Board is delighted that Ms. Dowdeswell
 
has agreed to accept this challenge," said Mr. Dicerni. "She is a highly
 
qualified executive with a truly impressive breadth of experience."
 
    The Nuclear Waste Management Organization has been established under the
 
Nuclear Fuel Waste Act (NFWA). Its members are Ontario Power Generation, Hydro
 
Quebec and New Brunswick Power, Canadian companies that produce used nuclear
 
fuel as a byproduct of electricity generation. The NFWA requires the NWMO to
 
complete a study of approaches within three years, and put forward a
 
recommended plan to the federal government for the long-term management of
 
used nuclear fuel. As President, Ms. Dowdeswell will oversee an extensive
 
public consultation process and a thorough study of long-term waste management
 
approaches.
 
    Ms. Dowdeswell has held a number of senior posts within government, and
 
has been active in a broad range of environment-related programs, including a
 
leading role in global efforts to negotiate the treaty on climate change in
 
1992. Ms. Dowdeswell was former Under Secretary General of the United Nations
 
and Executive Director of the United Nations Environment Program.
 
    "Science and technology have improved our quality of life and enriched
 
our society immensely. But such progress also has its challenges," said Ms.
 
Dowdeswell. "Managing used nuclear fuel is a public policy matter which will
 
require ingenuity, transparency and a meaningful engagement of citizens as we
 
work to find solutions," she said.
 
    "Ms. Dowdeswell's record of championing sustainable development and
 
promoting environmental protection in Canada and at the United Nations
 
uniquely qualify her to head up this important new organization," added Mr.
 
Dicerni. "The Board is confident that she will ensure this study has full
 
transparency and complete public policy debate."
 
                                BACKGROUNDER
 
              The Nuclear Fuel Waste Management Organization
 
    October 24, 2002
 
    OTTAWA - The Nuclear Waste Management Organization (NWMO) has been
 
established under the Nuclear Fuel Waste Act (NWFA) to investigate approaches
 
for managing Canada's used nuclear fuel. The NWFA results from the Government
 
of Canada's response to the Nuclear Fuel Waste Management and Disposal Concept
 
Environmental Assessment Panel, which was chaired by Mr. Blair Seaborn and
 
reported in March, 1998.
 
    The Government of Canada introduced Bill C-27 for First Reading on April
 
25, 2001. Following House and Senate Committee reviews, the legislation
 
received Royal Assent on June 13, 2002.
 
    The Nuclear Fuel Waste Act requires electricity generating companies
 
which produce used nuclear fuel to:
 
    - establish a waste management organization to provide recommendations on
 
      the long-term management of used nuclear fuel to the Government of
 
      Canada and,
 
    - establish segregated trust funds to finance the long term management of
 
      the used fuel.
 
    The NWFA also requires the NWMO to:
 
    - establish an Advisory Council whose comments on the waste management
 
      organization's study and reports will be made public.
 
    Among the first activities for the organization will be a study of long-
 
term management approaches for used nuclear fuel, including the design of an
 
innovative and wide-ranging program of public consultation.
 
    Within three years of the legislation coming into force, the NWMO is to
 
submit to the Minister of Natural Resources proposed approaches for the
 
management of used nuclear fuel, along with comments of the Advisory Council,
 
and a recommended approach.
 
    The legislation authorizes the Governor in Council to decide on the
 
approach. The government's choice will then be implemented by the Nuclear
 
Waste Management Organization, subject to all of the necessary regulatory
 
approvals.
 
    October 24, 2002
 
                            Elizabeth Dowdeswell
 
    OTTAWA - Elizabeth Dowdeswell has had an extensive career in government,
 
education and international affairs. From 1993 to 1998 she served as Executive
 
Director of the United Nations Environment Program, where she led the agency's
 
transformation into a modern organization, developing programs in state-of-the-
 
environment assessment and reporting, environmental law, and tackling new
 
issues of trade and globalization.
 
    Before joining the United Nations, Ms. Dowdeswell was the Assistant
 
Deputy Minister of Environment Canada from 1989 to 1992, responsible for the
 
national weather and atmospheric agency. In that capacity she played a leading
 
role in global efforts to negotiate the treaty on climate change adopted at
 
the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development. She was
 
also Canada's permanent representative to the World Meteorological
 
Organization; principal delegate to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
 
Change; and Canadian Chair of the Great Lakes Water Quality Board.
 
    Ms. Dowdeswell has worked as a management consultant to the Government of
 
Canada and led a number of public inquiries into issues such as Canada's
 
unemployment benefits program, water policy and meteorological services. She
 
has served as a member on numerous Canadian and international boards, advisory
 
panels and commissions.
 
    Early in her career, Ms. Dowdeswell served as Deputy Minister of Culture
 
and Youth for the Province of Saskatchewan, directing a major public review of
 
cultural policy and developing heritage legislation. Before that, she was a
 
human rights ombudsman and educational consultant with the Department of
 
Education, a university lecturer and a high school teacher.
 
    More recently, Ms. Dowdeswell's professional activities have included:
 
management consulting; Visiting Professor in Global Health, Genomics and
 
Ethics at the University of Toronto; Commissioner of the Commission on
 
Globalization; and Associate Fellow of the European Centre for Public Affairs.
 
    Ms. Dowdeswell is the author of numerous publications in both popular
 
press and professional journals. She holds a Master of Science degree in
 
behavioral sciences from Utah State University, a Bachelor of Science degree
 
in home economics and a teaching certificate from the University of
 
Saskatchewan. She is the recipient of nine honorary degrees including six
 
Doctor of Law degrees from various universities, a Doctor of Humane Letters
 
degree from Mount Saint Vincent University in Halifax and the Memorial Gold
 
Medal awarded by Charles University in Prague.
 
VIEW ADDITIONAL COMPANY-SPECIFIC INFORMATION:
 
http://www.newswire.ca/cgi-bin/inquiry.cgi?OKEY=24166
 
 
CONTACT: Media Contact: Michael Krizanc, (416) 592-3701
 
 
LOAD-DATE: October 25, 2002
 
 
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
 
 
DISTRIBUTION: Attention Business Editors
 
 
Copyright 2002 Canada NewsWire Ltd.
 
 
   
 
   
  
 
 
 
13 of 18 DOCUMENTS
 
 
PR Week
 
 
July 12, 2002
 
 
P&G'S JONNAERT BECOMES ECPA CHAIR
 
 
BYLINE: By STEVEN WILSON-BEALES
 
 
SECTION: STOP PRESS, Pg. 4
 
 
LENGTH: 251 words
 
 
Procter & Gamble director of corporate external relations Erik Jonnaert has been appointed chairman of European Centre for Public Affairs (ECPA).
 
The ECPA was set up in 1986 to 'record, analyse and improve the conduct of public affairs' in European Union institutions.
 
Based at Surrey University, the body conducts research programmes and training each year for PA practitioners, civil servants, and managers and staff of NGOs.
 
Brussels-based Jonnaert set up P&G's European PA office in the Belgiuan capital ten years ago and became deputy chairman of the ECPA in 2000.
 
ECPA faces issues such as the implications for governments and businesses of the EU's planned east-wards enlargement; the increasing take-up across the EU of corporate social responsibility initiatives; and changes to the EU's regulatory framework.
 
He said: 'It's important to continue the research we have built up over the years. It's also important to ensure that research carried out is relevant to current business needs. There's always a danger that re-search can become insular, so it's crucial that it can add real value to companies.'
 
He added: 'There is an increasing demand for companies to make themselves more transparent to gov-ernments and vice versa.'
 
Jonnaert replaced former chairman Henry Stenson - Ericsson vice-president of corporate comms - in the chairman's role two weeks ago. In accordance with the ECPA's rotation system, Stenson becomes deputy chairman of the management board.
 
 
LOAD-DATE: July 12, 2002
 
 
LANGUAGE: English
 
 
PUB-TYPE: Magazine
 
 
Copyright 2002 Haymarket Publishing Services Ltd
 
 
 
 
 
 
14 of 18 DOCUMENTS
 
 
 
Financial Times (London,England)
 
 
November 9, 2001 Friday 
 
London Edition 1
 
 
Anti-globalisation warriors shift their ground: The appetite for mass confrontations at international conferences has diminished. Alan Beattie reports
 
 
BYLINE: By ALAN BEATTIE
 
 
SECTION: INTERNATIONAL ECONOMY ; Pg. 10
 
 
LENGTH: 832 words
 
 
Since September 11 the appetite for anti-capitalist demonstrations seems to have shrunk: neither the World Trade Organisation meeting in Doha, Qatar, starting today nor the G20 meeting in Ottawa next week are expected to produce protests on the scale originally planned.
 
But for those willing to recast and direct their criticism in a different way, the potential for change may be at its strongest for a decade.
 
Tom Spencer, director of the European Centre for Public Affairs think-tank, sums up the challenge for those continuing to seek radical reform: "Are we talking about anti-capitalism, anti- globalisation or anti-Americanism? It didn't matter before September 11; now it does."
 
    He was speaking at a recent conference in Budapest on globalisation, hosted by George Soros, the billionaire financier, and attended by academics, campaigners and policymakers. 
 
What emerged from the conference was that continuing to conflate Mr Spencer's three critiques was to risk strong opposition. Both pro-and anti-liberalisation speakers attracted general opprobrium for appearing to do so.
 
Walden Bello, Bangkok-based director of the campaign group Focus on the Global South - which op-poses wholesale trade and economic liberalisation - attracted strong criticism when arguing that a similar critique was applicable both to the Washington economic model of liberalisation and to capricious US foreign policy.
 
He insisted that the public in poor countries routinely conflated anti-globalisation and anti-Americanism. "In the third world you saw a real ambivalence about the September 11 acts," he said. "Across Asia one of the biggest-selling items has been Osama bin Laden T-shirts. He is now emerging as a rebel figure running circles round a bully."
 
David Hartridge, special adviser to Mike Moore, the WTO's director-general, played the September 11 card from the other side of the table: "We should be aware of elevating an atrocity into the status of an argu-ment," he said. "Anger validates nothing."
 
Such comments drew strong reaction from several participants, who said being anti-liberalisation did not equal being anti-American.
 
One such was Susan George, born in the US but naturalised French, vice- president of the Paris-based campaign organisation Attac. Ms George said Attac's relatively specific agenda of controls and taxes on the free movement of capital were now even more relevant.
 
"One of Attac's demands has been a clampdown on tax havens," she said. "Up to September 11, every-one said this was impossible. Then George Bush suddenly said that tax havens were harbouring terrorists, and it became perfectly possible."
 
Ms George does not believe the US government has been converted to her analysis of the underlying causes of terrorism. Though distancing herself from Mr Bello's understanding of sympathy for the terrorist acts, she still regarded the US response with horror.
 
"As the saying has it: do not do what you want to do; do what your enemy would least like you to do," she said.
 
"That would be to start a genuine plan against the poverty and environmental crises which beset the planet. What they most want us to do is more or less what we are doing; bombing civilians and creating a reaction in the Muslim world."
 
She said she doubted governments had been shocked out of their complacency to the same extent as by the second world war, after which the United Nations was created and the US rebuilt Europe with the Marshall Plan. But there was, she said, at least a chance.
 
Indeed, the possibility of a genuine shift in the willingness to contemplate new ideas has been evident.
 
Blue-sky ideas including global carbon taxes to raise billions for development - floated recently by a blue-ribbon commission chaired by another Budapest conference participant, former Mexican president Ernesto Zedillo - seem a little less like fantasy and more like a basis for serious debate.
 
But it is not clear that the loose alliance of radical anti-capitalist organisations, which first leapt to global prominence at the 1999 WTO meetings in Seattle, is well suited to put the case for change.
 
The irony of the situation is that much of what its members call for is more regulation - of capital move-ments, of corporations, and of labour markets. So the interventionist instincts that generally accompany large-scale military conflict, as well as activist responses to the global economic slowdown, may serve them well.
 
But some supporters recognise their tactics may not be appropriate. Changes in state policy require a more systematic engagement with the state. More likely agents of change may be established non-governmental organisations such as the aid agencies which have acquired strong advocacy and lobbying wings.
 
G.M Tamas, a Hungarian philosophy academic, told the conference: "The Seattle movement is a revolu-tionary theatre with reformist aims. It does not want to turn into a set of elected politicians. But we are having a war in which voluntarism is not in vogue."
 
 
LOAD-DATE: November 8, 2001
 
 
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
 
 
PUBLICATION-TYPE: Newspaper
 
 
 
Copyright 2001 The Financial Times Limited
 
 
 
 
 
 
15 of 18 DOCUMENTS
 
 
The Times Higher Education Supplement
 
 
October 26, 2001
 
 
Don's Diary
 
 
BYLINE: Phil Harris
 
 
SECTION: OPINION; No.1510; Pg.13
 
 
LENGTH: 497 words
 
 
Week one
 
I fly to Dublin for the annual Political Marketing Conference of the Academy of Marketing at the Dublin City University Business School. We find out that the Californian referendum business has a turnover of more than $ 500 million (Pounds 352 million) a year. I wonder what the total spend in the euro campaign will be?
 
The next day I take part in the Today Show on Radio Telefis Eireann with professors Bruce Newman of Chicago and Nicholas O'Shaughnessy of Keele on United States elections and the decline of the Tory Party.
 
Week two Returning from a Chartered Institute of Marketing Council meeting via Edinburgh Airport on the afternoon of September 11, I watch on television scenes of carnage in New York and Washington. That night Steve Morrison, CEO of Granada Media, speaks at our Cobden lecture on communication in the digital age.
 
I arrive in Brighton for the Political Science Association Conference on the general election. Philip Gould, Tony Blair's pollster, presents how the master plan worked. It is generally agreed that the Liberal De-mocrats are improving because they focus on voter needs. The Tories do not show up because of the immi-nent reshuffle after the election of Iain Duncan Smith.
 
Week three I now know that all key colleagues and friends in New York and Washington are OK. The fresh-faced new undergraduates arrive. I spend time working on a special US edition of the Journal of Public Affairs with John Mahon of Maine.
 
Week four I am in Bournemouth for Charles Kennedy's speech on the war against terror and its impact on civic society. Colours and lighting in the conference hall reflect the subdued mood of the delegates.
 
I fly to Brussels for the launch of the JPA in Europe, sponsored by the European Centre for Public Af-fairs. We reflect on those in the public affairs industry who have lost their lives.
 
Week five I make it to Brighton in time for Tony Blair's inspired keynote speech. Delegates and others look fearful for the outbreak of war. Police officers are everywhere, many with body armour and semi-automatic weapons. The best stand is that of the Royal National Institute for the Blind, which has Rodin's Thinker outlining how one can enable the disabled. The scale of the exhibition, however, does give the con-ference the air of a large trade show.
 
Week six
 
Another train, this time to Blackpool to see IDS in action, only to find half the directorate of the BBC in one carriage. The Winter Gardens seems very empty. The backdrop of the conference is blue with a bright candelabra-lit podium, making everybody seem very old. I notice an anxious Michael Ancram, looking for journalists to talk to in the tiny press area. Anti and pro-euro campaigns are highly visible in the exhibition. Security appears a little excessive.
 
Phil Harris is chairman of the Academy of Marketing and a reader in marketing and public affairs at The Business School, Manchester Metropolitan University.
 
 
LOAD-DATE: October 27, 2001
 
 
LANGUAGE: English
 
 
PUB-TYPE: Magazine
 
 
Copyright 2001 TSL Education Limited
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
   
 
   
Line 753: Line 196:
  
 
Copyright 1999 Associated Newspapers Ltd.
 
Copyright 1999 Associated Newspapers Ltd.
 
 
 
 
 
7 of 26 DOCUMENTS
 
 
The Independent (London)
 
 
June 2, 1999, Wednesday
 
 
THE VOTE FOR EUROPE: MEPS WIN BONUSES IN PERKS 'CUTBACK'
 
 
BYLINE: Fran Abrams Westminster Correspondent
 
 
SECTION: NEWS; Pg. 8
 
 
LENGTH: 729 words
 
 
 
EURO MPs will collect bonuses of up to pounds 200 per week under new rules designed to crack down on waste, The Independent has learnt.
 
The travel allowances, designed to slow down the European "gravy train", replace a flat-rate fee with a reimbursement of the actual fare. MEPs will also be able to claim a generous "distance allowance" and mile-age to and from airports.
 
In many cases, the new arrangements will actually cost the European Union more because they remove an incentive for members to travel cheaply and keep part of the payment.
 
It was estimated that MEPs pocketed up to pounds 800 per month under the old system - almost exactly the same as those who are living farthest from Brussels will keep under the new rules. The new allowances will take effect after next week's Euro elections.
 
The claims revelation comes as the Conservatives press for a wholesale clean -up of the European Par-liament. They want a committee like the one headed by Lord Neill of Bladen in London to oversee the run-ning of the parliament and European Commission, and a commissioner who can penalise MEPs if they fail to register commercial interests.
 
MEPs are not penalised if they fail to register their interests fully, and constituents must visit Brussels or Strasbourg if they wish to discover their members' outside earnings. Despite this, many members do register directorships and consultancies.
 
Ken Collins, Labour member for Strathclyde East, lists advisory posts with the public service sector un-ion Unison and with Jeremy Kane International, which is run by a director of a lobbying company called European Public Policy Advisers.  Tom Spencer, former leader of the Conservative group in Brussels, re-ceives lecture fees from the European Centre for Public Affairs, of which his wife, Elizabeth, is also a di-rector. Mrs Spencer is director of Jeremy Kane International and European Public Policy Advisers.
 
Some MEPs benefit, too, from being members of more than one legislature. Three MEPs - the DUP leader Ian Paisley, the SDLP leader John Hume and the Conservative MP Anne McIntosh - have Westmin-ster seats and are entitled to receive an extra pounds 15,669, one-third of their European salary, on top of their pounds 47,008 UK salary. Mr Hume and Mr Paisley have also been elected to the Northern Ireland As-sembly, and are entitled to another pounds 9,600, or one-third of its interim salary of pounds 29,000. If the new assembly gets up and running that payment will probably increase to a further third of pounds 47,008, making a total of pounds 78,346.
 
The number of MEPs who are members of their national parliaments is dwindling, however. In 1979, one-fifth of members held two seats, but the number has dropped to just 25, or 3.8 per cent. There are now seven Italians, five Irish, five Danes, four French and one Luxembourg MEP in addition to the three UK MEPs.
 
David Heathcoat-Amory, shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury and Conservative MP for Wells, said it was time standards in the European Parliament were overhauled. He said: "No one is going to take them seriously until they sort our their rules and bring them in line with common sense."
 
Strasbourg's New Gravy Train
 
t In addition to their air fares, members will claim a minimum of pounds 28.56 in mileage, plus a distance allowance of pounds 71.40 if their round trip is less than 1,000km and pounds 171.36 if it is 1,000-1,500 km.
 
t An MEP travelling to Brussels from Manchester, Cardiff or London will claim pounds 99.96 per week on top of the air fare. An MEP travelling from Edinburgh or Belfast will claim pounds 199.92.
 
t Under the old system, an MEP travelling from Edinburgh claimed pounds 573.20 for a round trip. Now he or she will claim a BA fare of pounds 586.30 plus distance and mileage allowances of pounds 199.92, making a total of pounds 786.22.
 
t Allowances cover meals, accommodation and taxi fares en route. MEPs have free passes for airport parking and are assured of an in-flight meal and drinks.
 
t MEPs receive a "general expenditure" annual allowance of pounds 28,392, subsistence allowance of pounds 167.79 per day and a pounds 83.89 accommodation allowance when travelling to meetings outside the EU.
 
t Fare quoted in the rules is "YY economy class". BA says this equates to its Euro-budget business class fare.
 
 
LOAD-DATE: June 2, 1999
 
 
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
 
 
Copyright 1999 Newspaper Publishing PLC
 
 
   
 
   
  

Latest revision as of 14:08, 8 February 2007

Some press coverage of the ECPA:



3 of 18 DOCUMENTS


The Sprout

March 15, 2006

Media subsidies debate: Those who live in glass houses should shut the f---

SECTION: Pg. 27

LENGTH: 1805 words

DATELINE: Belgium

Publishers who complain about EU subsidies going to the their rivals need to check their own backyard thoroughly, before launching into their pathetic harangue, writes Martin Jay There's much talk at the moment of the role of the media, and subsidies shelled out to EU-friendly or-gans in Brussels. For many, an intensely boring subject, but the role of the European Commission and how it goes about using taxpayers' money to pump out puffed up 'news' about itself, or at the very worst, propa-ganda, is an important one: without the puff, would the EU, in reality, operate at all? But as any wise hack will tell you, very, very few magazines or newspapers, survive without some form of 'subsidy' - traditionally advertising. More increasingly though, in Brussels certainly, it is advertising which does not sell a product, but a political message aimed at steering regulators towards an agenda, which keeps many publications afloat. Who is the arbiter though over such 'subsidies'? Who defines what is ethical - or at least acceptable - over what is patently unacceptable in a democratic 'state'? Presently, no such organisation exists, although many argue it should be the International Federation of Journalists, (IFJ). Perhaps the problem also lies in the fact that the EU is not a 'state' (yet) and can not, therefore, be governed as such. And so, bereft of any real regulator, the media governs itself and hopes some of the more outlandish scams do not get spotted by a weary readership. But if the somnolent citizens of Europe were to know the true extent of the subsidies, they might stir. Then, and only then, could some kind of action take place. Yet how could that really take place? There aren't the mechanisms installed, (certainly not by the IFJ which takes a small subsidy from the EU coffers, incidentally). We journalists and publishers would have to present a concrete story, relevant to the breakfast tables of, say, Britain, with a caste-iron case, profession-ally put, endorsed, substantiated and verified. And here is the crux of the problem. The truth, like in most battles, is the first rifle volunteer to bite the gritty soil. Recently, the free EU news-paper 'EUReporter' published as a cover 'news' story a 2000 odd word rant about EU money being pumped into media outlets in Brussels. It itemised, without any real evidence, a list of news organisations which it claimed are funded, directly or otherwise, from the EU budget. The article failed however to have any impact whatsoever, but served as a perfect example of everything which is fundamentally flawed about the EU: hy-pocrisy. Sadly, its proprietor is probably heading towards a nervous breakdown as the verse was nothing more than a seething, angry and rather sad blither of sour grapes. Chris White is a funny, likeable guy. But as a former press officer of the UK Tories, he also knows how to spin a tale and make a news story look vaguely real. But this diatribe was anything but real, in fact, merely an end-of-career nuclear tantrum charged with bitterness and a deep refusal to accept his own failure as a publisher of a free rag which very few peo-ple actually read. Almost without failure, there is either a hidden agenda to what he writes, or a shocking, comical story to everyone he attacks for taking EU subsidies. But he does at least throw the spotlight on the very subject which is at the heart of the argument: if you accept that most Brussels media needs an EU subsidy, do you ban them (and therefore have no media), or accept them and allow those who cannot get an EU bung, to become a puppet to private sector backers? EUObserver This is the problem with Chris White's arguments. Pure sour grapes. Let's tackle the first one on his hit list: EUObserver. A website which offers news and comment, partly backed by a political group (INDEM) and further subsidised by part-time parliamentary workers (who receive salaries from the parliament as assis-tants). Our man is positively frothing at the mouth over this news organisation. He has even stated that his own newspaper will no longer take any campaign advertisements from Ukip, which signs the cheques for EUObs. What a hypocrite White is! Firstly, he has openly told friends that he would also like to have the same privileges that EUObs enjoys; and secondly, who does he think he is kidding by trying to distance him-self from INDEM/Ukip money? The few Tory MEPs who prop up his paper by small donations, and who see White as their lacky? Oh yes, it's widely known that Tory MEPs (former colleagues of White's) have helped ol' Chris out. And these Tories hate Ukip, thus obliging White to attack the small party - laughable in itself as White gives Ukip so much coverage in the same edition of the paper. And do these Tories believe White when he pretends to distance himself from the INDEM/Ukip slush fund? They must be fools is they do. One wonders if they know that White took Nigel Farage to lunch just recently and invited him to become a non-executive director of his company. Perhaps Farage's refusal - and thus block on White ever getting any INDEM money - has prompted this particular spasm of sour grapes? European Voice White's paper is quite right to attack the Voice for gaining a critical subsidy from the European Commis-sion - a privilege to distribute copies through the Commission's internal mailing system which consequently gives it a distinct advantage with advertisers. Bravo! But the mention of 'money' in the article is confusing. Where is the evidence that Voice receives dosh from the EU? Or is it that White is just angry again and has got confused. Incensed with jealousy and spite, his memory is playing tricks, it seems. Perhaps he has for-gotten the meetings he had with the Voice's editor 2 years ago, where he openly offered to sell his own pa-per to the Economist's EU weekly? He was promptly told to fuck off, which possibly upset him. And still up-sets him now as he sees the Voice clean up advertising. Just a small detail missing from the article. Lobby groups and PR outfits And then there is the all out assault on lobby outfits which receive EU money for EC projects. Wherever these organisations - like Hill & Knowlton or Burson-Marstellar - are involved in media operations, they are attacked by White's dismal paper on the basis of unethical journalism. Interesting concept. Perhap's White's 'journalist' who wrote the piece should have mentioned that a great deal of EU Reporter is funded by adver-tising - through thinly veiled advertorials - which are paid for, yes you've guessed it, by public affair/PR firms run by friends of White's. In the very edition where this diatribe is published is a full page 'article' by Tom Spencer who runs a lobby-cum-training institute called the European Centre for Public Affairs. The deal is 'publish my rant across an entire page and I'll pay for a quarter page ad' - made all the more unethical by the lack of 'advertorial' written above Spencer's article, so the humble reader is unaware that it is an advertiser posing as a journalist or writer. The same goes for the sugar industry - which funds a PR outfit run by David Zimmerman, another friend and advertiser; the same goes for 'articles' written by PA consultants for oil firms - which Chris charges 4500 euro each to publish. Let's turn to page 13. Oh, a commentary by Peter Gerwin-ski, the head of a German small firms software lobby, which, er, previously paid for pages and pages of ad-verting last year. And it just goes on. White has done everything he can to turn his 'newspaper' into a public affairs/PR journal where articles are paid for, per column inch and usually are tied to advertising deals - the very slur he chucks so pathetically at the European Voice and PA firms in Brussels. Not really very ethical. The European Parliament He even slams the parliament for its association with the 'ethics' of INDEM money and EUObserver. But wait. Doesn't White receive a substantial subsidy from this very institution? Indeed, he is allowed a privilege in the building which rival papers would pay scores of thousands of pounds to gain: he is allowed - against parliament rules - to distribute his arse-wipe journal, dumped on table tops and in key areas like the cafes. The parliament only allows this privilege for its own employees. Perhaps if White is so keen for parliament boss Julian Priestley to clean up, he should start by being firmer on this rule? This is a subsidy, after all, is it not? And clearly the parliament is breaking their own rules to assist and support White. What would happen to White's advertising revenue if he were not allowed to distribute in the parliament? The ethics of the company which publishes EUReporter And then we come to White's company, well, his many companies over the years which have owned a series of varied titles of the one free newspaper which trades today as EUReporter. Who actually owns it? The press room is buzzing of late by rumours that another PR firm, Quadrant Media, (yes, an advertiser) has bought a stake in it - all denied by White, of course. Quadrant are no doubt hoping to cash in on a lucrative contract from the European parliament, to host web-based news reports - another EU subsidy. But why is EUReporter running examples at the moment of these TV reports on their site? Is there a connection? And why did White move the company which owns EUReporter to Ireland recently? Was it linked to a former em-ployee - a trainee journalist - contacting the UK social security investigators, urging them to probe White's operation? And let's hope that no one examines back issues of EUReporter, as we wouldn't want the scores of journalists' by-lines to be checked to see if these names actually exist. As real people. Heaven forbid that articles were published and paid for by lobby groups, and dressed up as news stories. That would be too unethical! It is regrettable that The Sprout has to expose such inaccuracies in White's newspaper. But there is a real need to get the 'transparency of the press' debate going in Brussels if there is to be any free press in the EU at all. Unfortunately this particular strain of hypocrisy, from a man who is overcome with bitterness and jealousy, keeps the subject from ever seeing the light of day - as it feeds the adversaries of a free press with the suitable fodder to dismiss the subject outright. Instead of putting so much energy into crying like an over-grown baby about others who business plans appear to be sound, White should spend more time improving the dismal publication which he laughingly calls a 'newspaper' and 'independent'. Instead, he lampoons him-self like a sick child who relishes the grief that he is not feeding from the Brussels trough - whether it be EU coffers, or private sector loot. Is there really such a great difference?

LOAD-DATE: August 17, 2006

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

PUBLICATION-TYPE: Magazine


Copyright 2006 Sprout Media Ltd. All Rights Reserved


5 of 18 DOCUMENTS


Financial Times (London, England)

June 19, 2004 Saturday London Edition 2

Let EU electorate choose the Commission president

BYLINE: By TOM SPENCER

SECTION: LETTERS TO THE EDITOR; Pg. 14

LENGTH: 366 words

From Mr Tom Spencer. Sir, The opaque and undignified inter-governmental fight over the nomination of the next European Commission president is the flip side of the slap in the face delivered to ruling parties in last week's Euro-pean election. Both seem designed to confirm the electorate's darkest fears that voting changes nothing and closed-door deals prevail. A transparent solution could be to let the people of Europe choose the president of the Commission with the vote that they cast in European parliamentary elections. Next time, candidates for the president's job should have to declare themselves by January 1 2009. US-style primaries could then be held in all 25 countries. I suggest starting with the five smallest countries (Malta, Luxembourg, Estonia, Cyprus and Slovenia) for a visually satisfying echo of New Hampshire. The five biggest countries (Germany, UK, France, Italy and Spain) would hold their party primaries on the last weekend of March. From the beginning of April, the campaign would be focused around the policies and per-sonalities of the six or so party-endorsed individuals aspiring to lead the next Commission. The impact would be positive. The electorate could judge both the individuals and their policies. Issues could be debated over a six-month period, rather than crammed into six days. The political groups in the European parliament, and their transnational political parties, would have to define themselves and their alliances before, rather than after, the elections. National political leaders would have to invest real, rather than token, effort into the campaign, but could thereafter concentrate on choosing the new president of the Council. If the current system remains unreformed, we must resign ourselves to European elections in which the voters alternate between damaging apathy and euro-sceptic anger. The problem is not the much talked-about absence of a European "demos"; rather it is the weakness of the current arrangements by which the democratic will of the people of Europe is supposed to manifest itself. Tom Spencer, Executive Director, European Centre for Public Affairs, School of Management, Univer-sity of Surrey (MEP 1979-84 and 1989-99)

LOAD-DATE: June 18, 2004

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

DOCUMENT-TYPE: Letters

PUBLICATION-TYPE: Newspaper


Copyright 2004 The Financial Times Limited













11 of 18 DOCUMENTS


Financial Times (London,England)

October 25, 2002 Friday USA Edition 2

EU does not need a chief executive

BYLINE: By TOM SPENCER

SECTION: LETTERS TO THE EDITOR ; Pg. 12

LENGTH: 403 words

From Mr Tom Spencer. Sir, A move away from the system of six-month presidencies in the European Council of Ministers is in-evitable with enlargement, but it is wrong to present the issue as a choice between intergovernmentalism and the community method ("EU nears endgame in creation of a president", October 11).

    As always, the result of the current debate will contain elements of both. More important, any out-come will, and should, lead to a substantial increase in the power of the Council secretariat. In the unlikely event of the European Union adopting the Franco-British proposal for a president of the European Council with a five-year term, no one anticipates Europe's administrative business being solely in the hands of British or Spanish civil servants under a Blair or Aznar regime. Any such president would have to rely on the inter-national skills of an enhanced Council secretariat rather than their own national civil servants.  

The advantage of increased visibility for such a president is in any case illusory. The experiment with a high representative should have warned us of the dangers of awarding titles implying a degree of unity that does not yet exist. The last thing we need in a dangerous world is two presidents in Brussels, glaring at each other for five years from grand buildings, divided by hectares of contested turf. It would be far wiser to opt for a variety of the "team presidency" now doing the rounds in Brussels. A five-nation, 2 1/2-year presidency, sequenced with the five-year term of parliament, would share out all the portfolios except the chairmanship of the European Council, Coreper (the committee of permanent represen-tatives) and the General Affairs and External Relations Council. These bodies alone would continue to re-volve their chairmanship on the existing six-month basis. The reality would be co-ordination by the Council secretariat, but the principle of the equality of states would be maintained. Recent history should be our guide. Prime ministers may enjoy appointing one of their own as president of the Commission but, as Jacques Santer and Romano Prodi can confirm, they do not support them once chosen. Europe does not need a CEO - either as a chief executive officer or as a career enhancement op-portunity for retired national leaders. Tom Spencer, Executive Director, European Centre for Public Affairs, University of Surrey, Guildford, Surrey, UK

LOAD-DATE: October 24, 2002

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

PUBLICATION-TYPE: Newspaper


Copyright 2002 The Financial Times Limited





6 of 26 DOCUMENTS

MAIL ON SUNDAY

August 15, 1999

Charlie's single aim; BLACK DOG

SECTION: Pg. 27

LENGTH: 645 words


BAD news for Sarah Gurling, the girlfriend of newly-elected Liberal Democrat leader Charles Kennedy.
Dog can reveal the attractive 29-year-old PR girl is in danger of being signed up to an exclusive new club at Westminster.
Cruel wags are calling it Peggys' Club, because all the members suffer from Perpetual Girlfriend Syn-drome.
Honourable members include Gordon Brown's Sarah Macaulay and before wiser counsel prevailed Wil-liam Hague's Ffion. 
Dog can reveal tongues are wagging at Westminster over the 18-month romance between cherubic Charles and Sarah.
Fresh from his leadership triumph, Kennedy is preparing to whisk her off for a Bahamas holiday, fuelling speculation that wedding bells can't be far off.
Friends predict that, with the leadership under his belt, Kennedy, almost 40, will soon announce his en-gagement to Sarah, an adviser with lottery firm Camelot. But Kennedy is infamous for breaking hearts. Spite-ful gossips recall that earlier rumours of impending nuptials have all come to nothing.
Sarah's friends hope she won't be just another one of 'Charlie's Angels', who seem to get so close but never make it to the altar.
Advisers have told Kennedy a formal engagement to Sarah would allay his image as a Parliamentary playboy and be seen as a sign of growing political maturity.
But I can reveal that Kennedy has told confidantes he has no intention of going down on bended knee in the Caribbean. His message to friends has been blunt: 'We have no plans to wed. Sarah is a very busy pro-fessional person and I have been very busy of late.' Our advice to the two Sarahs is keep pegging away.
DISGRACED Euro MP Tom Spencer has bounced back from the scandal surrounding his bizarre pri-vate life. The 'happily married' senior Conservative, who had to give up his safe Euro seat after details of his long-term homosexual dalliances were revealed, has been given a new job.
He is to be temporary executive director of the European Centre for Public Affairs at Oxford Univer-sity's Templeton College, which was founded to promote religious and spiritual lifestyles.
Darling of the people
WHILE Tony Blair is off in Italy acting like some feted monarch, Dog is heartened to find that the Cabinet has at least one man of the people in its ranks.
My spies recently spotted Social Security Secretary Alistair Darling enjoying a plebeian day out with his family at Disneyland, Florida.
Unlike his boss, Presbyterian Darling eschewed any special treatment, much preferring to join the queue for the big dipper like everyone else.
I HEAR Junior Minister Angela Eagle is turning the air blue at the Environment Department. Civil ser-vants have been taken aback by the Anglo-Saxon richness of language used by the former Formby High School girl.
WHEN the Blairs attend the Palio horse race in Siena, much derided for its brutality, in the crowd will be Charlie Whelan, former spin-doctor to Gordon Brown, who is reporting on the event for a small circulation newspaper.
DOG sympathises with the Earl of Glasgow, who gave the following reason for failing to turn up for a House of Lords debate: 'I've got the bank on my back. The country park wasn't ready for the tourists and we didn't meet our target.
HIGHFLYING Cabinet Office Minister Lord Falconer has been wowing colleagues with his knowledge of pop music. Dog can reveal the reason. 'Charlie' Falconer's brother-in-law used to be Stevie Wonder's man-ager.
Alastair's burning desire
FORMER Tory chief whip Alastair Goodlad has been regaling the political salons of Sydney with an hi-larious story since Tony Blair appointed him to be our High Commissioner in Australia.
He met his wife Cecilia at a party when her hair caught fire and he dashed to the rescue to put it out. The ever-witty Aussies have nicknamed him 'Bushfire Goodlad'.

LOAD-DATE: August 16, 1999

LANGUAGE: English

PUB-TYPE: Paper

Copyright 1999 Associated Newspapers Ltd.



8 of 26 DOCUMENTS

The Scotsman

May 29, 1997, Thursday

European lobbyists are forced to conform

BYLINE: Francine Cunningham

SECTION: Pg. 28

LENGTH: 1072 words


A GROUP of dedicated students meets in a classroom close to the concrete jungle of European institu-tions in Brussels.  This is no ordinary evening class, but a programme designed to train lobbyists in the art of schmoozing, stroking and subtly influencing decision makers in the European Union.
Here, Euro executives learn the art of "coalition building" and developing "the methodology of a lobbying campaign".
They undergo multiple choice tests on their knowledge of EU bodies or examine a case study on the banana trade regime. 
Each student is introduced to a "godfather", a senior consultant who will act as his or her guide through the labyrinthine maze of European institutions.
At the end of this programme, run by the European Centre for Public Affairs, a Brussels think-tank, every successful participant is awarded a certificate.
Billions of pounds are at stake in EU legislation, state aid and competition rulings. An estimated 10,000 lobbyists now work in Brussels, often employed by multinational companies trying to shape decisions which profoundly affect their businesses. As the ranks of lobbyists have grown, so have calls for them to be con-trolled.  A new code of conduct which comes into effect today will tighten up the rules of the game.
Brussels lobbyists can be shy of their profession, preferring to call themselves "public affairs practitio-ners." They range from pressure groups such as the US National Rifle Association to the major German car manufacturers and multinational corporations.
Then there are all the trade union groups, non-governmental organisations, law firms and the regional governments vying for attention. Every conceivable sector is represented, from the EU mayonnaise and con-diment sauce committee to the International Confederation of Beet Growers.
The European Parliament based in Strasbourg and Brussels is a prime target for lobbyists.  They will now have to obey a clear set of rules or risk being refused access to the institution.
It took eight years of internal wrangling before the parliament finally adopted an eight-point code drafted by British Labour MEP, Glyn Ford.  "It is important to realise that this is not a voluntary code of conduct, it is compulsory.  Any lobbyist who does not sign up to it will not get a pass," said Mr Ford.
Under the new system, players will have to declare whom they represent and agree to abide by the new standards.
They must not obtain information dishonestly or sell parliamentary papers.  They have to refrain from of-fering gifts to MEPs and must declare any help they provide them.
Lobbyists also have to get approval from MEPs if they want to offer work to their assistants. This is aimed at assistants who sometimes combine "consultancy" work with other duties.
However, the parliament failed to back two of Mr Ford's toughest proposals.  There was insufficient sup-port for his plan which would have forced lobbyists to provide a detailed report each year of their efforts to influence decision-making.
The new code has been welcomed by leading Brussels-based consultancies, who are just as keen to keep out the cowboys.  Members of SEAP, the Society of European Affairs Practitioners, already have their own guidelines.
"We fulfil a valuable function which should be performed to the highest standards of professionalism," says Lyn Trytsman-Gray of the Alliance for Beverage Cartons and the Environment.  "We are seeking to take part in public policy process and try to influence that through lobbying and communication."
In her eyes, the relationship between EU institutions and the lobbyist is one of mutual dependence.  "EU officials need industry to formulate their work," says Ms Trytsman-Gray.
Sessions at the European Parliament in Strasbourg are prime hunting grounds for lobbyists.  MEPs are regularly buttonholed on the way to the voting chamber.
Lobbyists try to influence legislation early, when it is being drafted by civil servants at the European Commission in Brussels. They also work on the Council of Ministers, the final decision-making body where lobbyists exert pressure through national governments.
The secrecy of the EU's decision-making process, especially in the Council of Ministers, is a bone of contention for many lobbyists. "Citizens knocking on the door of European institutions should find the door open," says Rodolphe de Looz-Corswarem of the European Confederation of Breweries.
It is one of the strange quirks of the new rules, that lobbyists are obliged to make sure that MEPs regis-ter any gifts or trips given to them.  This gives the impression that MEPs cannot be trusted to do this them-selves.
Catherine Stewart, a consultant with multinational clients, says: "The European Parliament must enforce its own sanctions, if it feels members do not abide by the rules." The term "gifts" has even been taken out of the code of conduct and replaced with the more ambiguous "benefits in cash or kind." Thus, teddy bears or commemorative mugs are unlikely to fall foul of the rules.
Lobbyists claim that they rarely give gifts, but admit to inviting MEPs and officials for meals and paid trips to see farms or industries.  "There aren't very many jollies nowadays," remarks Ms Stewart.
Governments may prove more generous with their favours than commercial companies. Many Euro-MPs came in for fierce criticism last year for accepting junkets to Turkey, at a time when the Turkish govern-ment was trying to persuade the EU to sign a customs agreement.
The new rules may help to bring the army of professional lobbyists into line, but it does nothing to re-strict the activities of MEPs who sometimes moonlight consultants for big business.  A German MEP, Elmar Brok, for example, is quite open about his role as vice-president of European Affairs for the media giant Bertlesmann. He claims this does not interfere with his parliamentary duties.
Ms Stewart says: "Some MEPs use their parliamentary privilege to act as consultants.
The European Parliament has to decide whether that is acceptable." In Brussels, the atmosphere is of-ten frenzied as lobbyists with conflicting interests try to get to the official or MEP with the most clout.
Under the new rules, lobbyists will have to temper persistence with politeness.
But there will be no end to the ear-bending and arm-twisting.

LOAD-DATE: May 29, 1997

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

PUB-TYPE: PAPER

Copyright 1997 The Scotsman Publications Ltd.



9 of 26 DOCUMENTS

The Times

April 18, 1996, Thursday

Like cows to the slaughter

BYLINE: Robin Pedler

SECTION: Features

LENGTH: 809 words

Robin Pedler on the great BSE public relations blunder.

When John Major was interviewed after the Turin summit about the mad cow crisis, he said: Lessons will have to be learnt in dealing with future health scares. But the Government should already have been aware that there are well-established principles for crisis containment developed by companies. In attempt-ing to deal with the BSE scare, the Government ignored them. These are the points it ought to have under-stood and acted upon: 1. Put someone clearly in charge. An individual must be clearly identified and seen to be taking the nec-essary action. Most people expect it to be the head (chairman or prime minister) but it does not have to be. He or she must then co-ordinate the action and control the communication, internal and external. Internal communication is just as important. If members of an organisation are confused or under-informed, all kinds of rumours and speculation will emerge. Two contrasting examples from the oil industry illustrate the importance of someone being seen to be in charge. When the tanker Exxon Valdez ran aground off Alaska, no one senior in Exxon spoke up for a week. When the chairman finally did so, it was too late. Yet when the Piper Alpha rig blew up, Dr Armand Hammer, Occidental's chief, flew straight to Scotland, said all the right things and gave the impression that the company was in control. The Government ignored this principle in two important respects. First, it was not made clear whether Mr Dorrell, the Health Secretary, or Mr Hogg, the Agriculture Minister, was in charge. Secondly, Mr Dorrell made it clear that he was not in charge but merely reflecting the views of the scientists. This made him look reactive and also broke rule 2. 2. Your scientific advice may be good, but by itself it won't convince the public. In the Brent Spar case, Shell had the advice of its own scientists and those of the British Government on its side. Two of them even wrote to the journal Nature at the height of the crisis to confirm their view that deep-sea disposal was the least environmentally damaging option. None of this did Shell any good. Greenpeace had made Brent Spar into a symbol. Mr Dorrell chose an even less valuable support group. Opinion surveys in the environmental area show that Government scientists are particularly lowly rated as sources of information. Two thirds of respondents rate them as unreliable. A majority would rather believe single-issue groups, friends or neighbours. 3. Take action early and exceed what is expected by a clear margin. If you fail to do this, you will eventu-ally be forced into a U-turn, destroying any belief you may have engendered that you really are in charge. If you decide on taking unpleasant action too late, what might earlier have convinced people will appear to be just another example of the organisation being driven by events. A successful example of taking the hit early was provided by Perrier. When some of its bottled water was said to have been contaminated with benzene in 1990, the company opted for a total worldwide product re-call. Thereafter it quickly recovered market share and pricing. The advantage of taking the early hit is that it kills off a scare's news value. While the media have the impression that there is more to come, they will keep digging and publishing. The Government has been amazingly slow to learn this lesson.

As late as Friday, March 29, Douglas Hogg, interviewed on his way to Brussels after a policy of limited slaughter had been decided upon, said: We have done anything scientists required. It may be that more will have to be done to restore public confidence.

He will almost certainly have to say that again. 4. Admit mistakes, don't blame others. Admitting that a mistake has been made, when it obviously has, does not enhance the impression of crisis. Rather it suggests that the person in charge knows what has gone wrong and can probably fix it. There is also plenty of evidence that some contrition can be very effec-tive in winning public opinion to your side.

When Exxon finally spoke up about the Exxon Valdez disaster, it was not to apologise but to blame the tanker captain for being drunk. It lost even more public sympathy. The owners of the Braer, on the other hand, maintained public sympathy by admitting their mistakes.

In the case of Government's handling of the BSE crisis everybody else is to blame, the scare is whipped up by the Labour Party, the Europeans are ganging up against Britain. This approach only serves to diminish the chance that anyone will be regarded as being in charge. The author is Director of the European Centre for Public Affairs at Templeton College, Oxford.

LOAD-DATE: April 19, 1996

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

Copyright 1996 Times Newspapers Limited






11 of 26 DOCUMENTS

Financial Times (London,England)

November 14, 1995, Tuesday

Exceptional resistance?

BYLINE: From Mr ROBIN PEDLER

SECTION: Letters to the Editor; Pg. 22

LENGTH: 165 words

Sir, Paul Abrahams' well documented article 'Bitter memories of the resistance' (November 11/12) is convincing, for the countries he covers. While, however, he ranges from Brittany to the steppes of Russia and to Greece for his material, he omits all mention of Yugoslavia. Throughout the disastrous developments of the last four years in that region, it has repeatedly been stated that Tito's partisans were effective, that they tied down a number of German divisions - some esti-mates go as high as seven - and that they liberated their country with little outside assistance. At a moment when governments are considering the deployment of 60,000 Nato ground troops in the region, it would be highly relevant to consider whether the received wisdom about the effectiveness of Serb-led partisans is correct or whether it, too, is due for historical revision. Robin Pedler, director, European Centre for Public Affairs, Templeton College, Oxford OX1 5NY

LOAD-DATE: November 14, 1995

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

Copyright 1995 The Financial Times Limited;




13 of 26 DOCUMENTS

Financial Times (London,England)

December 30, 1994, Friday

Need to achieve a better balance in social policy in Europe and the UK

BYLINE: From Mr ROBIN PEDLER

SECTION: Letters to the Editor; Pg. 12

LENGTH: 118 words

Sir, Peter Cooke's thoughtful letter was published in the same issue in which you featured a report, enti-tled 'Germany 'ahead of UK on labour costs' ', detailing the Confederation of British Industry's concerns that Germany's unit labour costs are reducing at the same time as the UK's are again beginning to increase. It would seem that the current policy of resisting the legal protection of employee rights is no guarantee of maintaining comparatively low unit labour costs, even when the comparison is with Germany, the Euro-pean country where those rights are most entrenched. Robin Pedler, executive director, European Centre for Public Affairs, Templeton College, Oxford OX1 5NY

LOAD-DATE: January 1, 1995

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

Copyright 1994 The Financial Times Limited;