Changes made to long-term disability plan.In other business, the Council of General Synod: * elected Susan Moxley, suffragan bishop Noun 1. suffragan bishop - an assistant or subordinate bishop of a diocese suffragan bishop - a senior member of the Christian clergy having spiritual and administrative authority; appointed in Christian churches to oversee priests or ministers; considered of Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island Prince Edward Island, province (2001 pop. 135,294), 2,184 sq mi (5,657 sq km), E Canada, off N.B. and N.S. Geography One of the Maritime Provinces, Prince Edward Island lies in the Gulf of St. , as the new bishop delegate to the Anglican Consultative Council The Anglican Consultative Council or ACC is one of the four "Instruments of Communion" of the Anglican Communion. It was created by a resolution of the 1968 Lambeth Conference. , succeeding Bishop Michael Ingham of New Westminster, whose term ends this year. Bishop Victoria Matthews of Edmonton was chosen as alternate delegate; * approved several amendments to the General Synod pension plan, including a new design for the long-term disability (LTD LTD 1 Laron-type dwarfism 2 Leukotriene D 3 Long-term depression, see there 4. Long-term disability ) plan, and changes to the definition of "partner" to comply with federal and provincial legislation and to the definition of "continuous service." Changes to the LTD plan were introduced to address the plan's $4 million deficit, and because it was "not tax effective" and there was "unlimited financial exposure and risk," said Judy Robinsion, director of General Synod's pension department. The new plan, which took effect this Jan. 1, grants benefits equal to 60 per cent of earnings, provides cost of living increases when finances allow it, will have employer paid premiums and provide insurance changes; * approved a resolution urging the Canadian government to "take all available measures to ensure the opening of the United States/Canada border for the movement of live cattle as soon as possible." Archbishop John Clarke, metropolitan of Rupert's Land and bishop of Athabasca, moved the resolution saying that many farmers in Western Canada have been severely affected by the beef ban imposed by the U.S. when mad cow disease mad cow disease: see prion. mad cow disease or bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) Fatal neurodegenerative disease of cattle. Symptoms include behavioral changes (e.g. struck last year; * approved a resolution expressing great concern over the rise in the number of children living in poverty and asking the primate "to meet and/or communicate" with appropriate federal government ministers "to underline the need for the Parliament of Canada The Parliament of Canada is Canada's legislative branch, seated at Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Ontario. According to Section 17 of the Constitution Act, 1867, Parliament consists of three components: the Sovereign, the Senate, and the House of Commons. to reclaim as a priority the eradication of child poverty in Canada;" * heard from Canon Mwita Akiri, provincial secretary of the (Anglican) Church of Tanzania, who attended CoGS as a partner. He expressed his church's solidarity with the Anglican Church of Canada and sought support for the Tanzanian church's plan to build a $50 million university; * heard the report of the Anglican Council of Indigenous Peoples The Council of Indigenous Peoples (Chinese: 原住民族委員會, pinyin: yuánzhùmínzú wěiyuánhuì) (sometimes referred to as Council of Aboriginal Affairs , including its plan to hold an Anglican Indigenous Sacred Circle on Aug. 7 to 13, 2005, at the Wilderness Edge Retreat and Conference Centre in Pinawa, Man.; * approved a resolution asking the primate to write to the Council of Anglican Provinces in Africa, to the primates in Africa and Asia, "expressing the Anglican Church of Canada's solidarity with those bishops, clergy and lay people reaching out to people living with HIV/AIDS HIV/AIDS Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome , not as objects of charity but as equal partners;" * approved a plan to hold the next session of General Synod meeting in Winnipeg on June 7 to 14, 2007; * endorsed various initiatives related to youth ministry, including the primate's plan to establish an Anglican youth network, partnership with the Ask & Imagine youth leadership program and to support it "mindful that no funds are currently allocated for youth work," justice camps, and a survey of how dioceses carry out youth and young adult programs; * approved the application for full membership of the Mennonite Church Canada Mennonite Church Canada is the conference of Mennonites in Canada, with head offices in Winnipeg, Manitoba. The first Mennonites in Canada arrived from Pennsylvania in 1786. in the Canadian Council of Churches The Canadian Council of Churches/Le conseil canadien des églises is an ecumenical Christian forum of churches in Canada. It was founded on 27 September 1944 at Yorkminster Baptist Church in Toronto, Ontario. ; * approved a resolution asking CoGS-to "develop a policy and a strategy for the development and translation of resources for the church in languages other than English LOTE or Languages Other Than English is the name given to language subjects at Australian schools. LOTEs have often historically been related to the policy of multiculturalism, and tend to reflect the predominant non-English languages spoken in a school's local area, the ;" * elected the primate, Archbishop Andrew Hutchison, and Rev. John Steele of the diocese of British Columbia, as delegates to the World Council of Churches Assembly in early 2006 in Brazil; * heard from Archdeacon Jim Boyles, general secretary of the Anglican Church of Canada, that he has written a letter of protest to Industry Canada regarding the use by an incorporated group, North American Missionary Society, of the name "Anglican Communion in Canada" (ACiC). The tide is "confusing, and properly describes the General Synod, and is identified as such in the Constitution of the Anglican Consultative Council," said Mr. Boyles. ACiC was formed by some Anglican parishes who left the diocese of New Westminster after it approved the blessing of same-sex unions in 2002. |
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