Stephanie Cadieux Explained

Stephanie Cadieux
Birth Date:[1]
Assembly:British Columbia Legislative
Constituency Am:Surrey South
Term Start:May 9, 2017
Term End:April 30, 2022
Predecessor:Riding Established
Successor:Elenore Sturko
Assembly1:British Columbia Legislative
Constituency Am1:Surrey-Cloverdale
Term Start1:May 14, 2013
Term End1:May 9, 2017
Predecessor1:Kevin Falcon
Successor1:Marvin Hunt
Office2:Minister of Children and Family Development
Term Start2:September 5, 2012
Term End2:July 18, 2017
Predecessor2:Mary McNeil
Assembly3:British Columbia Legislative
Constituency Am3:Surrey-Panorama
Term Start3:May 12, 2009
Term End3:May 14, 2013
Predecessor3:Riding Established
Successor3:Marvin Hunt

Stephanie Cadieux (born 1972 or 1973) is a Canadian politician, who was elected as a BC Liberal member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia in the 2009 provincial election, representing the riding of Surrey-Panorama. After the 2013 provincial election, Cadieux was elected in the riding of Surrey-Cloverdale and in the 2017 provincial election, Cadieux was elected in the riding of Surrey South. In Opposition, she served as Opposition critic for Advanced Education and as Opposition critic for Gender Equity, Accessibility, Inclusion and Sport, having previously served, when her party formed the government, as the Minister of Children and Family Development, and prior to that as Minister of Social Development, Minister of Labour, Citizens' Services and Open Government and Minister of Community, Sport and Cultural Development.

She was a member of the Select Standing Committees on Health and on Children and Youth, and a former member of the Special Committee to Review the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act.

Cadieux, formerly the director of marketing and development for the BC Paraplegic Association and manager of accessibility for 2010 Legacies Now Society. Her leadership and resourcefulness led her to be voted one of Business in Vancouver's Top 40 Under 40 for 2007. She has been a wheelchair user since a car accident at age 18.[2] She is the second wheelchair user, following Doug Mowat, elected to the provincial legislature.

She has served as president of the Realwheels Society, ambassador for the Rick Hansen Man in Motion Foundation, a researcher and member of the advisory panel for the International Collaboration on Repair Discoveries (ICORD), a member of the Diversity Advisory Committee for Global BC and as a mentor with the YWCA.

She has traveled extensively, including to Europe, Central America, Africa and North America, some of which has been as a delegate for international development work with people with disabilities in developing countries.

She resigned from her MLA position, effective April 30, 2022, to become Canada's first Chief Accessibility Officer.[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. SURREY-PANORAMA: Economy, crime, health care jostle for top issue in revamped ridingDiakiw, Kevin. The Leader [Surrey, B.C] 09 Apr 2009: 1.
  2. https://theprovince.com/More+than+quarter+MLAs/1594466/story.html "More than a quarter of MLAs new"
  3. Web site: Veteran B.C. Liberal Stephanie Cadieux resigns seat, takes federal accessibility post . 2022-06-16 . Victoria Times Colonist . 4 April 2022 . en.