In Touch_October 2010_CLR.indd - Bell In Touch
Transcription
In Touch_October 2010_CLR.indd - Bell In Touch
In Touch Newsletter for Bell retirees | October 2010, Vol. 10, No. 3 Introducing Bell’s new national charitable initiative in support of mental health On September 21, Bell launched a new multi-year charitable program to support mental health in every aspect of Canadian life. One in five Canadians will suffer from some form of mental illness in their lives – meaning that all of us will be impacted in some way, either directly or as a family member, friend or colleague. In fact, mental illness affects more Canadians than any other major illness yet it remains significantly underfunded and misunderstood. Investing $50 million over the next five years, Bell’s Mental Health Initiative is built on 4 key action pillars that will help increase awareness and acceptance of mental illness, improve access to mental health care, support new research and enhance workplace programs. The 4 key action pillars are: 1. Anti-stigma Many of those who experience mental illness are too embarrassed to talk about it and seek the help they need. To drive real progress, Bell has made reducing the stigma the first pillar of our program. A new campaign called Bell Let’s Talk is being launched to open a national conversation about mental health with a Canadian icon leading the way: Olympian Clara Hughes. access to care in their communities wherever a Bell or Bell Aliant company is connecting Canadians. More announcements to come throughout the fall. In addition, an annual Bell Let’s Talk Day, set for February 9, 2011, will further help to raise awareness about mental health. For every text message sent and every long distance call made by Bell customers that day, Bell will donate 5 cents to programs dedicated to mental health. 3. Research 2. Community care and access Together with the Canadian health care community from coast to coast to coast, Bell will work to enhance access to mental health care with solutions ranging from local community support to telemedicine to improved hospital capabilities. Our first gift of $1 million will support the Royal Ottawa Hospital Foundation’s videoconferencingbased telepsychiatry program, a national initiative that is especially effective in serving remote communities. Bell will also launch a country-wide grant fund for smaller organizations looking to improve Contest Check out the new In Touch website, sign up for the email distribution list and gain a chance to win a smartphone. Details on page 20. To support research that leads to better understanding, prevention and treatment of mental illness, Bell will invest in groundbreaking programs at hospitals, universities and other institutions across Canada through new research chairs, fellowships, bursaries and project grants. (Continued on page 3) In this issue News roundup . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Bell buys CTV . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Bell retiree profile . . . . . . . . . 4 Bell retirees in the community 5 Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Retirements and obituaries . 11 Employee Giving Program . 16 Friends and Family offer . . . 19 In Touch contest . . . . . . . . . 20 News roundup September 21 September 10 July 5 Bell introduces a new charitable initiative in support of mental health Bell buys CTV Bell TV enhances French content with Zeste and Playhouse Disney télé Read article on page 1. September 8 September 16 Bell TV first in Canada to offer satellite customers national video‑on-demand service Bell launches Bell TV On Demand, the first national on-demand video service available to Canadian satellite TV subscribers. Bell TV On Demand is also the first to offer satellite customers national on-demand access to select titles in crystal clear 1080p HD resolution, comparable to Blu-ray™. Bell Fibe TV™ is here Bell’s IPTV (Internet Protocol Television) service has debuted in Toronto and Montréal. The new service called Fibe TV™ was one of the most anticipated new communications services in Canada with premium content, advanced programming options and stunning picture quality that take TV viewing a dramatic step forward. Delivered over Bell’s multibillion-dollar FTTN network, Fibe TV complements our popular national Bell TV satellite service and accelerates TV choice and competition in both of these major urban markets. For more information, go to bell.ca/fibetv. 2 | In Touch Bell Mobility scores touchdown with exclusive NFL partnership Bell and the National Football League (NFL) announced an exclusive multi-year relationship to bring live NFL regular-season and post-season games, including the Super Bowl, NFL Network, RedZone and much more NFL content, to Bell Mobility phones across Canada. July 30 iPhone 4 now available on Canada’s best network September 13 BCE shares Read article on page 3. Bell has begun offering iPhone 4, the thinnest smartphone in the world, with the highest resolution display and the most advanced mobile operating system, iOS 4, which includes multitasking and over 100 new features. iPhone 4 is the ultimate platform for the more than 200,000 applications available from the App Store, including Apple’s new iMovie application for editing videos on the go. For more information, go to bell.ca/iphone4. July 29 Bell Homestead celebrates a “Century of Connections” Alexander Graham Bell’s first Canadian residence celebrates 100 years as a historic site. It was at his family farm near Brantford, Ontario that Alexander Graham Bell made some of the most important breakthroughs in his invention of the telephone. The Bell Homestead is open to the public Tuesday to Sunday. For more information, go to www.bellhomestead.ca. Closing price September 24, 2010: $33.77 Low October 15, 2009: $25.07 High September 22, 2010: $34.00 Bell TV has announced the exclusive addition of Playhouse Disney télé (PHD télé) to its growing line-up of French content. PHD télé and Zeste food specialty channel, which launched in April, are two key additions to the company’s French specialty and family entertainment programming. For more information, go to bell.ca/tv. June 25 BCE once again shows its leadership as a corporate citizen The 2009 Corporate Responsibility Report reinforces BCE’s track record on environmental, community and sustainability issues. And as always, it’s chock full of facts, figures and compelling stories that demonstrate the company’s commitment to the highest standards of ethical, responsible and community-oriented behaviour. Read it online at bce.ca/responsibility. June 10 Bell’s Turbo Hub now available in Western Canada Consumers and businesses in rural and remote communities in Ontario and Québec, and now in British Colombia and Alberta, can access high-speed Internet and voice service using the new Bell Turbo Hub on Canada’s best network. For more information, go to bell.ca/turbohub. For information on Bell products and services, go to bell.ca or call 310-BELL. (Continued from page 1) Introducing Bell’s new national charitable initiative in support of mental health 4. Workplace health Bell will work with corporate Canada and the health care community to develop and adopt mental health best practices in our workplace. That includes easy access to mental health information for Bell team members, advanced return-to-work programs and the creation of an overall culture of mental health support. Every senior leader will participate in new training and information programs to accelerate understanding of and action around mental health issues. Educational elements for all team members will range from special webcasts to lunch and learn sessions. Find our more, by visiting Bell’s Mental Health website at bce.ca/mentalhealth. Bell buys CTV, Canada’s #1 media company With the acquisition of CTV, announced September 10, Bell is taking a big step closer to becoming Canada’s leading video provider across all three screens: TV, mobile and online. Bell will buy 100% of CTV, including the nation’s premier TV network, the most popular speciality channels in Canada, the leading digital media sites and the largest radio network in the country. Bell’s purchase of CTV generated a flurry of media coverage heralding the deal as an historic move that will remake the media landscape in Canada. Most commentators and analysts agreed that the acquisition of CTV is a perfect fit with Bell’s strategy: it ensures we have the best video content for our TV, online and mobile platforms, such as Bell Mobile TV, Bell TV Online and Fibe TV, our new IPTV service that recently launched in several Toronto and Montréal neighbourhoods. It also strengthens Bell’s competitive position, more than levelling the playing field with competitors like Vidéotron, Shaw and Rogers, who have significant media assets. CTV brings to Bell an awesome array of popular content, including top specialty channels like TSN and RDS; leading online destinations like CTV.ca, MuchMusic.com and TheComedyNetwork.ca; and of course, Canada’s mostwatched network, CTV, and its 27 stations across the country. We’ll also be welcoming a great team of more than 5,000 CTV employees right across Canada, who did a stellar job broadcasting the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics. Video is a big part of Bell’s business and is going to get a lot bigger. Bell TV already generates as much revenue as home phones and that doesn’t include our fast-growing Bell Mobile TV and the just-launched Fibe TV. With the best video content and the best networks for delivering this content to customers, Bell is well on its way to becoming Canada’s #1 TV provider. Update on Bell’s Pension Plan Our most recent actuarial valuation of the Bell Canada Pension Plan, held on December 31, 2009, showed a solvency* ratio of 89.6% and a funding* ratio of 100.2%. A solvency ratio of less than 100% means that if the Plan had been terminated on December 31, 2009, the company would have 5 years from that time to cover any insufficient funds and pay all of the Plan’s commitments. Find more information in the 2010 Pension Information Committee report available in the News section of the In Touch website at www.intouch.bell.ca. * A solvency ratio refers to assets divided by liabilities, calculated as if the plan had terminated. A funding ratio relates to assets divided by liabilities, calculated on a going-concern basis. Bell Canada and the participating subsidiaries are contributing to the Plan in accordance with pension legislation and as per the Solvency Funding Relief Regulations. October 2010 | 3 Bell retiree profile Living in the fast lane At 73, Jimmy Seanosky exercises up to three hours a day, six days a week, and proudly boasts that he doesn’t take a single pill. While most men his age are taking it easy on the golf course, Jimmy’s favourite sport is inline speed skating, a sport he took up when he moved to Florida in 1997, seven years after retiring as a manager in the Engineering & Provisioning group in Montréal at the enviable age of 53. What does he love most about speed skating? “The speed of course,” says Jimmy with a laugh. On a recent morning, Jimmy clocked a training speed of one minute and 55 seconds for a 1,000 metre sprint. In competition, he could make it in one minute, 40 seconds. Unofficially, Jimmy owns all the sprint records in Canada and the United States. He can’t claim the records officially because there are no other competitors in his age group. “I’m the only skater in North America that does outdoor speed skating because it’s very strenuous with the wind and the heat,” he explains. While he does compete with men up to 20 years younger, he admits: “I can’t make the podium because of the big difference in age.” But that doesn’t stop him from training regardless. Every morning, Jimmy heads out to the Hollywood Beach boardwalk where he practices his sprints and indulges his other passion: preaching the benefits of exercise. “I love to talk with the locals and tourists about speed skating,” says Jimmy, who also offers free demonstrations. In 2008, he started a website called “SkateForHealth” to promote speed skating as a way to 4 | In Touch stay fit. “I recommend skating for older people too,” he says. “If they’re sound of body, they can learn how to skate.” A lifelong sports enthusiast, Jimmy was on the track, football, hockey and gymnastics teams in high school. As an adult, he’s been a marathoner, a curling enthusiast/coach and a body builder. In the early 1960s, he founded the Bell Canada Québec City hockey league. “I’ve been into sports all my life,” he says. Now, his mission is to convey that love of sport to a younger generation. He recently applied to become accredited to perform skating demonstrations in gymnasiums and outdoor rinks in schools and city parks. “I’ll be able to work with kids of all ages from kindergarten to high school,” he says. Besides his passion for sport, Jimmy has also self-published three language lexicons on Amazon.com and started an entertainment business singing karaoke. Next year, he plans to indulge his interest in ancient history by travelling to Mayan, Incan, Egyptian and Sumerian historic sites. “I’ve got lots on the go,” he admits. “Life is great when you find hobbies and sports that really interest you. This is just the start,” states the indefatigable Jimmy who—no surprise—plans to live until he’s 130! For more info, visit Jimmy’s website at www.skateforhealth.com. If you, or other retirees you know, have found interesting ways to fully enjoy your retirement, we would like to hear from you. Send us an e-mail at intouch@bell.ca, or write to us at 1 carrefour Alexander-Graham-Bell, A-4, Verdun (Québec) H3E 3B3. Bell retirees in the community Learning centre teaches Bell retiree importance of volunteering “Without the more than 60 volunteers who help us out, we wouldn’t be able to offer the services that we do,” states Karen Barr, Executive Director of the Comox Valley Adult Learning Centre. Among those indispensible volunteers is Bell retiree Judy Jolley. Judy has been volunteering at the learning centre for 10 years as a receptionist. On paper, her duties consist mainly of answering the phone and basic office work. But, as Karen explains, Judy’s contribution is so much more than that. “Judy has a real gift for making people who come through our doors feel so welcome,” she says. According to Karen, there is no task too big or too small for Judy to tackle. Not only is she reliable and hard working, but she’s also very funny. “She has a knack for putting things in a way that makes light work of something rather than turning it into a serious issue,” Karen explains, adding: “She’s just a real pleasure to have around the organization.” What Judy finds most gratifying about volunteering at the learning centre is the belief that she’s doing something useful. “The Comox Valley Adult Learning Centre truly makes me feel that I’m making a useful contribution to our community,” says Judy, who retired from Bell in 1996 as an administrative clerk in the Dorval office. In 2000, she and her husband moved to the Comox Valley in British Columbia. Judy also makes herself useful to the learning centre by helping with fundraising. In addition to selling raffle tickets to raise money, Judy has also received a $500 grant from Bell’s Employee Giving Program for the past seven years. Those funds have crucially gone to finance tutor training. “I just have to put in my 50 hours of volunteer work a year, which doesn’t take too long,” says Judy, who volunteers four hours at the learning centre every week. Established in 1993, the Comox Valley Adult Learning Centre is dedicated to increasing adult literacy in the area. Their services include a program that helps adults learn and improve their basic math, reading, writing, computer, and workplaceessential skills; ESL tutoring; a learning program for parents; and computer workshops for seniors. The tutors are all volunteers and the services are free. “I think it’s truly wonderful how the learning centre is helping people, both those who are new to our country as well as those adults who, for one reason or another, have slipped through the cracks of our school system and never learned the proper reading and writing skills,” Judy says. The learning centre has also taught Judith some things too: namely, the importance of volunteering to help those in your own community. Bell’s Employee Giving Program offers employees and retirees the ability to make donations to their favourite charities through payroll deduction and/or personal credit card donations. The program also recognizes employee and retiree volunteer efforts through grants back to the charitable and sport organizations with which they are involved. Complete details about Bell’s Employee Giving Program: • consult the In the community section of the In Touch website at www.intouch.bell.ca • write to employeegiving@bell.ca or • call 1 866 670-8800 For more on the Comox Valley Adult Learning Centre visit www.cvalc.ca. More about volunteering in Canada at www.volunteer.ca. October 2010 | 5 Bell retirees in the community Helping others know they’re not alone For Joanne Smith, volunteering isn’t just a noble pursuit… it’s a personal one. Twenty years ago when Joanne was having difficulty caring for her mother, who suffered from a severe mental illness, she turned to AMI-Québec for help. The organization was so supportive, she felt compelled to give back. AMI-Québec (which stands for ‘action on mental illness’) is a grassroots organization that provides support and information to help families manage the effects of mental illness. Serving more than 1,000 members a year, they also work to promote understanding and dispel the stigma surrounding mental illness. When Joanne attended her first family support group meeting in 1990, it was a revelation to her: she realized she was not alone; others were going through the same thing. Today, she facilitates such meetings, helping to break the isolation so many primary caregivers feel. “Meeting people who were going through the same difficulties gave me hope that I wasn’t alone and that made quite a difference in my life,” explains Joanne, who ended her career at Bell in 2003 as a Business Analyst in Toll Billing. “Those meetings gave me insight into what strategies had worked for others and showed me that the difficulties associated with caring for a loved one were not unique to me.” 6 | In Touch She joined the organization as a volunteer that same year and has since been helping out in any way she can, from serving coffee, to giving presentations in hospitals, to writing articles for the organization’s newsletter, to serving as Secretary on its board. Currently, Joanne facilitates a monthly family support group, is a member of the fundraising committee, and sits as a family member on the organization’s board. Plus, twice a year she co-facilitates a six-week family education workshop. Thanks to her volunteer work, Joanne receives yearly $500 grants from Bell’s Employee Giving Program; money that is crucial to funding the organization’s programs. “As a facilitator, my role is to encourage people to talk and make sure no one interrupts them,” Joanne explains. “These support groups are a chance to provide information, talk about what difficulties the caregivers are having and give them a chance to share their common experiences.” She also directs people to resources that are available to them in the city and primarily through AMI-Québec. Unlike with illnesses like heart disease and cancer, obtaining information about mental illnesses is often difficult for family members. AMI-Québec works with other family organizations throughout Québec to provide such information. While they mostly provide services to the English-speaking community of Montréal and the surrounding areas, since introducing monthly Joanne Smith reviews the fall issue of the AMI-Québec newsletter. Tele-Support Groups and monthly Tele-Workshops (which allow family members to attend sessions via telephone), AMI-Québec is now able to provide services in English to family members across the province. Joanne recalls how the support she received from AMI-Québec all those years ago enabled her to develop a relationship with her mother for the first time in her life. It’s something for which she will always be grateful. “I appreciate the idea of being able to give back and help others in the same way that I was helped,” she concludes. For more on AMI-Québec visit www.amiquebec.org. Events Ontario Barrie Huronia Telecom Pioneers The club meets monthly from February to June and October to December. Current schedule: • October 19 – Georgian Downs race night with dinner • November 15 – Grace United Church • December 4 – Xmas luncheon at the Kempenfelt Centre Info: Vickie Douglas at 705 835-3637 or Brenda Collins at 705 726-7444. Cornwall Bell Telephone Pioneers of Cornwall The club meets for lunch every second Wednesday of the month (from September to June) at the Royal Canadian Legion, Glen Room 415, 2nd St. W. Info and reserv.: Dan Youmelle at 613 938-1930 or 613 936-5020; daniel.youmelle@sympatico.ca. Hamilton Retirees Club December 9 Christmas luncheon at Michelangelo Banquet Centre. Social time from 11:30 a.m.; lunch at 1:00 p.m. Cost T.B.A. Info: Edith Gallagher at 905 575-8205; edith.gallagher@ sympatico.ca. London Telecom Pioneer Club Vacation getaways February 17, 2011 Hawaiian Adventure – 10 day escorted tour of Hawaii including Oahu, Kauai and Maui. Cost: $4,899 p.p. (double occ.). Info: Cary Grant at 1 800 209-7114 or clgrant@sympatico.ca. Inge Desautels and Marion Berglund: two Bell co-workers who have never retired! Inge Desautels began her career as a volunteer in the 1970s when she led a fundraising campaign to finance a new long-term care facility in Dryden, Ontario. The campaign collected $1.3M and the Princess Court opened its doors in 2000. Today, Inge heads the Dryden Extended Care Organization, which provides assistance to the centre. And as if that weren’t enough, Inge also does volunteer work at the Dryden Go Getters seniors centre. Marion Berglund, who spends most of her days volunteering at the Dryden Go Getters seniors centre, coordinates a variety of activities and services, such as weekly bingo, lunches, and ROSE Volunteers October 17 A day of fun betting at Woodbine Racetrack. Races start at 1:00 p.m. Cost: $50 p.p. RSVP by Oct. 12 at 1 800 254-5022 or Nancy Spence at 416 292-5322. Pay by cash, cheque or credit card. All proceeds go to charity. Vacation getaways Check www.rosevolunteers.com for info on trips available throughout 2010/2011. Volunteers are always needed for planting projects at Leisureworld – Altamonte and Guildwood Extendicare. access to the onsite nursing services, and has been an active member of the board of directors for the past five years. For these two women, who are also active in their church’s functions and services, volunteering is very fulfilling and perfectly natural. Inge Desautels and Marion Berglund Info: www.rosevolunteers.com or Sharon Teed at 1 800 254-5022; sharon.teed@sympatico.ca. Telco Community Volunteers (TCV) Five retirees clubs, under the banner of TCV, have been serving retirees in the Greater Metropolitan Toronto area since 2000. Retirees Clubs are located in Brampton, Mississauga, Oakville, Scarborough and Toronto. Clubs hold monthly events that include meetings of members, cultural and recreational tours, fellowship events and participation in local charitable activities. Visit www.telcocommunityvolunteers.com for more information. October 2010 | 7 Events (cont’d) October 13 Annual General Meeting at the Novotel Hotel North York, 3 Park Home Avenue. Lunch at noon followed by the business meeting and a guest speaker. Register your attendance with your club. Underground parking available at hotel. TCV Brampton Retirees Club (General Brampton Area) General club meetings first Thursday of every month. More info at http://brampton.telcocommunity volunteers.com. To join: Jim Doyle at 905 941-4426; brampton@ telcocommunityvolunteers.com. TCV Fieldway Retirees Club (Mississauga, Etobicoke & environs) General club meetings third Monday of every month (except July, August and December). More info at http://fieldway.telcocommunity volunteers.com. To join: Cecil Chin at 905 671-2052; fieldway@ telcocommunityvolunteers.com. • December 7 – Annual Christmas luncheon at Le Dome Banquet Hall, 1173 North Service Road East in Oakville. Doors open at 11:00 a.m. Cost: $15 p.p./members and partners; $30 p.p./guests. Reservations obligatory: call any member of the Program Committee by Dec. 1. • February 1, 2011 – A general meeting of your club at Maple Grove United Church. Lunch at noon; meeting at 1:00 p.m. Speaker to be announced. • General club meetings held the first Tuesday of February and October at Maple Grove United Church. Event Line at 905 849-9867 or http://oakville.telcocommunity volunteers.com. To join: Pat Herron at 905 794-7971; herronbird@ rogers.com. TCV Toronto Retirees’ Club (Downtown, Midtown, North) • December 2 – Christmas luncheon at the Novotel Hotel North York, 3 Park Home Avenue at noon. Cost: $20 p.p. Register with Nancy Spence at 416 292-5322 if attending. Bell retirees golf tournament a big success! The 18th annual Bell retirees golf tournament was held on June 22 at the Lotbinière Golf Club. Over 150 golfers from the Greater Québec City Area participated in the tournament. For the second year, Christian Goulet, Bell Assistant Vice-President – Québec Public Sector, served as honorary president. The tournament was an opportunity for retirees to enjoy each other’s company, take part in various contests and share a meal. TCV Oakville Club (Oakville, Burlington, Milton, Mississauga) • October 13 – TCV annual meeting at Novotel Hotel, North York. Lunch at 12:30 p.m. followed by meeting. Bus leaves Maple Grove United Church at 10:15 a.m. Reserv.: Rosy Hayward at 905 823-2546. • October 20 – A fall drive to St. Jacobs Country for lunch at Crossroads and a 2:00 p.m. matinée of Twelve Angry Men. Bus leaves Maple Grove United Church at 10:00 a.m. Cost: $55 p.p./members and partners; $75 p.p./guests. Reserv.: Fred Bucknam at 905 634‑9836. 8 | In Touch Left to right: Lyle Sample, ETFS Travel & Healthcare Solutions, Christian Goulet, Denis Chartrand, Caisse d’économie des employés en Télécommunication, and Yvan Bastien, Bell retiree and outgoing honorary president. • General club meetings first Monday of every month, unless a holiday. Hot Line at 416 440-6838 or http://toronto.telcocommunity volunteers.com. For info regarding the Heart Pillow Group or Quilting Group, call Nancy Spence at 416 292-5322. Retirees get together in Saint-Jérôme and Lachute TCV Scarborough Retirees Club (Scarborough, East, Northeast) General club meetings third Tuesday of every month (except July, August and December). More info at http://scarborough. telcocommunityvolunteers.com. To join: Ron Green at 416 290‑5381; scarborough@telcocommunity volunteers.com. Québec Montréal Bell Community Volunteers • The Bell Community Volunteers are currently collecting pop-can tabs to help finance the purchase of the 142nd wheelchair for Fondation Clermont Bonnenfant. Please send your donations to or drop them off at the Bell Community Volunteers office (C-29), 700, de La Gauchetière W., Montréal, Québec, H3B 4L1, c/o Lise Ouellet. Info.: Lise Ouellet, 514 870-2569; lise.ouellet3@ sympatico.ca. • Memorial mass, Saturday, November 13 at Maison des Sœurs Grises (1190, Guy in Montréal). Doors open at 10:00 a.m., mass at 10:30 a.m., lunch at noon. Price: $20. Free parking at 1200, Guy. Reserv.: Thérèse Lecavalier or Lise Ouellet, 514 870-2569; lise.ouellet3@sympatico.ca (by November 5). • Christmas lunch, Friday, December 10 at the Delta Montréal (475, Président-Kennedy, McGill In the photo: Retirees at a breakfast in Saint-Jérôme. In 1993, a group of retirees in Saint-Jérôme, including Jean-Guy Perron, decided they would get together on the last Thursday of every month to have breakfast and chat. Since then, the group has grown steadily. Even though he moved to the Outaouais region in 1995, Jean-Guy has not only continued to attend the breakfasts but also started a second group in Lachute, whose members meet on the last Friday of every month. To find out more, email Jean-Guy at jean-guy.perron@sympatico.ca. station). Price: $38. Reserve by November 26. Info.: Lise Ouellet, 514 870-2569; lise.ouellet3@ sympatico.ca. • Artists and craftspeople, come show your work at the exhibition sale to be held November 16 and 17 from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. at the Bell Campus (1, carrefour Alexander-Graham-Bell, Île-desSœurs, Verdun). Interested in exhibiting your work? Contact Lise Ouellet, 514 870-2569; lise.ouellet3@sympatico.ca. Organized vacation tours (Montréal departure) • Traditional Christmas at Cap-Santé, Saturday, November 24. • Provence and the Côte d’Azur, May 9 to 20, 2011. Info.: Lise Ouellet, 514 931-3319; lise.ouellet3@sympatico.ca. October 2010 | 9 Events (cont’d) Québec City Club Bell-Vie • Saturday, November 6 at 11:00 a.m. – Memorial mass at Saint-Sacrement Church, Chemin Sainte-Foy. Buffet and conversation after the mass in the church basement. Reserv.: 418 661-3441. • Sunday, December 5 – Christmas lunch. Full details at 418 661-2112. • Club Bell-Vie is looking for retirees who would like to join the club’s management team. If you are interested, leave a voice message with your contact info. at 418 661-3441. • Next breakfast meetings at Kalimera Restaurant (577, Charest Blvd W., corner Aqueduc): October 27, November 24 and January 26, at 9:00 a.m. Reserv.: 418 661-3441. No meeting in December. • For information about Club BellVie activities, call the news line at 418 661-2112. • If you are a Club Bell-Vie member and have changed addresses recently, don’t forget to advise Denise Baillargeon at 418 687-3331. Volunteers wanted Alberta Bethany Lifeline is seeking volunteers to install Lifeline units in Calgary. Lifeline is a 24-hour Personal Emergency Response service. Includes training and ongoing support, reimbursement of mileage costs and a free Lifeline subscription for the volunteer or a family member. Info: Wendy Ahlefeld at 403 210-4667 or ahlefelw@bethanycare.com. Ontario The Friends of the Canadian War Museum (www.friends-amis.org) are seeking a part-time volunteer to coordinate the recruiting, management and celebration of volunteers at the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa. The position requires good organization and interpersonal skills. Info: Mike Bedford at 819 776-8618 or member-fcwm-amcg@magma.ca. The Toronto office of the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario needs volunteers to assist in corporate, community and youth fundraising programs. Info: Jennifer Woodill at 416 489-7111, ext. 358; jwoodill@hsf.on.ca. 10 | In Touch The Lung Association has plenty of volunteering opportunities in the McMaster Region (Brantford, Hamilton, Haldimand-Norfolk, Niagara and Waterloo-Wellington) for Bell retirees. For more info, call Sandy Lee at: • Brantford area: 519 753-4682 • Hamilton: 905 383-1616 • Simcoe: 519 426-4973 • Niagara and Waterloo-Wellington: 1 800 790-5527 St. Patrick’s Home of Ottawa Inc., a long-term care home, is seeking volunteers to assist with residents’ day-to-day activities (leisure programming, wheelchair escort, pastoral services, meal assistant, etc.). Training provided. Info: Suzanne Jeansonne at 613 731-0094, ext. 235; suzannejeansonne@ stpats.ca. Canada-wide The Red Cross is looking for volunteers to join its Disaster Management team. Preference for volunteers available weekdays from 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Training provided. Info: www. redcross.ca/volunteernow. Are you a Member of the Bell Pensioners’ Group? BPG was founded 15 years ago by a group of Bell pensioners who got together to create an organization totally dedicated to the protection of two of your most important assets: your Bell pension and benefits. The site will give you access to the sites of BPG’s five local chapters where you can get a membership application form under the tab “Become A Member.” An application form is also available in the March issue of In Touch. To become a member and find out more about the BPG and its activities, visit bellpensionersgroup.ca. Retirements and obituaries from May to August 2010 Retirements Ontario Thomas Aabna, in Toronto, 29 years and 2 months Kathyrin A. Agaoglu, in Mississauga, 33 years and 9 months Jon A. Allison, in Toronto, 28 years and 11 months Louis Almeida, in Mississauga, 28 years and 2 months Randall G. Badcock, in Scarborough, 36 years and 1 month Gary Crossman, in Val Therese, 21 years and 2 months Judy E. Horsley, in Mississauga, 32 years and 9 months Jackie I. Currie, in Toronto, 30 years and 5 months Richard Howes, in Scarborough, 35 years and 2 months Gina W. Davis, in Hamilton, 28 years and 8 months Leslie G. Deavy, in Ottawa, 28 years and 7 months Diane Désilets, in Ottawa, 34 years and 9 months J. Joan Donaldson, in Mississauga, 32 years and 3 months Allan J. Duff, in Ottawa, 31 years and 10 months Michelle M. Badley, in Mississauga, 35 years and 6 months Margaret Easterbrook, in Hamilton, 32 years and 5 months Solveig Barber, in Don Mills, 21 years and 3 months John R. Edmonds, in Stratford, 31 years and 9 months Léopold Beaudet, in Ottawa, 12 years and 3 months Susan Bianco, in Mississauga, 29 years Daniel C. Blackton, in Windsor, 34 years and 2 months Graham Boone, in Don Mills, 36 years and 9 months Bonnie Brennan, in Toronto, 16 years and 8 months Nancy E. Brown, in London, 27 years and 8 months Catherine A. Butten, in Mississauga, 29 years Vivia R. Campbell, in Don Mills, 20 years and 11 months Alan M. Childs, in Ajax, 35 years and 11 months Ian D. Churchill, in Zephyr, 29 years and 3 months Bonita Ciarallo, in London, 36 years and 1 month Michael Clements, in Hamilton, 29 years and 6 months Mark A. Coady, in Scarborough, 32 years Leon Conner, in Mississauga, 33 years and 7 months Lucy Corrigan, in Mississauga, 28 years and 8 months Wendy A. Hudspith, in Toronto, 20 years and 3 months Carla Hughes, in London, 22 years and 8 months David E. Hyatt, in St. Catharines, 29 years and 10 months Amalia Iantorno, in Toronto, 32 years and 5 months Bradley D. Irwin, in Toronto, 33 years and 6 months Brian Kelahear, in Ottawa, 31 years and 10 months Keith Kelly, in Scarborough, 29 years and 9 months Jamileh Ehsani, in Ottawa, 22 years and 10 months John Kelso, in Dunrobin, 33 years and 5 months Terry J. Fairbarn, in Newmarket, 28 years and 4 months Russell G. Kerr, in Toronto, 36 years and 1 month Christine A. Fuller, in Mississauga, 30 years and 7 months Michael Gaida, in Toronto, 30 years and 7 months Hendrysena Gamage, in Ottawa, 35 years Mary Giotsalitis, in Toronto, 32 years and 11 months Karen Good, in Mississauga, 24 years and 10 months Louise C. Kinszky, in Mississauga, 34 years and 1 month Roy Kissore, in Mississauga, 29 years and 11 months Orly Krauklis, in Don Mills, 32 years and 5 months David Krause, in Ottawa, 6 years and 10 months Wendy J. Kropka, in Toronto, 31 years and 6 months Ingrid Granton, in Toronto, 33 years John A. Kustra, in Stoney Creek, 34 years and 10 months Frank S. Grech, in Don Mills, 23 years and 5 months David Lamb, in Woodstock, 35 years and 8 months Steven E. Guernsey, in Picton, 32 years and 10 months Colin R. Landrigan, in Mississauga, 31 years and 1 month Dulari Harrichand, in Toronto, 34 years and 2 months Arthur D. Langevin, in Ottawa, 31 years and 11 months David A. Harris, in Kitchener, 34 years and 1 month Elizabeth A. Harris, in Oshawa, 32 years and 9 months Laural Harris, in Ottawa, 32 years and 8 months Pierre C. Langevin, in North York, 33 years and 7 months Avis Lecky, in Mississauga, 34 years Isabelle Lesniewski, in Pembroke, 31 years and 6 months A. Scott Lester, in Etobicoke, 21 years and 10 months Siu Lien Liew, in Toronto, 28 years and 11 months Richard H. Louch, in Ottawa, 30 years and 10 months Deborah B. Luke, in Mississauga, 29 years Robert Lush, in Mississauga, 28 years and 8 months Robert M. MacKenzie, in Lindsay, 36 years Donald Mahony, in Toronto, 30 years and 4 months Barbra Malins, in Toronto, 35 years and 2 months Glenn W. Marchant, in Mississauga, 36 years and 11 months Felicity E. Martin, in Mississauga, 21 years James R. McAllister, in Mississauga, 28 years and 9 months John McBride, in Mississauga, 34 years and 2 months Paul D. McCluskey, in Hampton, 32 years and 8 months Barbara A. McCutcheon, in Mississauga, 31 years and 4 months Ian McDonald, in Barrie, 30 years and 9 months Sheryl D. McGill, in Mississauga, 29 years and 3 months David McGraw, in Hamilton, 23 years and 4 months Paul W. Melling, in Kingston, 33 years Richard Middleton, in Ottawa, 36 years and 4 months Gloria C. Miller, in Toronto, 34 years and 7 months Jo-Anne Mineault, in Ottawa, 35 years and 3 months David Moriarity, in Mississauga, 29 years and 7 months Laura E. Morris, in Ottawa, 34 years and 1 month Zainool Mustapha, in Brampton, 10 years and 1 month October 2010 | 11 Retirements and obituaries from May to August 2010 (cont’d) William Nagle, in Ottawa, 32 years and 2 months Terry A. Salhani, in Toronto, 34 years and 4 months Patrick L. Neilly, in Don Mills, 31 years and 7 months Joseph Saule, in Scarborough, 31 years Rita H. Nykilchyk, in Mississauga, 30 years and 4 months Teresa M. Scuccimarri, in Don Mills, 29 years and 10 months Giselle O’Keefe, in Ottawa, 34 years and 11 months Chris C. Oliver, in Mississauga, 33 years and 8 months Joanne M. Palmer, in Toronto, 30 years and 4 months Terry C. Petican, in Brampton, 34 years and 5 months Diane H. Service, in Hamilton, 34 years and 11 months Tomasina Sgrignuoli, in Mississauga, 30 years Douglas T. Shinn, in Newmarket, 32 years and 10 months Donna L. Stedman, in Toronto, 29 years and 4 months James Pitcher, in Stratford, 31 years and 9 months Patrick J. Stephensen, in Barrie, 37 years and 6 months Claudia Pooley, in London, 21 years and 7 months Lorraine Stewart, in Ottawa, 33 years and 9 months Brenda M. Prevost, in Ottawa, 35 years Susan C. Sutherland, in London, 34 years and 3 months Glenn Raggett, in Mississauga, 34 years and 5 months E. Pamela Redway, in Toronto, 26 years and 10 months Marc René-Decotret, in Ottawa, 35 years and 1 month Denise Swan, in Mississauga, 33 years and 5 months Andrew A. Swiatlowski, in Ottawa, 34 years and 4 months Ralph E. Tannahill, in London, 43 years and 10 months Elizabeth Riley, in Don Mills, 29 years and 3 months Steve Toczyski, in Etobicoke, 19 years and 9 months Denise Roach, in St. Catharines, 32 years and 5 months Laurette M. Tremblay, in London, 35 years Patricia A. Robitaille, in Mississauga, 33 years and 1 month Gordon Rogers, in North York, 35 years and 1 month Douglas S. Ross, in Mississauga, 34 years and 9 months Michelle Roy, in Ottawa, 35 years and 11 months Laura Royal, in Mississauga, 33 years and 3 months Kenneth J. Russell, in Mississauga, 32 years and 2 months Heather Safran, in Toronto, 19 years and 1 month Joseph Sage, in Nepean, 33 years and 1 month 12 | In Touch Henriette Tyrrell, in Toronto, 33 years and 11 months Adrian VanSchyndel, in London, 35 years and 7 months Cynthia Wallace, in St. Catharines, 32 years and 5 months William J. Weir, in London, 34 years June White, in Toronto, 23 years and 2 months Ronald B. Wilson, in Toronto, 30 years and 10 months Glen Woodin, in Mississauga, 10 years and 7 months Robert J. York, in Belleville, 31 years and 6 months Renato J. Zanon, in Mississauga, 32 years Elaine ZeMaytis, in Mississauga, 29 years and 3 months Québec Carver Ali, in Montréal, 35 years and 4 months Lorraine Allaire-Berthiaume, in Montréal, 11 years and 4 months Céline Asselin, in Montréal, 31 years and 7 months Danièle Audet, in Montréal, 22 years and 2 months Richard Beaudry, in Montréal, 30 years and 7 months Normand Beaulne, in Sainte‑Agathe, 34 years and 4 months Normand Bédard, in Montréal, 33 years and 9 months Louis Bélanger, in La Présentation, 35 years Gérard Belisle, in Montréal, 34 years Normand Belisle, in Sainte‑Thérèse, 33 years et 8 months Michel Belletête, in Montréal, 29 years and 1 month Anne Bergeron, in Verdun, 32 years and 6 months Normand Bernier, in Pont‑Viau, 35 years and 7 months Yves Bessette, in Montréal, 35 years Pierre Bezeau, in SaintJérôme, 30 years and 3 months Rose Bidler, in Montréal, 56 years and 8 months Carole Bissessar, in Montréal, 35 years and 2 months Diane Blondin-Côté, in Montréal, 26 years and 7 months Yves Bond, in Longueuil, 30 years and 9 months Richard Bonenfant, in Montréal, 31 years and 10 months Simon Bouchard, in Québec City, 34 years and 1 month Louis Boudreau, in Anjou, 35 years Sona S. Boyamian, in Montréal, 31 years and 2 months Larry G. Brazel, in Montréal, 32 years and 1 month Carole Breton, in Montréal, 33 years and 5 months Jean-Pierre Brillant, in Sainte‑Agathe, 35 years and 10 months Joanne Careau, in Québec City, 22 years and 10 months Carole Chabiague-Laurin, in Gatineau, 36 years and 1 month Michel Chevalier, in Candiac, 33 years and 10 months Solange Ciminelli, in Montréal, 30 years and 10 months Monique Cloutier, in Montréal, 22 years and 4 months Richard Cloutier, in Laval, 33 years and 5 months Joanne Corriveau, in Montréal, 29 years and 7 months Lorraine Croxen, in Montréal, 29 years and 8 months France Danis, in Montréal, 32 years and 2 months Jacinthe Delorme, in Montréal, 34 years and 4 months Jean-Pierre Denis, in Montréal, 33 years and 6 months André Desjardins, in Montréal, 34 years and 4 months Liborio Di Stefano, in Dorval, 30 years and 11 months Joe Diogo, in Montréal, 32 years and 11 months Daniel Doyle, in Montréal, 33 years and 8 months Rémy Duff, in Chomedey, 34 years and 3 months Ginette Faucher, in Montréal, 35 years and 2 months Angel Feeley, in Granby, 29 years and 10 months Jean Fortin, in Montréal, 9 years and 5 months Denis Lalonde, in Montréal, 31 years and 3 months Samir Oueslati, in Montréal, 33 years and 4 months Denis Fournier, in Gatineau, 33 years and 2 months Louise Lapensée, in Montréal, 32 years and 11 months Alain Paquette, in Montréal, 33 years and 11 months Dyane Fournier, in Montréal, 24 years and 11 months Mario Laplante, in Saint‑Bruno, 29 years and 10 months Danielle Paré, in Verdun, 21 years and 6 months André Frenette, in Montréal, 30 years and 1 month Daniel Frenette, in Drummondville, 33 years and 10 months Claude T. Gagnon, in Saint‑Jean, 32 years and 11 months Maurice Gamache, in Verdun, 29 years and 11 months France Gariépy, in Montréal, 29 years and 10 months Maureen Gauthier, in Montréal, 35 years and 4 months Léonce Gélinas, in Shawinigan, 32 years and 2 months Francine Girard, in Québec City, 34 years and 2 months Colette Gosselin, in Montréal, 15 years and 2 months Daniel Grenier, in Sherbrooke, 35 years Robert Guay, in Verdun, 28 years and 11 months Marc Guertin, in Québec City, 33 years and 1 month Serge Guimond, in Sainte‑Thérèse, 24 years and 4 months Danielle Houde, in Verdun, 33 years and 9 months Paul C. Hubert, in Gatineau, 32 years and 10 months Daniel Jacques, in Verdun, 31 years and 3 months Alain Jasmin, in Montréal, 30 years and 2 months Johanne A. Labelle, in Montréal, 27 years Monique Lacasse, in Montréal, 31 years Raymond Lachambre, in Verdun, 33 years and 5 months Denise Lafrance, in Sainte‑Foy, 32 years and 2 months Claude Lajoie, in Le Gardeur, 35 years and 3 months Robert Lapointe, in Montréal, 33 years and 7 months Alain Lavallée, in Laval, 30 years and 11 months Gilles Lavallée, in Anjou, 30 years and 2 months Jocelyne Leduc, in Verdun, 25 years and 7 months Lise Legault, in Montréal, 9 years Anne Lemelin, in Sainte-Foy, 33 years and 2 months Luc Lessard, in Québec City, 30 years and 10 months Paul-Lucien Lévesque, in Montréal, 33 years and 6 months Denis Paré, in Sainte-Foy, 32 years and 4 months Jean-Claude Paré, in Anjou, 35 years and 2 months Michel Pelletier, in Québec City, 33 years and 1 month Ronald Pelletier, in Sainte‑Foy, 31 years and 10 months Réjean Pilon, in Trois‑Rivières, 32 years and 1 month Carole Poirier, in Montréal, 15 years and 1 month Claudio Poletto, in Montréal, 36 years Linda Poulin, in Montréal, 35 years and 10 months Émilie Lussier, in Verdun, 29 years and 7 months Guy Pronovost, in Repentigny, 33 years and 4 months Serge Lussier, in Verdun, 21 years and 4 months Hélène Provencher, in Sainte‑Foy, 33 years and 2 months Richard Mannion, in Verdun, 34 years and 5 months Lucie Martel, in Montréal, 32 years and 2 months Richard Maurice, in Montréal, 28 years and 7 months Scott McCartney, in Lasalle, 33 years and 11 months Hélène McNeil, in Verdun, 30 years and 5 months Danielle Meloche, in Montréal, 32 years and 3 months Claude Métayer, in Québec City, 33 years and 11 months Manon Migner, in Montréal, 32 years and 4 months Serge Milse, in Anjou, 33 years and 2 months Alain Morin, in Montréal, 33 years Denis Morisset, in Montréal, 32 years and 8 months Deborah Morris, in Montréal, 31 years and 11 months Louise Nicol, in Montréal, 25 years and 6 months Alain Ouellette, in Sherbrooke, 31 years and 10 months Bernard Rioux, in Montréal, 35 years and 1 month Renée Robert, in Verdun, 32 years and 6 months Pierre Rochon, in Montréal, 33 years and 1 month Maurice Routhier, in Québec City, 33 years and 1 month Louise Roy, in Sherbrooke, 32 years and 3 months Paul-Émile Roy, in Sainte‑Agathe, 34 years and 11 months Johane St-Onge, in Québec City, 31 years and 11 months Doris St-Pierre, in Saint‑Lambert, 32 years and 2 months Daniel Tardif, in Brossard, 30 years and 7 months Lucie Thérien, in Verdun, 31 years and 1 month Richard Thérien, in Saint‑Colomban, 35 years and 1 month Suzanne Thérien, in Montréal, 30 years and 1 month Mourad Tikelaline, in Sainte‑Foy, 21 years Lise Turcot-Giroux, in Montréal, 30 years and 4 months Christine P. Turcotte, in Montréal, 34 years and 4 months Jean-Luc Vaudry, in Pont‑Viau, 31 years and 1 month Pierre Verdoni, in Montréal, 33 years and 9 months Jacques Vézina, in Québec City, 32 years and 8 months Richard D. Villeneuve, in Gatineau, 32 years Joseph Viventi, in Montréal, 35 years and 3 months Alberta Gary Stoutenburg, in Calgary, 8 years and 9 months British Columbia Karen C. O’Brien, in Vancouver, 37 years and 4 months Céline Samson, in Québec City, 29 years and 9 months Obituaries Ann Sanders, in Sainte-Juliede-Verchères, 35 years and 6 months Marion Anderson, April 20, in Arnprior Diane Sarrazin, in Montréal, 32 years and 11 months Michel A. Savard, in Montréal, 30 years and 4 months France Séguin, in Montréal, 33 years and 11 months Ontario Owen F. Andrews, July 17, in Milton Bruce T. Archer, April 24, in Fonthill Richard Armstrong, August 22, in Kitchener Claire Aubrey, June 18, in Pembrook October 2010 | 13 Retirements and obituaries from May to August 2010 (cont’d) Margaret Bagley, April 18, in Orillia John W. Dyer, May 10, in London Margaret Hutton, June 21, in Whitby Leslie Merrifield, May 31, in North Augusta V. Owen Ball, May 15, in Huntsville Archie A. Edwards, May 7, in Port Credit (Mississauga) Stephen Ihasz, April 26, in Toronto Roland Mills, June 22, in Dundas Elizabeth J. Barron, June 8, in Scarborough Gordon Elliott, July 22, in Niagara Falls Doreen F. Jackson, June 30, in Oshawa Peter B. Mitchell, August 10, in Bracebridge Malcolm E. Bell, May 10, in Belleville Berthe E. Farley, August 14, in Gloucester John Jemison, July 26, in Windsor Marion Monahan, April 22, in Carleton Place Carolle M. Benoit, May 10, in Almonte Aileen C. Fernando, April 28, in North York Anne Johnson, June 1, in Peterborough Margaret Morgan, May 28, in Toronto H. Neil Bielby, August 22, in North Bay Gordon P. Findlay, August 14, in Milton Flora Jordan, May 11, in Kingston Shirley A. Nantais, May 13, in Windsor Dorothey Bisschop, June 12, in Bradford Jessie Fisher, May 31, in Willowdale Kathleen E. Jukes, June 17, in Innisville Catherine Ondracek, July 22, in Ajax Jane H. Blakely, May 11, in Kitchener Robert Francisco, August 10, in Ajax Betty J. Kibbler, April 22, in Kitchener-Waterloo Brenda L. Organ, August 4, in Scarborough Thomas Bourret, July 8, in Brockville Margaret Friesen, July 15, in Huntsville Alfred Kirton, July 26, in Corunna Wing Ho Pang, May 9, in Vaughan Alice Brocanier, May 24, in Tillsonburg William M. Gilland, May 23, in North York William Kobus, July 6, in Renfrew William N. Philip, June 15, in Scarborough Leslie Brown, June 1, in Islington John A. Gooderham, May 9, in Sutton Blanche Labute, July 12, in Tecumseh James Ramage, May 11, in Wasaga Beach Paul Brown, May 6, in Campbellford Frances Gorgichuk, June 25, in Weston Mary Leavitt, August 18, in Peterborough Earl L. Reid, August 17, in Hamilton Peggy Brown, May 25, in Toronto William Greatrix, June 10, in Barrie Norman Legacy, August 17, in Brantford Joyce I. Rice, August 8, in Kincardine Hugh Campbell, June 12, in Ancaster William Greer, April 15, in Hannon Ronald Little, April 25, in Sault Ste. Marie Barbara Roberton, March 16, in London Freda Chinn, April 15, in St. Thomas Pauline G. Groulx, May 1, in Orleans Derek L. Littlefair, June 3, in Burlington Neil P. Robertson, April 16, in Ottawa Douglas Clark, June 24, in Scarborough Frank T. Hankins, April 24, in Newmarket Donald J. Loughlin, May 19, in Milton Mary Ann Robitaille, May 24, in Lasalle Hilda L. Clark, April 18, in Sudbury Helen Hanlan, June 23, in Peterborough Muriel E. MacDougall, June 20, in Scarborough Maurice C. Rochette, July 29, in Gloucester M. Berthe Cloutier, May 28, in Orleans Arthur Harriss, July 31, in Whitby Veronica J. MacNeil, July 14, in Brantford Robert Roose, May 17, in Peterborough Beatrice Cole, June 18, in Ottawa Peter Hayden, June 11, in Millgrove Mercedes Martyn, May 7, in Mississauga Donald Ryder, May 6, in Kingston Allan Cornelius, July 5, in Whitby May B. Hayes, May 20, in London William W. McArthur, August 2, in Orillia John H. Seeley, June 26, in London Elsie Crabb, May 1, in Hamilton Douglas Heard, May 15, in Port Perry John McBride, July 4, in Burlington Jit Singh, April 23, in Scarborough Robert J. Craig, May 18, in Owen Sound Dorothy Herbert, July 4, in Thunder Bay Edith McCartney, July 18, in Scarborough Alex Spasov, May 14, in Ottawa Karen Danzinger, August 14, in Toronto Leslie Hird, July 15, in Toronto Mary McIntosh, May 16, in Lucknow Arthur G. Spencer, August 13, in Collingwood Kathleen McIver, July 13, in Fonthill Sidney Standen, March 15, in North Bay Robert S. McLelland, August 8, in Sudbury Helen Stelczer, July 9, in West Hill Marjorie McTeer, April 4, in Dundalk Robert W. Stringer, May 23, in Etobicoke Wilhelmine Merklinger, May 8, in Waterloo Allan Swan, August 10, in Kingston Beulah Davidge, August 1, in London Merle Davison, June 2, in Guelph Sandra Dion, August 19, in Milton Janet Douglas, July 14, in Toronto 14 | In Touch Peter E. Holleron, May 2, in Gloucester Kenneth Holmes, June 28, in St. Catharines Evelyn Hudson, August 3, in Bala Edward R. Hulanicki, July 22, in London Phylis Taggart, July 24, in Guelph Charlotte Delisle, August 2, in Québec City Monique A. Laramée, June 10, in Boucherville Jocelyne Thibault, June 23, in Beauport Margaret Thompson, May 28, in Islington Laurence Doyle, July 18, in Montréal Ghislain Larouche, August 8, in Québec City Fernande Tremblay, August 5, in Le Gardeur Vera Topicha, May 23, in Toronto Aldo Druda, July 4, in Acton Vale Huguette L. Larouche, April 11, in Trois-Rivières Jeannette Tremblay, June 10, in Montréal Douglas Toynbee, August 16, in Markham Annette Duchêne, July 20, in Montréal Jacqueline Larue, April 24, in Québec City Lysette C. Trottier, May 27, in Prévost Elizabeth A. Trotta, July 7, in Maple Donalda Duchesne, April 27, in Terrebone Raymond Lavigne, July 1, in Laval André J. Vaillancourt, July 19, in Chicoutimi Richard J. Valcourt, August 14, in Clarksburg Jean-Louis Duford, June 6, in Beloeil Nicole Lavoie, June 18, in Blainville Marie-Ann Velgos, June 8, in Dollard-des-Ormeaux Louis Van De Walle, August 2, in Mississauga Colette Dufour, August 22, in Chicoutimi-Nord Robert Lavoie, April 20, in Verdun Henri Verrier, June 22, in Montréal Loucianna Voutsinas, April 24, in Ottawa Hélène Duhamel, August 3, in Saint-Jérôme Nicole Maher, April 27, in Montréal Alberta Bruce R. Waldron, July 16, in Burlington Donald Dumouchel, March 18, in Île-Bizard Jean-Baptis Maltais, July 28, in La Malbaie Reginald Walker, July 23, in Brampton Regina Eitner, May 12, in Dollard-des-Ormeaux Louise Martineau-Lajoie, June 21, in Saint-Hubert Gary J. Walsh, August 6, in Perth John Elliott, August 24, in Montréal Léo J. Mathieu, April 29, in Québec City William N. Watson, June 24, in Calabogie Ceres Émond, May 1, in Valleyfield Eugène Miron, August 2, in Lanoraie William Winton, June 19, in Ottawa Claude Émond, July 5, in Québec City Thomas Moran, June 19, in Laval Susan A. Wisdom, June 6, in Toronto Joseph Exantus, August 17, in Anjou Jacques Nicole, April 22, in Wotton Elizabeth M. Worsley, June 18, in Markham Knud Geertsen, June 17, in Gatineau Juliette Nieri, April 22, in Montréal-Nord Frank Zamora, July 5, in Toronto Rolande GerMayn, July 10, in Montréal Jules Noreau, August 10, in Québec City Charles Renoe, June 30, in Nanaimo Barbara A. Ziegler, August 5, in Ancaster Madeleine Gingues, June 1, in Sherbrooke Dorothée A. Ouellet, April 26, in Thetford-Mines David Wilson, July 1, in Duncan Québec James R. Gordon, April 20, in Ogden Jeannine Pelland, June 5, in Joliette Nova Scotia Claude Goulet, July 6, in Notre-Dame-des-Prairies Jean-Claude Plourde, May 24, in Sainte-Martine Gaston Goyette, June 26, in Laval Éric Pollard, July 7, in Brôme Italy Françoise Presseau, April 8, in Châteauguay Angelo Ciccarelli, August 2, in Monteleone Di Puglia, Foggia Viviane A. Barnard, May 14, in Gatineau Jean-François Beaulieu, May 9, in Montréal Denise Bedwani, August 18, in Sillery Jeanne Bilodeau, August 7, in Gatineau Gertrude Blondeau, May 22, in Montréal Clarence F. Bourguignon, June 30, in Québec City Chantale Brodeur, August 7, in Mercier Pierre Cardinal, May 6, in Québec City Bruno Chouinard, June 26, in Weedon Fernand Cornellier, June 6, in Saint-Hubert Monique De Grandmont, June 8, in Saint-Léonard Jeannine M. Hétu, May 4, in Rosemère E. Holmes, June 22, in Kirkland Raymond R. Hurtubise, June 30, in Lac-Supérieur Rosalee Kovalsky, August 1, in Côte Saint-Luc John Y. Labonté, June 13, in Gatineau Blandine Lacroix, May 6, in Sherbrooke Simone Lafleur, May 2, in Rigaud Léo Landry, August 15, in Saint‑Rédempteur Claire Lapierre, August 6, in Saint-Laurent Lise C. Rivard, March 13, in Verdun Maurice Robert, May 17, in Saint-Lambert Lucie Sauvé, June 13, in Châteauguay Jean-Guy J. Sénécal, August 1, in Brossard Edwin Massey, May 1, in Fort Saskatchewan British Columbia Stanley Armstrong, August 11, in Abbotsford Frank J. Baksics, June 8, in Mission James Biggs, July 29, in Nanaimo Lillian K. Cornell, July 30, in Victoria Elizabeth Farrar, July 1, in Sydney Frank Holt, May 16, in Victoria Richard Godson, May 26, in Dartmouth Philippines Danny R. Clarke, April 16, in Davao City United States Charles Garrow, May 4, in Ormond Beach, Florida Robert Sigouin, August 17, in Montréal-Nord Jacqueline L. Singer, July 29, in Montréal Gilles St-Marseille, June 9, in Deux-Montagnes The retirement and obituary notices are updated monthly at www.intouch.bell.ca. Veronica Stone, June 2, in Montréal-Nord October 2010 | 15 Employee Giving Program: Renew or register today Every fall, we invite Bell retirees to participate in the Employee Giving Program to support charities and other non-profit organizations through payroll deduction or a personal credit card. Thank you to all the Bell employees and retirees who made donations through the Employee Giving Program in 2010. Together, we contributed more than $1.3 million to charities and organizations that provide direct assistance to families, children and seniors across Canada. New focus on mental health In September, Bell announced that mental health is the new primary focus of our community investment strategy (see article on page 1). We encourage you to continue supporting the United Way and your other favourite charities, but we also invite you to join the fight against mental illness by donating to an organization that supports mental health research and community services such as the Canadian Mental Health Association. With your help, we can increase that amount and make an even bigger positive difference in our communities. Join the Employee Giving Program today—just fill out the form inserted in this In Touch and send it to us by mail or fax. Why make a donation from your pension cheque? Already making donations? You must renew your donation amounts and choice of organizations every year. The donations you are currently making will stop at the end of December unless you fill out and send us the form. Please don’t hesitate—your contributions support the well-being of our communities. • You can support as many charities as you want. Bell’s Volunteer Grant Program Bell recognizes retiree and employee volunteer efforts through grants to the charitable and sport organizations with which they are involved. Grant applications must be submitted by December 15, 2010. • Small monthly amounts can add up to a big contribution. • There are no cheque fees, stamps, envelopes, etc. • Donations are automatically included on your tax slips from Bell. • You are still identified as an individual donor to the charitable organization if that is your preference. Visit the In the community section of www.intouch.bell.ca to learn more about the Employee Giving Program or the Bell’s Volunteer Grant Program or contact us at employeegiving@bell.ca or 1 866 670-8800. Former Québec Science Fair exhibitors, we’re looking for you! As part of their 50th anniversary celebrations, the organizers of the Bell Science Fairs in Québec have launched an extensive search to locate former exhibitors from as long ago as possible. If you are among the 300,000 former students who once took part in a Science Fair in Québec, please visit www.exposciences.qc.ca and fill out the online form for former exhibitors—it takes only a few minutes to complete! This search will help the Conseil de développement du loisir scientifique (CDLS) and its network partners create a profile of the up-and-coming scientists and technologists who enter the Science Fairs and determine the role the Science Fairs played in influencing former exhibitors’ education and career choices. The CDLS will also contact former participants who fill out the online form about a national reunion planned for November 18, 2010 in Montréal. We look forward to hearing about you and meeting you again! Please don’t hesitate to circulate this message within your own networks! 16 | In Touch How to ensure you benefit from the Employee Discount Plan To ensure you benefit from the Employee Discount Plan (EDP), please contact the Benefits Administrator at 1 888 400-0661, 48 hours after activating or installing a Bell service including: • Activating a new service* • Moving (even if you are already enrolled in EDP) • Registering a name change on a One Bill account * Even if the customer service representative issuing your order indicates s/he will make the changes for you, and that you must wait to receive your first bill, you must still personally inform the Benefits Administrator of this change. Steps to follow to enrol** 1. Place your service order(s) or request to move: 3. Contact your Benefits Administrator at 1 888 400-0661 and choose Billing Inquiry or Enrolment of a Service to activate the Employee Discount Plan. ** Retroactive credits cannot be applied until an enrolment request is made at 1 888 400-0661. Please note that not all products and services are eligible for the 35% employee discount. Also, it may take one to two billing periods before the rebate takes effect (this does not include any retroactive treatment). Products and services eligible for the 35% discount To confirm if your product or service is eligible, contact the Benefits Administrator at 1 888 400-0661 and please have your service code (USOC) ready. • Bell Canada: 310-BELL (310‑2355) To take advantage of this discount • Bell Mobility: 1 800 465-2355 • The account must be in the name of the retiree/employee • Sympatico: 310-SURF (310‑7873) • The account must be a residential account • Bell TV: 1 888 759-3474 The complete list of excluded products and services is published in In Touch once a year in June. To view the list anytime, go to the Useful links section of the In Touch website at www.intouch.bell.ca. 2. Wait 48 hours following your service order date. (For Bell TV, wait 4-5 working days) Bell TV exclusive Friends and Family offer With the fall TV season upon us, it’s the perfect time to own Canada’s best HD PVR so you won’t miss a moment of your favourite shows. For a limited time, Bell team members or retirees and their friends and family can purchase Bell TV receivers at exclusive low prices. With additional savings of $150.00 on HD PVRs, it’s a great time to subscribe to Bell TV or upgrade your existing equipment. To take advantage of this exclusive offer, visit employeedeals.bell.ca. Log in with the first four characters of your Bell employee ID and your last name. To share these great deals with your friends and family, simply send the link with the first four characters of your ID. The Personal makes a happy winner! Last June, Bell retiree Michel Aubin, won the first prize of $10,000 in the Rêves en banque 2010 contest organized by The Personal Insurance Company. Congratulations! Left to right: Lucie Fournier, Manager – Benefits, BCE, Michel Aubin, and Michel Lachance, Director of Business Development, The Personal. October 2010 | 19 The In Touch site now offers you even more! Streamlined design, new features, updated content... www.intouch.bell.ca has had a complete makeover. Navigating the site and finding the information you want is now easier than ever. And speaking of new features, be sure to check out the section for sharing your event photos. It’s a great way to keep in touch with former co-workers! While you’re checking out the revamped site, why not sign up for the In Touch email distribution list. You could win a latest-generation smartphone! This simple act of green will help Bell’s environmental effort to reduce the company’s paper consumption. For example, in 2009, Bell managed to save the equivalent of 26,000 trees thanks to its e-Bill option, which a growing number of customers are choosing. • News on topics of interest to you • Information on your benefits and pension plan and the Employee Discount Plan • Retirement notices and obituaries updated monthly Sign up for the email distribution list and you could win! When you subscribe to the list, you will receive an email message as soon as the latest issue of In Touch is available online (PDF format). And you will also be notified every time a new offer or a news item is added to the site. The website’s content now includes: • Useful forms (donation and volunteer programs) • The Québec and Ontario events and retiree profiles published in the newsletter • All of the past issues of In Touch There are also some great deals to be had, since the site features several exclusive discount offers that you won’t find anywhere else! To enter the contest Simply sign up for the In Touch email distribution list at www.intouch.bell.ca by November 30 to gain a chance to win a smartphone. The winner’s name will be published on the website as soon as the winner has been notified. Retirees whose name is already on the distribution list are automatically eligible for the contest. The contest is reserved for Bell retirees. Only one entry per retiree is allowed. Produced by Corporate Communications in collaboration with Human Resources. In Touch 1 carrefour Alexander-Graham-Bell, Aile A-4 Verdun (Québec) H3E 3B3 Telephone: 1 877 666-7474 Fax: 514 766-5735 E-mail: intouch@bell.ca Website: www.intouch.bell.ca Employee Services To inform us of a move or to get information on your benefits or your pension, contact Employee Services at 1 888 400-0661 or employee.services@bell.ca. Website: www.benefits-avantages.hroffice.com. Fibe is a trademark of Bell Canada. Mail Room 1 carrefour Alexander-Graham-Bell, DB1-17 Verdun (Québec) H3E 3B3 40069525 20 | In Touch