[Commpsych] APS members - less than 1 hour to lodge your proxy if you cant attend Tuesday's EGM in person
Trudy Rosenwald
trosenwald at iinet.net.au
Sun Jun 4 16:44:03 WST 2017
Dear Heather,
Thank you for all the hard work you do in Community Psychology in Australia and the region. I have much appreciated your ongoing dissemination about issues, events and debates and generally have agreed and supported you on these.However, on the current issue of the APS proposed changes to the rules/constitution I have to disagree with you. In my view it is NOT about clinical versus non-clinical psychologists but about the unequality in the remuneration to clinical versus non-clinical and the notion in Australia that somehow clinical psychologists are the real psychologists and the non-clinicals are not good enough, not educated highly enough , not highly enough trained. As a highly educated, trained and experienced generalist psychologist in a wide range of areas who purposefully selected community and cross-cultural psychology over clinical I have felt shocked, offended and disadvantaged ever since I became aware of and experienced the exclusive nature of the medicare rebate system. How did this unequality come about?? I have been an APS member since my student days in the late 80s and have faithfully paid the membership fee each year but I have come to the conclusion that the APS does not really represent me. This conclusion was confirmed by a very recent comment by a clinical psychologist at a meeting that the clinical psychologist is more educated, trained and qualified than any other psychologist. Really!!!!
Yours sincerely,
Trudy
Trudy Rosenwald (BAHon, PhD)Registered Generalist Psychologist+61 419941670trosenwald at iinet.net.au
Sent from my Samsung device
-------- Original message --------
From: Heather Gridley <Heather.Gridley at vu.edu.au>
Date: 2017/06/04 15:39 (GMT+08:00)
To: Cohb.psychology at groups.vu.edu.au, Commpsych List <commpsych at lists.curtin.edu.au>
Subject: [Commpsych] APS members - less than 1 hour to lodge your proxy if you cant attend Tuesday's EGM in person
Dear colleagues - I promise this is the last time I'll harrass you about this, but I'd hate to think you wanted to have a say in the APS Governance proposals but had missed the chance to do so. The way I see it, we currently have the equivalent of 'Sydney'
(clinical psychologists) and 'Melbourne' (anti-clinical psychologists) dominating recent elections to the APS Board since the abolition of Director portfolios about 10 years ago. So no-one from 'Perth' (e.g. academics) or 'Tasmania' (e.g. community psychologists)
has much chance of being elected if they don't fall on one or other side or the other of the divisive Medicare rebates debates. The proposed changes will establish some 'electorates' - academics, college members, generalists, early career psychologists - and
the proposed Advisory Council is even more representative, with provision for Indigenous psychologists , rural members etc.
The proposed changes to the Society's constitution require the approval of at least 75% of members present or voting by proxy.
So what to do: VOTE in the EGM on 6 June 2017 at 6:15pm
You have to be onsite at one of 10 voting sites around Australia or else you need to appoint a proxy who will be onsite to vote on your behalf. If you can't get to these venues,
please take the time to send a proxy vote by 6.15pm AEST Sunday 4 June to the APS. The link to the form is here: http://admin.psychology.org.au/Assets/Files/6June2017DigitalProxyForm.pdf
I am happy to be a proxy for anyone who needs one and I will be attending the Melbourne meeting. Note that you don't return the form to me, or need my permission
to list me as your proxy. But you do need to know that I live in West Brunswick
Heather Gridley
Honorary Fellow
College of Arts
Victoria University
Melbourne, Australia
E: heather.gridley at vu.edu.au
Ph: +61 419113731
From: Jenny Sharples
Sent: Friday, 19 May 2017 1:46 PM
To: Cohb.psychology at groups.vu.edu.au
Subject: [cohb.psychology] APS members please vote - important
Dear colleagues who are APS members,
Last week the APS sent an email advising all members that the Extraordinary General Meeting about Governance of the APS has been postponed until Tuesday 6 June.
This EGM is crucial in setting up the APS going forward and I would encourage all APS members to vote. The story so far:
The APS has conducted an extensive governance review over the last 18 months, with lots of opportunities for member input, and based on this feedback has decided on a new structure to take the
society forward. You can read details on the email/website.
When the APS first moved from a large Council to a Board of Directors in the mid-1990s, candidates stood for election to particular portfolio positions, such as Director of Membership, Science
or Social Issues. There were problems with this model, which didn't reflect accepted business practice where all directors accept responsibility for all areas governed by the Board, but are less 'hands-on' in a management sense. But the move away from portfolios
to generic directors about 10 years ago meant a loss of diversity and skill spread within the Board - for example, it has become very difficult for an academic to be elected, because academics represent a relatively fixed (but now shrinking) proportion of
APS members.
The new structure is designed to ensure that Board membership is more equitable across the society - a 'best of both worlds' model that retains the generic nature of the director role itself but
enables the different sectors that make up the discipline and profession to have input at Board level. Thus, there will be one Director elected by academics (via the Division of Psychological Research, Education and Training - DPRET) and up to 5 practitioners
(2 from Colleges, 2 general practitioners and 1 early career member).
There will also be a larger Advisory Council to the Board, which might look more like the old Council, with membership reflective of key stakeholder groups of the Society, such as state branches,
interest groups etc. At present these groups have no direct input to the Board. The Council will meet twice yearly.
The proposed changes to the Society's constitution require the approval of at least 75% of members present or voting by proxy.
So what to do: VOTE in the EGM on 6 June 2017 at 6:15pm
You have to be onsite at one of 10 voting sites around Australia or else you need to appoint a proxy who will be onsite to vote on your behalf. If you can't get to these venues, please take the
time to send a proxy vote by 6.15pm AEST Sunday 4 June to the APS. The link to the form is here: http://admin.psychology.org.au/Assets/Files/6June2017DigitalProxyForm.pdf
I am happy to be a proxy for anyone who needs one and I will be attending the Melbourne meeting. Note that you don't return the form to me, or need my permission
to list me as your proxy. But you do need to know that I live in East Brunswick (I guess that's just in case there's more than one Jenny Sharples, and easier than needing to know my membership number!)
I am happy to answer any queries that members may have (including about how I plan to vote).
regards
Jenny
Professor Jenny Sharples
Head of Clinical Services
Head of Psychology
College of Health and Biomedicine
Victoria University
Footscray Park Campus,
Room G461
Ph: +61 3 99194448
MAPS:
College of Clinical Psychologists
College of Community psychologists (National Committee chair)
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