National Action Committee on the Status of Women (NAC) / Comité canadien d’action sur le statut de la femme (CCA)

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The origins of the National Action Committee on the Status of Women are to be found in the Royal Commission on the Status of Women. In 1972, frustrated by the lack of action in response to the Royal Commission Report, the Committee on Equality for Women met on January 31, 1971. The 34 participants represented 22 organisations. They agreed to disband the Committee for Equality and formed a new organisation designed to keep various organisations informed about each other and to initiate efforts to get the government to act on the recommendations of the report: the National Ad Hoc Action Committee on the Status of Women. More groups joined, and the committee organised a conference in Toronto for April 7-9, 1972 called Strategies for Change. That conference decided that the National Action Committee was here to stay and no longer “ad hoc”. The words ad hoc were removed from the previous name, and the National Action Committee on the Status of Women (NAC) with 31 member groups was founded. By 1977, there were 120 member groups; by 1988, it had brought together 576 member groups, and by 1996, there were over 600 groups. These groups spanned a large range of political thought. They included many of the older national women’s organisations, business and professional women, unions, YWCAs, and service organizations such as women’s shelters and rape crisis centres, immigrant women’s centres, disabled women’s groups, new women’s liberation and autonomous feminist groups, women’s caucuses in various mixed groups, and political parties. In 1976, NAC officially became a bi-lingual organization.

NAC always subscribed to the four main principles set out by the Royal Commission on the Status of Women:

  • Women should be free to choose whether or not to take employment outside their homes.
  • The care of children is a responsibility to be shared by the mother, the father ,and society.
  • Society has a responsibility for women because of pregnancy and childbirth, and special treatment related to maternity will always be necessary.
  • In certain areas, women will for an interim period require special treatment to overcome the adverse effect of discriminatory practices.

In addition, NAC always promoted legislation banning all discrimination by reason of sex, marital or family status, pregnancy, or sexual orientation. And, of course, NAC always supported and campaigned for more government funding for birth control information, so that women could take control of their own lives. NAC also campaigned for access to free and safe abortions when a woman and her physician decide that it is the best course.

Since the founding conference in 1972, NAC has moved beyond these preliminary positions to develop policy on many, many issues. The archive – and particularly the pages on the National Action Committee on the Status of Women – will contain many policy documents adopted by NAC.

The heart of the National Action Committee and the head, in the sense that it is the main decision-making body of the organization, was the Annual General Meeting. At this meeting, delegates from member organizations across the country discussed and debated many issues and voted to adopt positions that would form the basis of future NAC actions and campaigns. Policy resolutions had to be circulated to all member groups at least 30 days prior to the annual general meeting; proposed constitutional changes had to be circulated at least 90 days prior to the meeting. In addition to policy resolution, the delegates elected a 21-member volunteer executive. These executive members were responsible for running the organization in the period between the Annual General Meeting and the implementing of the policy resolutions and actions. The Meeting also directly elected the President, Vice-Presidents, Secretary, and Treasurer. Member groups of each region elected their own regional representative, resulting in ten regional representatives on the executive. Five members at large were elected by the delegates.

Eventually, NAC was able to secure government funding from the Secretary of State Women’s Programs, as well as raise money through fundraising. It was then able to establish a Head Office and an Ottawa Lobbying Office. It was able to hire staff to organize the several executive meetings a year, mid-year conferences, the Annual General Meeting, the newsletter and publications, campaign support, financial administration, and communications.

NAC volunteers took on the responsibility for preparing position papers and briefs to government, as well as organizing related campaigns and actions. To do this, the volunteers set up issue committees chaired by one of the executive member. From the early days, these committees included employment, pensions and income security; social services (included child care); violence against women; health and reproductive rights; pornography; visible minority and immigrant women; and native women. The committees grew and shrank according to what was needed at the time.

Such was the organizational fabric that permitted NAC to become an extremely responsive, effective, and articulate voice for the women of Canada throughout the period of this Archive from the 1970s to the 1990s.

Its accomplishments can be seen in the archival material on this section of the website, which in brief include the following:

  • After the Murdoch Case, NAC launched a successful national campaign to overturn provincial property laws to recognize the value of women’s work such as homemaking, farming, and family businesses.
  • NAC contributed to improving pensions by obtaining amendments to the Canada Pension Plan to cover women who drop out of the labour force to care for young children.
  • NAC had a major impact on getting homemakers included in the Canada Pension Plan.
  • Along with other groups, NAC successfully lobbied for the implementation of maternity benefits in the unemployment insurance program (1971). Later, NAC and other groups were able to secure changes to the Canada Labour Code to provide for shorter notice for maternity leave, extra sick days for family responsibilities, and 6 weeks of additional unpaid leave for either parent on the birth or adoption of a child. Further, NAC was instrumental in securing the 1978 change to the Canada Labour Code which prevents an employee from being fired because she was pregnant; plus, securing a change in the Human Rights Act (1983) to include pregnancy and childbirth on the “grounds for discrimination”;
  • NAC lobbied extensively with other groups for the vast extension of government funding for child care services. This resulted in very minor increases in expenditures, but the issue began to achieve prominence when NAC and other groups persuaded the government to set up a federal Task Force (the Katie Cooke Task Force), and later, a Special Parliamentary Committee on Child Care.
  • NAC worked with others across Canada to implement laws on pay equity in every jurisdiction including at the federal level.
  • Pressure from NAC and other groups led to the implementation of an affirmative action program for women in the federal public service leading to the appointment of a Royal Commission on Equity in Employment led by Judge Rosalie Abella.
  • NAC promoted appointments of women to prominent positions such as Governor General and women on the Supreme Court of Canada.
  • NAC led the campaign to overhaul the Criminal Code provisions on sexual assault to make convictions less difficult and grant more protection to victims.
  • NAC lobbied for stronger protections against harassment on the job in the Canadian Human Rights Act (1983) and the Canada Labour Code (1984).
  • NAC began the work of improving Canada’s pornography legislation.
  • NAC, with other organizations, led campaigns against violence against women, including in families. Such campaigns led to the establishment of shelters for women across Canada, the appointment of a parliamentary committee on family violence, and the appointment of the Badgley Committee on Child Abuse.
  • NAC endorsed the Ad Hoc conference on women and the Constitution (1981), which played a key role in the inclusion of stronger equality clauses for women in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
  • NAC worked with indigenous women’s organizations to revoke the provision in the Indian Act that led to indigenous women losing their status upon marriage to a non-Indian man.
  • NAC organized televised party leaders’ debates on women’s issues and raised women’s issues during election campaigns.
  • NAC lobbyied to get women’s issues on the agenda of the 1985 and 1986 meetings of Canada’s first ministers.
  • NAC created a Visible Minority and Immigrant Women’s Committee and a Lesbian Issues Committee in 1985.
  • NAC constantly reminded politicians, media, and citizens of the major gaps in women’s equality in Canada.
  • NAC played a key role in the World Conference of Women in Nairobi, 1985.
  • NAC lobbied extensively to ensure funding by the Secretary of State Women’s Program to equality-seeking women’s organizations.
  • NAC oversaw the mass mobilizations of women in elections through “Women Vote” campaign; “Get the Budget Back on Track” campaign; and Campaign Against Free Trade and the Goods and Services Tax.
  • NAC made a high-profile, renewed commitment to pro-choice issues through the Chantal Daigle abortion case.
  • NAC worked closely with feminists across the country to address the devastating issues that had resulted in the violent murder of 14 young women by Marc Lépine’s in 1989

The face of NAC has always been its presidents. In the period covered by this Archive, the following women served as NAC Presidents:

1971-1974                        Laura Sabia
1974-1975                        Grace Hartman
1975-1977                        Lorna Marsden
1977-1979                        Kay Macpherson
1979-1981                        Lynn McDonald
1981-1982                        Jean Wood
1982-1984                        Doris Anderson
1984-1986                        Chaviva Hosek
1986-1988                        Louise Dulude
1988-1990                        Lynn Kay
1990-1993                        Judy Rebick

Since then, NAC Presidents have been:
Sunera Thobani (1993-1996)
Joan Grant-Cummings (1996-1999)
Terri Brown (2000-2002)
Sungee John (2003-2005, interim)
Dolly Williams (2006- )

More information about NAC’s history can be found on the pages of this Archive. In particular, the article “An Action that Will Not Be Allowed To Subside: NAC’s First Twenty Years” by Anne Molgat provides a very well-rounded introduction to this amazing organization.

National Action Committee on the Status of Women (NAC) / Comité canadien d’action sur le statut de la femme (CCA) Documents

Title Date Region
1991 AGM Reference Materials 1991 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1972): Strategy for Change – Conference Materials 1972 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1972): Strategy for Change Conference – Emergency Statement 1972 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1972): Strategy for Change Conference – Letter to Delegates 1972 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1978): NAC Annual Meeting – List or Participants 1978 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1978): NAC President’s Report 1978 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1982): Minutes and Annual Reports 1982 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1982): Minutes of Annual General Meeting, March 12-15, 1982 1982 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1982): President’s Report – Ten Years’ Later 1982 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1983): Call for Nominations to 1983-84 Executive Committee 1983 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1983): Information re: Travel Grant Requests 1983 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1983): Registration Notice and Information on Amendments and Nominations 1983 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1985): The Canadian Women’s Economic Summit – Resolutions Passed 1985 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1991): NDP Federal Caucus response to NAC Lobby Questions, June 1991 1991 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1991): Annual Report (1990-1991) 1991 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1991): Liberal Party – Questions and Answers, 1991 1991 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1991): Notice of Meeting – Immigrant and Visible Minority Women’s Committee 1991 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1991): Report to OCUFA 1991 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1991): Solidarity & Diversity – AGM Reference Materials 1991 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1991): Statement by the Lesbian Caucus 1991 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1991): Taking Care of Canada: The Future of Women’s Work 1991 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1992): NAC Campaign Proposals – Strategies for Change: Part II 1992 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1992): Substitute Resolution Re: Canadian Panel on Violence 1992 National (all of Canada)
AGM & Lobby (1993): Taking our Place: Feminism in the 1990s – Agenda 1993 National (all of Canada)
AGM and Lobby (1988): Feminism and Political Power – Annual Report 1988 National (all of Canada)
AGM and Lobby (1991): Feminist Conference to Tackle Crucial Issues (June 14, 1991) 1991 National (all of Canada)
AGM and Lobby (1991): NAC Conference to Address Key Issues in Feminist Movement 1991
AGM and Lobby (1993): Resolutions 1993 Saskatchewan
AGM and Lobby (1996): Resolutions 1996 National (all of Canada)
AGM and Lobby (1997): Agenda 1997 Quebec
AGM and Lobby (1997): NAC 1997/98 Nominations 1997 Quebec
AGM and Lobby (1999): Conference Package 1999 National (all of Canada)
An Action That Will Not Be Allowed To Subside: NAC’s First Twenty Years 1992 National (all of Canada)
Committees (1983): Report of the Editorial Committee 1983 Ontario
Committees (1988): Child Care Bulletin sur les Garderies 1988 National (all of Canada)
Committees (1991): NAC Housing Committee – Draft Declaration of the Rights to Adequate Housing & AGM Resolutions 1991 National (all of Canada)
Committees (1992): Do you Know A Lesbian? 1992 National (all of Canada)
Committees (1992): Y a-y-il une lesbienne dans votre vie? 1992 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1973): What Can One Person Do? 1973 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1979): Questions and Answers on the Goods and Services Tax 1979 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1980): NAC Election Kit – Questions for Candidates 1980 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1983): Pornography Endangers the Lives of Women – NAC Press Release 1983 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1984): Historic Leaders’ Debate on Women’s Issues 1984 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1985): Letter to Support Government Funding for Women’s Programs 1985 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1986): Child Care 1986 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1986): Les garde des enfants 1986 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1987): Women Peace Politics 1987 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1988): Response to Leaders’ Debate – Media Release 1988 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1988): Smoke and Mirrors? Or a New Federal Government Child Care Plan? 1988 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1988): Visible Minority and Immigrant Women Election Bulletin – “Our Voices Will Be Heard” 1988 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1988): Women Vote! 1988 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1988): Women Vote! Day – Let’s Make Women’s Votes Count -- Ontario
Issues & Campaigns (1988): Women Vote! Vote No to the Free Trade Deal 1988 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1988): Women Vote! What every woman needs to know about Free Trade 1988 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1989): Bill C-21: A Minefield for Women 1989 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1989): Breaking the Social Contract Statement and Campaign 1989 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1989): Keep Abortion Legal 1989 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1989): NAC Update 1989 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1990): Budget Cuts Survey – Women’s Program of the Secretary of State 1990 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1990): We’re Worth More – Government Funding and the Women’s Movement 1990 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1991): Women Offer 52% Solution 1991 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1992): Come Out Against a Bad Deal 1992 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1992): Letter re: Ontario’s Employment Equity Legislation 1992 Ontario
Issues & Campaigns (1992): Women’s Constitutional Conference 1992 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1993): A Great Debate 1993 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1993): Equality is the Bottom Line – Our Lives 1993 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1994): Liberals Condemn Women to Greater Inequality 1994 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1995): There is Another Way – A Very Political Budget 1995 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns (1999): Advancing Equality Rights in Canada 1999 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns: Action Canada Caravan – Join the Fight for Jobs, Justice and Equality -- National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns: Free Trade is a Women’s Issue 1988 National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns: Help Protect Section 745 -- National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns: Les Femmes Indiennes et l’Alinéa 12 (1) (b) -- National (all of Canada)
Issues & Campaigns: Reclaim Our Future – Make It Work/Prendre notre avenir en main – Au boulot! -- National (all of Canada)
Issues and Campaigns (1992): Canadian Panel on Violence 1992 National (all of Canada)
Issues and Campaigns (1993): Equality is the Bottom Line – Federal Election 1993 National (all of Canada)
Miscellaneous (1974): Women’s Resource and Development Centre – A Plan for International Women’s Year 1985 1974 National (all of Canada)
Miscellaneous (1983): Upcoming Events 1983 National (all of Canada)
Miscellaneous (1985): A Feminist Fantasy of the Future – Women’s Celebration of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms 1985 National (all of Canada)
Organization (1972): NAC Information and Membership Pamphlet -- National (all of Canada)
Organization (1973): NAC Board of Management Members, Officers, Contacts 1973 National (all of Canada)
Organization (1973): NAC Information and Membership Pamphlet 1975 National (all of Canada)
Organization (1981): List of Member Organizations and Delegates at AGM 1981 National (all of Canada)
Organization (1981): NAC Trust Report 1981 National (all of Canada)
Organization (1982): Membership Group List 1982 National (all of Canada)
Organization (1983): Membership List 1983 National (all of Canada)
Organization (1983): NAC Information and Membership Pamphlet 1983 National (all of Canada)
Organization (1984): NAC Fundraising Letter from President, Chaviva Hosek -- National (all of Canada)
Organization (1986): NAC Information and Membership Pamphlet 1986 National (all of Canada)
Organization (1986): NAC Information and Membership Pamphlet 1986 National (all of Canada)
Organization (1987): NAC Information and Membership Pamphlet 1987 National (all of Canada)
Organization (1988): NAC Organizational Review – The Next Steps 1988 National (all of Canada)
Organization (1991): National Action Committee – Information Flyer 1991 National (all of Canada)
Organization (1992): 20th Anniversary Renewal Campaign 1992 National (all of Canada)
Organization (1992): Organizational Change 1992 National (all of Canada)
Organization (1995): From the desk of Doris Anderson 1995 National (all of Canada)
Organization: NAC Information Pamphlet – When words are simply not enough… -- National (all of Canada)
Policy (1972-1978): Index of NAC Policy Resolutions 1978 National (all of Canada)
Policy (1981): Discussion Paper on Pensions 1981 National (all of Canada)
Regional (1982): Manitoba Action Committee – Proposed Amendments to NAC/CNA Constitution 1982 Manitoba
Regional (1988): Update for NAC Southern Ontario Members 1988 Ontario
Regional (1989) Southern Ontario Regional Newsletter 1989 Ontario
Reports (1972): National Ad Hoc Committee on the Status of Women Submission to Government of Canada 1972 National (all of Canada)
Reports (1977): Presentation to the Standing Committee on Justice and Legal Affairs 1977 National (all of Canada)
Reports (1978-1988): List of NAC Briefs 1988 National (all of Canada)
Reports (1981): Canadian Cultural Development with Equity for Women 1981 National (all of Canada)
Reports (1982): Les femmes et les Pensions 1982
Reports (1983): Funding of Social Services for Women – Canada Assistance Plan 1983 National (all of Canada)
Reports (1983): Taxation and Women’s Services 1983 Ontario
Reports (1986): Presentation By NAC to Standing Committee on the Secretary of State 1986 National (all of Canada)
Reports (1986): Reproductive Hazards in the Workplace 1986 Ontario
Reports (1989): Women in Banking – The First Year of Employment Equity 1989 National (all of Canada)
Reports (1990): Parallel Report to the Second Report of Canada to U.N. Committee on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women 1990 National (all of Canada)
Reports (1992): Justice Works: Response of NAC to “Working Towards Equality” 1992 Ontario
Reports (1993): Review of the Situation of Women in Canada 1993 National (all of Canada)