6 Weston high schoolers to attend Women Empowerment Awards
CBC
Jummy Akinola says she was shocked when she got the call saying she'd been picked to attend the Women Empowerment Awards gala.
"Just the thought that I was chosen and nominated for it really made me happy," said the 16-year-old from Weston Collegiate Institute.
Akinola is one of six Weston students picked for a night of networking Friday at the Park Hyatt hotel. The event is meant to celebrate changemakers in their communities and those who want to advance their careers.
The mood was giddy in the high school resource room Wednesday, where the girls sorted through fancy dresses and heels delivered especially for them as part of a pilot project meant to inspire them to chase their own ambitions.
As they picked their gowns, they told CBC Toronto they're excited for the chance to represent their neighbourhood — one they say is unfairly stereotyped.
Jayda-lee Doherty, who just started Grade 12, said she's excited for the opportunity to put herself out there, something she's found hard in the past.
"I was shy or didn't feel like I deserved it," said the teenager, who is thinking of pursuing a career in writing.
"It's a good chance for us all to take this opportunity to be our full selves and our confident selves and to really just seize every moment."
Shawna-Kay Thompson, also in Grade 12, said it means a lot to go to the gala and meet other women who've overcome adversities.
"This will be a first time for me, going to people and trying to get them to know me as me and not as some person from the bad part of Weston," said Thompson, who hopes to become a social worker.
"We can be bigger than what people say."
The pilot is the brainchild of Karen Samuels, a mental health advocate who was nominated for the mentorship award at last year's gala.
Samuels says when she went to the gala, she realized the potential of bringing young women and showing them what's possible, especially as someone who had a hard time as a teen herself.
"I decided that I was going to pour love back into a community I felt no one cared about or actually believed a lot of negative stereotypes," she said.
A city councillor is suggesting the City of Calgary do an external review of how its operations and council decisions are being impacted by false information spread online and through other channels. Coun. Courtney Walcott said he plans to bring forward a motion to council, calling for its support for a review. He said he's not looking for real time fact checking but rather, a review that looks back at the role misinformation played on key issues. Walcott cited two instances in 2024 where factually incorrect information was circulated both online and at in-person meetings regarding major city projects: council's decision to upzone much of the city, and the failed redevelopment proposal for Glenmore Landing. "Looking back on previous years, looking back on major events and finding out how pervasive misinformation and bad information is out there and it's influence on all levels of the public discourse is really important," said Walcott.