Meet 91³Ō¹Ļ's new ombudsperson: Ellen Hodnett
Professor Emeritus had two pieces of advice when she addressed graduating students at the 91³Ō¹Ļ last year: donāt be afraid to step out of your comfort zone when you see a great opportunity and, no matter what you do, try to make it better.
This year, Hodnett took her own advice and agreed to become 91³Ō¹Ļās new ombudsperson, replacing Joan Foley, who is retiring after eight years in the position.
Hodnett becomes the new ombudsperson on July 1. For her, itās just the latest of several different careers at 91³Ō¹Ļ that began in 1975. Besides teaching in the Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing for 39 years, she was appointed to the first nursing research chair in Canada in 1996, served as chair of 91³Ō¹Ļās Academic Board and on Governing Council, and sat on important international and national research advisory groups. Sheās also done extensive research on care for childbearing women.
But being appointed to replace Foley is definitely a ājump outside of my comfort zone,ā she says. āThe contributions she made at so many levels at 91³Ō¹Ļ have been extraordinary.ā (.)
However, Hodnett is prepared to accept the challenge. āItās an opportunity to continue to be associated with governance at 91³Ō¹Ļ, which I love, and to try to make it a little better place.ā
The ombudsperson helps members of the university community by identifying options, explaining university policies, providing neutral advice and assisting parties to resolve disputes. (For more on the role, visit .)
Itās a ātremendously important positionā that ensures the system is working properly and that people are treated fairly, says Hodnett.
āWhen you have more than 80,000 students and 13,000 faculty and staff, you need a place for people to go if theyāre unsure or they think that something has happened that isnāt right.ā
Hodnett feels the job will only grow in importance over the years, as the university gets bigger and more complex. But she says her job will be made easier by the officeās professional staff, led by assistant ombudsperson Garvin De Four.
āI feel very confident because the office itself runs so well. The people are so experienced that they can teach me a lot.ā
Foley says Hodnett will do an excellent job. āEllen comes in with very relevant experience for the role, particularly her lengthy period on the governing council and her chairing of the academic board.ā Her only advice for her successor is to keep an open mind and be interested.
āThe defining feature of the role is its neutrality,ā Foley says. āThe office is not an advocate for either a complainant or the institution so it can give useful advice to both parties, thereby assisting the individual member of the University to address the problem constructively and effectively, and at the same time contributing to the evolution and improvement of University policies and practices.ā
As for her own future, Foley is open to whatever the future brings. āI havenāt anything particular in mind except that I need to spring-clean my apartment. But I know that Iāll need more to challenge me than gardening, crossword puzzles, Scrabble and tennis. Iām open to whatever presents itself. Itās always worked out in the past and Iām sure itāll work out in the future.ā
The Office of the Ombudsperson promises confidential, impartial, independent and accessible services. You can contact the office by phone (416- 946-3485), email (ombuds.person@utoronto.ca) or online at http://www.utoronto.ca/ombudsperson/ombuds_assist.html.