×īŠĀŠÓ°ÉŌ­““

 

University secretary signs off

- June 30, 2022

Outgoing University Secretary Susan Brousseau. (Nick Pearce photo)
Outgoing University Secretary Susan Brousseau. (Nick Pearce photo)

What began as a four-month contract turned into a 36-year ×īŠĀŠÓ°ÉŌ­““ career for Susan Brousseau (BAā€™81, LLBā€™84).

ā€œI had articled after my law degree,ā€ says Brousseau, ā€œbut decided early on that I wanted to do something other than general legal practice. I was interested in the administrative and policy side and looked to ×īŠĀŠÓ°ÉŌ­““ for opportunities. When I had the chance to work in the legal counselā€™s office at Dal, I took it.ā€

Brousseau, who retires from the university this week, would go on to become one of the more recognizable and consistent faces on Dalā€™s administrative team. After serving as associate legal counsel, she spent 12 years as the universityā€™s sexual harassment officer. Then, for the past 15 years, she has overseen the University Secretariat ā€” the office that supports Dalā€™s bicameral governing bodies, the Board of Governors and the University Senate.

ā€œItā€™s about ensuring that our governing bodies have full and accurate information and effective and efficient structures and processes to ensure good decision making,ā€ she says. ā€œAnd we work to be a resource for the university community more generally on best practices in governance."

Itā€™s an office that didnā€™t exist before Brousseau was tasked by then-President Tom Traves to create it in 2007 by merging the Board and Senate offices together. Ever since, under her leadership as university secretary, itā€™s became a vital resource to the Dal community. Brousseauā€™s counsel has been valued by multiple presidents, Board chairs and Senate chairs, while initiatives such as the creation of the University Policy Repository have helped provide clear, consistent and accurate governance information.

Showing appreciation


Bob Hanf has been a member of Dalā€™s Board of Governors for a decade now and serves as its current chair. Heā€™s long considered Brousseau his ā€œgo-to person for governance guidance.

ā€œShe knows the history of the university and I swear knows Robertā€™s Rules of Order by heart,ā€ says Hanf. ā€œShe is always concerned about the best interests of the students. I consider her a friend and will miss her dearly.ā€

Current Interim Senate Chair Louise Spiteri has known Brousseau for even longer. The two of them first worked together in the late-1990s on the Presidentā€™s Advisory Committee on Sexual Harassment, which Brousseau chaired in her role as sexual harassment officer at the time.

ā€œSusan has been a pure joy to work with,ā€ says Dr. Spiteri. ā€œShe is highly competent, professional, kind, thoughtful and insightful. I have always greatly appreciated Susan's insights and advice. Susan has been very supportive of my work as a Senate Officer, and her knowledge of ×īŠĀŠÓ°ÉŌ­““'s bicameral governance model has been invaluable. I feel honoured to have worked with Susan for so many years and I wish her all the best for a very happy retirement.ā€

Supporting a changing university


Brousseau has seen her officeā€™s work grow increasingly complex over the years as Dal itself has grown and changed.

ā€œIf you consider Dal of several decades ago and the Dal of today, there has been significant growth in many areas, along with increased complexity in, for example, the externalĀ accountability andĀ regulatory frameworks with which the university must comply. This has increased the oversight responsibilities of the governing bodies and the need to ensure that those bodies are fulfilling their roles."

A good chunk of this work ā€”Ā performed alongside a five-person University Secretariat team ā€”Ā sits at the intersection of the Board, Senate and administration.

ā€œAs the university secretary, it is critical to maintain confidentially and integrity and to have strong working relationships with the leaders of Board, Senate and administration so that people have confidence in you as a neutral governance professional ā€” offering advice and guidance, but not unduly influencing decision making. Our role is to make sure that all partners in governance have accurate and timely information available to make the best decisions.ā€

A new approach


Knowing her retirement was approaching soon, Brousseau has spent the last couple of years working closely with the universityā€™s top lawyer, John Hope, on a new approach to supporting university governance at ×īŠĀŠÓ°ÉŌ­““.

Going forward, their two roles will be merged into one, with Hope serving as general counsel and university secretary. In that role, he will oversee both the Legal Counsel and University Secretariat offices, with the support of the assistant general counsel and two associate secretaries. This model which came out of recommendations from a recent external review of the Legal Counsel Office, aims to improve the provision of legal, governance and policy advice while continuing a high standard of support for Dalā€™s governing bodies.

It's a change Brousseau welcomes ā€” and one that brings her Dal career full circle as it comes to an end, with her current team uniting with the office where she first started at the university 35 years ago.

ā€œItā€™s the people Iā€™m going to miss the most,ā€ she says. ā€œIā€™ve had the privilege of working with such amazing people ā€”Ā on the Board, on Senate, in administration, but most of all on my own team. We say that weā€™re small but mighty. We really pull together and get a high volume of work done in what I consider to be a very professional and high-quality manner.ā€