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Josée Forest-Niesing
Canadian lawyer and politician (1964–2021) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Josée Forest-Niesing (December 18, 1964 – November 20, 2021) was a Canadian lawyer and politician, who was appointed to the Senate of Canada in October 2018.[1]
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Forest-Niesing's grandmother, Agnès Lafond, was a member of the Abénakis de Wôlinak First Nation.[2] She first attended Collège Notre-Dame before getting under undergraduate degree in law, justice, and political science at Laurentian University.[3] She then studied law at the University of Ottawa.[3] She was called to the Ontario Bar in 1990.[4] As a lawyer, she was a partner in the firm Lacroix Forest LLP where she specialized in family law, civil litigation, education law, and employment law.[4] A trial lawyer from Sudbury, Ontario, she served on the boards of the Art Gallery of Sudbury, the Carrefour Francophone de Sudbury, the University of Sudbury and the Ontario Arts Council.[5] Prior to her appointment as senator, she was a judge for the Superior Court of Justice Small Claims Court.[6]
he was an advocate for the use of the French language and helped get funding for Laurentian University's French-language programs after it was about to be cut.[2] Among other actions, she did as a senator, she helped update Senate committee mandates and indigenous rights.[2]
Forest-Niesing was hospitalized due to COVID-19 in October 2021; she had an autoimmune condition affecting her lungs, which increased her vulnerability to the virus.[7] She was discharged on November 14, but died a few days later on November 20, 2021, at the age of 56.[7] Forest-Niesing had two children with her husband, Robert.[8]
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