Stan Woloshyn

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Stan_Woloshyn an entity of type: Thing

Stanley Woloshyn (born July 17, 1939) is a politician in Alberta, Canada. He was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta as an Alberta New Democrats candidate in 1989. Woloshyn was reportedly a former card-carrying Progressive Conservative member. Before the next election, he crossed the floor to join the Progressive-|Conservative caucus for which he sat for 11 years. In the year 2000, Woloshyn received the (APEGGA) Summit Award. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Stan Woloshyn
rdf:langString Stan Woloshyn
rdf:langString Stan Woloshyn
xsd:date 1939-07-17
xsd:integer 6445341
xsd:integer 979423668
xsd:date 1939-07-17
rdf:langString MLA for Stony Plain
xsd:date 2004-11-22
xsd:date 1989-03-20
xsd:integer 1989
rdf:langString Stanley Woloshyn (born July 17, 1939) is a politician in Alberta, Canada. He was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta as an Alberta New Democrats candidate in 1989. Woloshyn was reportedly a former card-carrying Progressive Conservative member. Before the next election, he crossed the floor to join the Progressive-|Conservative caucus for which he sat for 11 years. Born in Edmonton, Woloshyn received a bachelor of education degree from the University of Alberta, and went on to serve as teacher, department head and principal of Memorial Composite High School in Stony Plain. From 1977 to 1989, he served as principal of Kitaskinaw School on the . Woloshyn crossed the floor to the governing Progressive Conservative caucus prior to the election in 1993. In 1996, Woloshyn was appointed Minister of Public Works, Supply and Services, and was re-elected (and re-appointed to cabinet) in 1997. Following the cabinet shuffle of May 1999, he was named Minister of Community Development. In the year 2000, Woloshyn received the (APEGGA) Summit Award. Woloshyn ran again in 2001, re-capturing the constituency of Stony Plain easily, with 67% of the vote. He did not run again in 2004. Rates at the province's long-term care facilities were increased by 42% under his watch, and Woloshyn himself was "somewhat disappointed" in the lack of assistance handed down to seniors in the spring 2004. The NDP was critical of his and other returning government members' "transition allowances", in Woloshyn's case totalling over $477,000.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3651
xsd:date 2004-11-22
xsd:date 1989-03-20
xsd:string MLAforStony Plain

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