Joyce Hayden
{{Short description|Canadian politician (1931–2009)}}
{{Use Canadian English|date=January 2023}}
{{Infobox officeholder
|image =
| name = Joyce Hayden
| caption =
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1931|9|20}}
| birth_place = Glaslyn, Saskatchewan, Canada
| death_date ={{death date and age|2009|3|7|1931|9|20}}
| death_place=Yukon, Canada
| office = Member of the Yukon Legislative Assembly for Whitehorse South Centre
| term_start = February 20, 1989
| term_end = October 19, 1992
| predecessor = Roger Kimmerly
| successor = riding dissolved
| residence = Whitehorse, Yukon
| party = New Democrat
| occupation = writer
}}
Joyce Sandra Hayden (September 20, 1931 – March 7, 2009) was a Canadian politician, who represented the electoral district of Whitehorse South Centre in the Yukon Legislative Assembly from 1989 to 1992. She was a member of the Yukon New Democratic Party.
Background
Hayden was born in Glaslyn, Saskatchewan and raised in Birch Lake, Saskatchewan.{{cite book|title=Guide Parlementaire Canadien|author=Canada. Parliament|date=1989|publisher=Gale Canada|issn=0315-6168|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5v3vAAAAMAAJ|accessdate=2014-11-16}} She married Earle Hayden in 1949, and the couple moved to the Yukon in 1953.
As founding president of the Yukon Status of Women Council, she spearheaded a campaign to institute a public transit system in Whitehorse, securing an $80,000 grant from Transport Canada to set up a community system, the Yukon Women's Minibus Society.[https://web.archive.org/web/20021026032555/http://www.inventivewomen.com/library/library_joycehayden_yk.shtml Joyce Hayden] biography at Inventive Women. She was also active in the Girl Guides of Canada and the YWCA.
She had been legally blind since 1983.
Politics
Hayden was elected to the Yukon Legislative Assembly in the 1989 election, succeeding Roger Kimmerly in the district of Whitehorse South Centre. She served as Minister of Health and Social Services in the final cabinet of Tony Penikett. In that role, she briefly faced controversy when two young offenders who had escaped from a youth detention facility turned themselves in to her office, and she spent some time talking to them over lunch before turning them back over to the police.
She did not run in the 1992 election.
Career after politics
Hayden went on to be active in the Yukon Commission on Unity, Hospice Yukon and Whitehorse Northern Women: Different Lives, Common Threads Circumpolar Women's Conference. She also wrote two books on Yukon history, including Yukon's Women of Power.[http://www.yesnet.yk.ca/schools/carcross/cohen_moose_hayden_page/joycehayden.htm Joyce Hayden] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090305091855/http://www.yesnet.yk.ca/schools/carcross/cohen_moose_hayden_page/joycehayden.htm |date=2009-03-05 }} at Carcross Community School's Pictorial History of the Yukon. In 2003, she was a recipient of the Governor General's Award in Commemoration of the Person's Case.{{Cite web |title=2003 Recipients - Governor General Awards in Commemoration of the Persons Case - Status of Women Canada |url=https://cfc-swc.gc.ca/commemoration/gg/recip-laure/2003-en.html#archived |access-date=2022-10-25 |website=cfc-swc.gc.ca}}
She died in 2009."A dedicated dynamo’s voice has been stilled". Whitehorse Star, March 13, 2009.
References
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Hayden, Joyce}}
Category:Yukon New Democratic Party MLAs
Category:Writers from Whitehorse
Category:Politicians from Whitehorse
Category:Canadian women historians
Category:Canadian blind people
Category:Governor General's Award in Commemoration of the Persons Case winners
Category:Canadian politicians with disabilities
Category:Canadian women biographers
Category:20th-century Canadian biographers
Category:20th-century Canadian women writers
Category:20th-century Canadian women politicians
Category:Canadian women non-fiction writers
Category:20th-century Canadian historians
Category:20th-century members of the Yukon Legislative Assembly