Marissa DuBois in Slow Motion Full Fashion Week 2023, Fashion Channel Vlog,

Monday, June 13, 2016

Sue Hickey

Sue Hickey FAICD (born c. 1958) is the Lord Mayor of Hobart. She defeated sitting
Lord Mayor Damon Thomas at the 2014 Tasmanian local government elections.

Hickey first entered public life when she won the Miss Tasmania quest 1979. She later worked in a number of retail and service positions, before starting a career in marketing. In 1991 she established her own marketing business, Slick Promotions. Hickey won the Tasmanian Businesswoman of the Year award in 2007. Hickey obtained an MBA from the University of Tasmania in 2012.

She intended to stand as a candidate for the Liberal Party of Australia in the 2010 state election, but was unable to do so due to a conflict of interest with her business. She was a successful candidate for the Hobart City Council in the 2011 Tasmanian local government elections.
Gordon Alfred Bradbery OAM (born 8 May 1951) is the Lord Mayor of Wollongong and
a former minister of the Uniting Church.

Born and initially raised in Tamworth, Bradbery moved to Sydney and was schooled at Barnardos Children's Home in Normanhurst between the ages of 10 and 16; an experience Bradbery refers to "being raised at the school of hard knocks".

After leaving school at age sixteen, Bradbery trained as a laboratory technician, and in 1971 joined the Uniting Church as a youth and children's welfare worker. After 14 years as a layman, Bradbery was ordained in 1985 into the Uniting Church ministry.

The majority of Bradbery's 25 years as an ordained minister was spent at the Wollongong Mission of the Uniting Church, known as the "Church on the Mall" in Crown St, Wollongong. In addition to his ministerial duties, Bradbery was also responsible for the Wollongong Community Care Centre that runs regular welfare programs for the disadvantaged, including a popular soup kitchen. Bradbery also worked actively with various elements of the community, adopting specialist areas in community development and social justice programs, as well as trauma and bereavement counselling. Bradbery has been recognised through numerous awards for his work with the disadvantaged, the traumatised and the vulnerable.

In addition to his work as a minister and in the community, Bradbery also undertook continued education, earning bachelor's degrees in psychology, sociology and divinity at the University of Sydney.

Following a meeting of the Presbytery of Illawarra of the Uniting Church, the decision was made not to extend Bradbery's term as the head of the Wollongong Mission beyond 2011, with the Chairman, David Jones citing "need to undertake succession planning for Ministry Leadership given the length of time Gordon has been in this placement". There was significant uproar among parts of the Wollongong community as a result of this decision, largely due to Bradbery's extensive community service work.

Bradbery has held numerous positions outside his church ministry role, including:

Chairperson of Lifeline South Coast for 15 years
Police Chaplain – Wollongong Region for 14 years
Rural Fire Service Chaplain and awarded 10 years service medal
Police Commissioners Citation – Waterfall Train Disaster – for outstanding welfare assistance
Interfaith Dialogue with the Muslim and Buddhist Communities
Mental Health Advocate
Awards[edit]
In 1996, Bradbery was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia, "in recognition of service to the community, particularly for his role during the 1994 Sydney bushfires and the subsequent relief efforts for those affected".

In 1996 and again in 2009, Bradbery was awarded Rotary International's Paul Harris Fellowship Medal for outstanding community service.

Tom Tate

Tom Tate is an Australian politician and the current Mayor of the City of Gold Coast,
first elected on 28 April 2012 and re-elected on 19 March 2016.

As Mayor, he is charged with representing the City and is directly elected by residents. Presiding over all council meetings; he is the only councillor to not represent a specific Gold Coast Council Division; and is the foremost representative of the City of Gold Coast and its policies.

The City maintains a budget of $1.2 billion annually (is the second highest of municipal governments in Australia), is the second largest local government area in Australia, and maintains a staff of over 3,500.

The mayor's office is primarily located in the Southport Town Hall building in Southport, Queensland.

Tate was elected after former Mayor, Cr. Ron Clarke, resigned on 27 February 2012, after announcing his nomination as an independent candidate for the seat of Broadwater in the 2012 Queensland state election, with Mr Clarke achieving a primary vote of only around 6%.

Mayor of Gold Coast

Tate was born in Vientiane, the capital Laos in 1959. He speaks three languages:
English, Thai and Laotian.
He attended school at Scots College in Sydney where he was a drummer in the school's pipe band.

A civil engineer by trade, Tate graduated from the University of NSW in the early 1980s.He started his career in the construction industry and later moved into the tourism and hospitality industry.

Tom has been married to his wife, Ruth, for 36 years and together they have four children.

Cr Tate worked across the world before joining his father, Warwick Tate's development company at the age of 35.

In 1992, Tate Sr bought the Islander Resort Hotel in Surfers Paradise, where Tate performed a refit of the building.

In 1993, he took over management of the Islander and turned it into one of the city’s most successful resorts. Notably, during the late 1990s Asian economic downturn, he offered hotel rooms for $1.

Warwick Tate, who was also a civil engineer by profession, died on 19 January 2015 after a long illness. His funeral service was held at the Scots College Chapel.

An independent, Tate had two tilts at the mayoralty before his success in 2012, including as an endorsed Liberal candidate in 2008.

His reelection saw a massive increase in his primary vote from 37% in 2012 to 64% in 2016. He is noted for refusing to accept political donations, self-funding his campaigns.

In June 2015, he sold the Islander Hotel Resort in Surfers Paradise to Brisbane nightclub identity Louis Bickle, to avoid suggestions he has a conflict of interest.

Mayor of Sunshine Coast

First elected in May 2012, Mayor of the Sunshine Coast Mark Jamieson is delivering
on his promise to shape a prosperous future for the Sunshine Coast.
Mark Jamieson was elected to create the right conditions for jobs while protecting the region's enviable lifestyle and environment - and that's what he and the Sunshine Coast Council are doing.
Now in his second term as Mayor, Mark Jamieson can list some extensive achievements by Council under his leadership, including:
A clear 20 year blueprint established for a new economy for the Sunshine Coast - which is already delivering results, with the Sunshine Coast recently ranked the second strongest performing regional economy in Queensland.
A new planning scheme for the Sunshine Coast - one which puts the right settings in place to encourage new investment and provide certainty for the community.
Developing the right conditions for investors and business. The Coast's business confidence levels are the highest in the State and major expansions are underway with companies such as Youi and Budget Direct.
Substantial employment growth with unemployment now lower than the Queensland average and youth unemployment nearly 5% lower than November 2014.
A new development scheme delivered for the Maroochydore city centre, providing greater certainty and confidence for investors in the only green field CBD in Australia at this time.
The completion of the Environmental Impact Statement for the expansion of the Sunshine Coast Airport with the international expertise of the Royal Bank of Canada engaged to develop the best model for securing investment in the airport project.
Investing significantly more funding in community organisations, facilities and programs than any other regional council in Queensland - providing a strong social fabric for communities and the well-being of residents.
The purchase of almost 500 hectares of environmentally significant land to add to council's conservation estate for the enjoyment of current and future generations, coupled with growing some of the most successful and extensive environmental programs in Australia.

Mark Jamieson

Mark Ian Jamieson (born 4 May 1984 in Dandenong) is an Australian professional
racing cyclist. He started competing at the age of 10 in 1994, he first represented his country in the World Junior Track Championships in 2001. He was an Australian Institute of Sport scholarship holder.

On 15 February 2010 Jamieson appeared before the South Australian District Court on multiple child sex charges and pleaded guilty to four counts of unlawful sexual intercourse with a 15-year-old girl and one count of indecent assault with a girl aged under 16. The charges related to alleged conduct in Adelaide between November 2008 and January 2009. He received a suspended sentence for the offences.

Jamieson received a two-year suspension from cycling as a result of the sentence. The suspension expired on 27 January 2011, and Jamieson returned to competitive cycling at the Melbourne Madison in March of that year. He joined the Jayco 2XU cycling team, and in October competed as part of the team in the Tour of Tasmania, where he posted a strong performance, winning the first day of the six-day event. Later that month he competed in the Grafton to Inverell Cycle Classic, which he won by breaking the previous record time set by Paul Curran.

He changed direction in late 2011, pairing with vision-impaired cyclist Bryce Lindores. After Jamieson relocated to the Gold Coast to train, the two went on to compete at the UCI para-cycling road world cup. Although they did not win, their performance was sufficient to qualify for the paralympics, and in June 2012 it was announced that Jamieson would be piloting for Lindores at the 2012 London Paralympics.

Mayor of Adelaide

Martin Haese is the Lord Mayor of the City of Adelaide in South Australia and he took
over from Stephen Yarwood in 2014. Haese was the founder of the Youthworks fashion chainand general manager of the Rundle Mall Management Authority from 2010 to 2013.

Martin co-founded the Entrepreneurs’ Organisation in SA and has served on a number of boards including the South Australian Youth Arts Board, the Adelaide Convention Bureau, the Property Council’s Mainstreets Committee and Chairman the Bay to Birdwood. Martin was also the national Chair of the Council of Capital City Lord Mayors in 2015.

Martin has also worked as a lecturer for MBA students where he has taught entrepreneurship in Adelaide and interstate. He has travelled widely and done business internationally.

Martin believes that technology will provide many of the solutions for today’s problems and opportunities. As Lord Mayor, Martin is focused on enhancing Adelaide’s reputation as a smart innovative city and being a ‘city where good things happen first’.

Martin’s immediate goal is for the City of Adelaide to become an even greater place to live, learn, work, play, visit and invest. The ultimate goal is to become the world’s most livable city. 

Mayor of Perth

Lisa Scaffidi (née Sanders) (born 12 February 1960) is the first female lord mayor of
Perth, Western Australia. Scaffidi won the seat in the October 2007 council elections following the retirement of her predecessor, Peter Nattrass, after a record twelve years in the position.

Scaffidi was educated at Churchlands Primary School and Methodist Ladies' College after which she graduated as a dental therapist from the WA Institute of Technology (now Curtin University). She served as an air hostess with TAA in 1980, worked in the hospitality industry in a marketing capacity and, in the 1990s, helped to promote export of semi-precious stones. She was the WA state director of the Committee for Economic Development of Australia (CEDA) for over ten years.

She served two terms as a councillor before successfully contesting the lord-mayoralty.

In October 2015, the Corruption and Crime Commission of Western Australia found that Mrs Scaffidi had "signally failed in her duties" as Lord Mayor by accepting and failing to declare a $31,000 travel package to the 2008 Beijing Olympics from BHP, and other gifts from private companies that have dealings with the City of Perth. The Commission's report found that Mrs Scaffidi had committed acts of "serious misconduct."