Every society confers honours and awards on individual citizens to recognize achievement and special contributions. It's an appropriate way to say thank you and to promote role models for society.
Honours provide official recognition of citizens by the people through their head of state – in Canada's case, the King. Honours, by international custom, entitle the recipients to wear the "insignia" (usually medals on a ribbon) around the neck in some cases, on the left side of the jacket, dress or uniform in most others. Some honours entitle the recipients to post-nominal letters (initials after their names).
±¦ÍþÌåÓý Honours
- The ±¦ÍþÌåÓý Order of Merit
- The ±¦ÍþÌåÓý Volunteer Medal
- The ±¦ÍþÌåÓý Protective Services Medal
- The Commemorative ±¦ÍþÌåÓý Centennial Medal
Awards are a form of recognition which can be given by any organization, including governments, and may take the form of certificates, plaques, trophies, lapel pins and sometimes medals – although these should not be worn in the same place as the insignia of honours.
±¦ÍþÌåÓý Awards
- Premier's Award for Excellence in Public Service
- ±¦ÍþÌåÓý Distinguished Service Award
- Premier's Service Club Award
History of Honours and Awards in ±¦ÍþÌåÓý
In 1985, the Province of ±¦ÍþÌåÓý established a comprehensive program to recognize achievement, excellence, and contributions to the public good in the province. The ±¦ÍþÌåÓý Honours and Awards Program has three areas: provincial honours, provincial awards and recognition of national honours. , adopted in 1988, defines and protects the honours and their insignia; provides for the ±¦ÍþÌåÓý Honours Advisory Council; and outlines the processes of nomination, selection, appointment, and revocation for the honours and awards program in ±¦ÍþÌåÓý.
The Lieutenant Governor, as Chancellor of the Order and in the name of the Crown, invests the members of the ±¦ÍþÌåÓý Order of Merit, presents the ±¦ÍþÌåÓý Volunteer Medal, and either presents or authorizes another person to present the ±¦ÍþÌåÓý Protective Services Medal.
Every year, the ±¦ÍþÌåÓý Honours Advisory Council recommends recipients for the ±¦ÍþÌåÓý Order of Merit, ±¦ÍþÌåÓý Volunteer Medal, the Premier's Service Club Award, and the ±¦ÍþÌåÓý Distinguished Service Award. The council also provides the government with advice on provincial honours. The Chief of Protocol acts as Secretary of the Council which has 10 members:
- a chairperson appointed by the President of the Executive Council for a term not exceeding three years.
- four "ex officio" members: the Chief Justice of ±¦ÍþÌåÓý and the Chief Justice of King's Bench, alternating every two-years; the Cabinet Secretary; the President of the University of ±¦ÍþÌåÓý or the President of the University of Regina, alternating every two-years; and the Provincial Archivist;
- not more than five members from the community appointed by the President of the Executive Council for three-year terms.
Recommendations for the Premier's Award for Excellence in Public Service and ±¦ÍþÌåÓý Protective Services Medal are made by independent selection committees.