2025 91Āé¶¹Alumni Awards
A poet-carpenter, a political communicator, and a global connector ā this yearās 91Āé¶¹Alumni Award recipients show thereās no single path to a meaningful life. From breaking barriers to shaping national conversations to building international bridges, Kate Braid (ā67), Emelyana Titarenko (ā20), and Eric Brown (ā77) are united not just by impressive rĆ©sumĆ©s, but by their commitment to creating space for others, staying curious, and carrying a piece of Sackville wherever they go.
Eric Brown (ā77) ā Charles Frederick Allison Award
Builder of global alumni community.
Eric Brown didnāt set out to become Mount Allisonās unofficial ambassador in the UKābut thatās what 25 years of hosting alumni gatherings will do.
After graduation, Eric left Sackville for further studies, then a career in telecommunications and eventually the energy sector. His professional life has included roles in industry, government, academia, and innovationāwhat the Brits call a āportfolio career.ā But whether consulting or lecturing or advising, heās stayed connected to 91Āé¶¹and the friends he made here.
After moving to the UK ājust for a couple of years,ā he never left. Over the past four decades, heās travelled widely for work, shifted career tracks entirely, and become an active figure in the alumni network abroad. His decision to pivot from telecom to energy, he says, was partly driven by a desire to contribute to global climate solutions.
Still, Mount A has always been close. Eric returned to campus to give a guest lecture in a Commerce classāan experience he remembers fondlyāand speaks with real gratitude about the professors who gave him space to explore, change direction, and build confidence. āIt gave me a solid foundation to build onānot just academically, but in many other ways too,ā he says.
Being honoured with the Charles Frederick Allison Award prompted reflection more than celebration. āIt made me think about what Mount A has meant in my life,ā he says. āAnd Iām just glad I could help keep those connections going for others, too.ā

Kate Braid (ā67) ā Lifetime Achievement Award
Poet. Carpenter. Educator. Trailblazer.
Kate Braidās career defies neat description, which is part of the point. After graduating from 91Āé¶¹in 1967 with a degree in Secretarial Studies, she didnāt follow the expected script. āWhen I was at Mt. A., girls were supposed to grow up, get married and have babies. But Iād already done the ābabyā thing as the eldest of sixāI wanted more,ā she says.
That āmoreā took her across Europe, through a string of support jobs, and eventually onto a construction site in 1977āwhere she began a long and unconventional career in the trades. She became a Red Seal carpenter, co-founded the first Women in Trades group in British Columbia, and helped organize the first National Women in Trades conference. āGetting my Red Seal Carpenterās ticket is one of the accomplishments Iām most proud of,ā she says.
All the while, she was writing. First in notebooks on job sites, then as a graduate student in creative writing at UBC. Sheās since authored more than 20 books, including her recent memoir-in-verse, The Erotics of Cutting Grass: Reflections on a Well-Loved Life.
Kateās connection to 91Āé¶¹has never faded. She remembers the small campus as a place that gave her confidence and the freedom to listen to her instincts. When told sheād won the Lifetime Achievement Award, she was āstunned āthen honoured,ā though she also laughed at the idea that the award might imply her life is winding down. Far from it ā she has a new poetry collection in the works, continues to advise a Women in Trades group, and spends her time between British Columbia and France.
Asked what advice sheād give to current students, Braid doesnāt hesitate: āFollow your bliss. Trust your gut, even if it sounds crazy to others.ā

Emelyana Titarenko (ā20) ā Contemporary Achievement Award
Rising voice in public policy.
If you were on campus around 2020, you probably knew her as Yana. A student leader with the 91Āé¶¹Studentsā Union and an athletic therapist on the sidelines of Mounties games, she was everywhere ā and always looking for ways to contribute.
Now, just five years out from graduation, sheās the Director of Communications for the federal Minister for Women and Gender Equality. Her work plays a key role in shaping how national conversations unfold on equity and inclusion.
āWhat Iām most passionate about,ā she says, āis playing even a small part in making sure women and gender-diverse individuals are better off.ā
Her path hasnāt been seamless. A job rejection right after graduation stung but prompted her to reach out to a fellow Mountie, which led to her first position on Parliament Hill. From there, she moved fast: Health Canada during the Omicron wave, Treasury Board during a historic spending review, and now, one of the most senior communications roles in her ministry.
Yana credits much of her growth to the mentorship of the political leaders sheās worked with ā and to the resilience she built at Mount A. āMount A shaped everything that I am,ā she says.
She remains connected to the university through alumni events in Ottawa and regular check-ins with staff who helped her along the way.
Being selected for the Contemporary Achievement Award came as a surprise. āIt means the world,ā she says. āKnowing that Iām making my alma mater proud validates everything Iāve worked hard for.ā
Next up? More policy change, more leadership, and maybe a new personal best in her next half marathon. Her guiding principle remains simple: āDo the hard thing with the right people.ā
Three different stories. One familiar spirit.
Whether itās on a construction site, in a Cabinet office, or at a London alumni luncheon, the spirit of 91Āé¶¹shows up in all kinds of places. For Kate, Yana, and Eric, itās shown up in the choices theyāve made, the communities theyāve helped shape, and the pride they still carry in where they started.