CTU People
For a full list of CTU staff and contact details, click here
Helen Kelly
President
Helen Kelly was elected CTU president at biennial conference in 2007. She had been CTU Vice President since September 2003.
She has a long history in the union movement, primarily in the education sector, as an organiser for the Association of University Staff and holding several positions including Assistant Secretary in the New Zealand Educational Institute. Within NZEI she played a prominent role in the pay parity campaign for kindergarten and primary teachers. Helen became the general secretary of AUS in June 2002, a role she held until becoming CTU president.
Helen trained as a teacher and has an LLB from Victoria University. Her CTU responsibilities include economic development, employment law, climate change, social partnership, ACC and pay and employment equity. She co-chairs the Workplace Health and Safety Council and is a member of the Climate Change Leadership Forum.
Helen is responsible for CTU international work through the International Trade Union Congress and the International Labour Organisation.
Carol Beaumont
Secretary
Carol Beaumont was elected as Secretary of the Council of Trade Unions in May 2003, after 20 years involvement in unions both in New Zealand and Australia. Prior to taking the Secretary role, Carol established and was the Lead Organiser at the CTU Organising Centre since 2000. Carol’s involvement in unions has been as a delegate, executive member, organiser and union secretary. Before working for the CTU Carol was National Retail Secretary of the National Distribution Union.
Carol’s work at the CTU spans a number of industry and sector groups, including food manufacturing and retail and hospitality. Carol is also responsible for policy areas such as health and safety, work-life balance, minimum wages, migration, learning and skills development, industry development,
Carol currently represents the CTU as special advisor to the Small Business Advisory Group, she is a member on the Partnership Resource Centre Board, the Ministerial Advisory Committee on Employment Relations Education, the Workplace Health and Safety Council and she is the co-chair of the Skills and Training Action Group, established by the Food and Beverage Taskforce. Carol was a CTU representative on the 2004 Pay and Employment Equity taskforce, and has also represented New Zealand workers internationally at forums of the International Labour Organisation, the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions, and at other conferences and events.
Sharon Clair
Vice President Maori
Sharon Clair was elected vice president Maori in 2005 after 29 years working in nursing and health, and most recently as the Policy Analyst Maori of the New Zealand Nurses Organisation.
Sharon qualified as a Psychopaedic Nurse and has a post graduate diploma in Rehabilitation with Otago University and is currently completing her thesis for a Master of Arts in Maori Development at Auckland University of Technology. Sharon is a member of the Maori Women’s Welfare League, an executive on her hapu trust and continues her involvement in her whanau/hapu development and is a member of the Raukawa Treaty claim team.
As a union activist, commentator and advocate on Maori worker interests Sharon was the very first Maori woman to speak to the plenary of the United Nations International Labour Organisation (ILO) conference, at its 95th session in 2006.
Sharon is the co chair of MAKEPOVERTYHISTORY in Aotearoa, an executive committee member on the National Consultative Committee for Disarmament, an executive committee member of the Peace Foundation Aotearoa, a representative on the inmate employment advisory committee and a regular political commentator on Radio Waatea.
With CTU Officer responsibilities that include the environment and Maori development Sharon is also is a heading the Maori workforce development project for Hui Taumata and is a member of the Maori reference group on Climate change.
Sharon is of Raukawa, Ngati Ranginui and Scottish descent. 
Richard Wagstaff
Vice President
Details coming soon.
Peter Conway
Policy Director/Economist
Peter Conway advises unions on economic issues.
Peter has been active in unions since 1977, when he became assistant secretary of the Canterbury, Westland, Nelson and Marlborough Clothing Trades Union. Peter also was been assistant national secretary of the New Zealand Distribution Workers Federation, an advocate for retail workers in the National Distribution Union, an educator with the Nurses Organisation and was also a director of Auckland’s Yellow Bus Company. He was also a Coordinator of the Hounslow Trade Union Support Unit and Centre for the Unemployed in London for a period.
Peter’s qualifications include a Bachelor of Commerce and Administration and an MA in Economics. He is on the Board of New Zealand Trade and Enterprise and is Chair of Oxfam NZ.
Bronwynn Maxwell
Director of Organising
Bronwynn Maxwell is the Director of the CTU Organising Centre which encompasses all areas of worker representation and education. Bronwynn manages two teams associated with the Organising Centre, one based in Auckland which delivers training nationally for union members, delegates and paid officials, and
works with affiliates to support the work of key campaigns at a strategic and operational level; and a team in Wellington responsible for key CTU projects such as Learning Reps, Health & Safety and the Workplace Productivity Education Programme.
Bronwynn has been actively involved in the union movement since the early 1980s. Her first union experience was a formative one, helping to establish the Early Childhood Workers Union (ECWU). Bronwynn worked for the ECWU as a paid official for five years having first served her apprenticeship as a delegate, member of the regional and national executive and then National Vice President. Bronwynn then worked as a Regional Educator for TUEA (Trade Union Education Authority) before joining the Engineers Union as one of their first women organisers in 1991. As a paid official, Bronwynn has worked under four different industrial legislations and has experience in both private and state unions. Before joining the NZCTU in 2003, Bronwynn was employed as a Regional Branch Organiser for the Association of University Staff.
Bronwynn forms part of the CTU management team along with Helen Kelly, Carol Beaumont and Peter Conway.
