All Posts Tagged With: "Kwantlen University College"

We want a sweet deal!

Kwantlen students remind BC Premier of U-Pass campaign promise—with chocolate

Students from Kwantlen University visited the B.C. Legislature last Thursday with a sweet gift for the premier. Derek Robertson, KSA External Affairs Director, presented a giant chocolate U-Pass to remind legislators of the Liberal government’s campaign promise to deliver a standard transportation program for all post-secondary students. That promise was not mentioned in last week’s budget.

“We wanted to do something creative to highlight this ‘outside-the-box’ option to affordably implement its 2009 campaign promise to deliver a U-Pass program for all B.C. students,” said Robertson.  ”We are hoping this gift reminds the premier and his transportation leaders that we need them to sweeten the deal for students that are struggling to get around in this tough economy.”

While Simon Fraser University and the University of British Columbia students have long enjoyed the benefits of the U-Pass, a number of colleges and smaller universities in British Columbia have been lobbying Translink — the regional transportation authority in the Lower Mainland — and government for access to the program for years. However, the formula Translink uses to calculate the cost of the program to students (the U-Pass is intended to be revenue neutral) isn’t as economically efficient in some circumstances as it is at SFU and UBC, particularly for schools with multiple campuses spread out over long distances. This has led to a stalemate between Translink and students’ union, which believe students should be entitled to the most affordable U-Pass option.

The Kwantlen Students Association is pushing the BC government to subsidize local transit authorities with $10 for each student who is given a U-Pass.

From college to university

B.C. grants full university status to three university colleges, critics concerned lack of funding will hinder transformation

British Columbia’s three university colleges are in a jubilant mood this week as the provincial government announced that they would be granted full university status.

The move comes after a major review of the province’s post-secondary education system last spring, titled Campus 2020. The report, authored by former attorney general Geoff Plant, recommended that B.C.’s university colleges be renamed “Regional Universities” to better reflect the role they play in offering a range of certificate, diploma and degree programs.

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On Monday, University College of the Fraser Valley was renamed University of the Fraser Valley. Tuesday, it was announced that Kwantlen University College will now be known as Kwantlen Polytechnic University, and today it was announced that Malaspina University College will be called Vancouver Island University.

The university colleges have long coveted the designation of university, claiming that the inclusion of the word “college” has made it difficult for their degree programs to be fully recognized, which has hindered, they say, their ability to recruit abroad, and for their graduates to have their degrees accepted by both employers and graduate programs in other Canadian universities.

“University status will bring enormous benefits to our students and communities, while retaining our local focus and our emphasis, above all, on excellent teaching,” said Malaspina University College president Ralph Nilson.

The institutions began as colleges responsible for providing vocational and diploma programs along with two year associate degrees. The two year associate degrees have for the most part been fully transferable into full degree programs and have been a popular option for B.C. students.

Beginning in 1989 five of the province’s colleges were given degree granting status, first in association with other major universities, and then on their own. Okanagan University College has since split into two parts: Okanagan College and the University of British Columbia-Okanagan. University College of the Cariboo has since become Thompson Rivers University.

As of this week, the three remaining university colleges have become full fledged universities, simplifying to some extent what is often seen by outsiders as an overly convoluted system. Provincially recognized institutions will now be either a college or a university.

Aziz responds: more denial

The only surprise from the leaked “war plans” is the CFS’ denials

The Canadian University Press spoke with Aziz last week regarding a leaked document (see here) from the CFS-BC office detailing campaign plans for the upcoming defederation vote at Simon Fraser:

Amanda Aziz, national chairperson of the CFS, said that the document was authored by the B.C. wing of the CFS without the input from national office, adding there are no plans to fly anyone to B.C. to campaign during referendums.

“There has been no discussion about who is going to be attending,” she said, but added she knows there is interest. Aziz would not speculate whether their flights would be subsidized by the organization.

Aziz said that the document wasn’t a final plan and shouldn’t have been circulated.

“I’m trying to understand what Summer was thinking when writing it,” she said, adding that “the idea of having a game plan doesn’t seem very sinister to me.”

Aziz is apparently suggesting that not only was there no collaboration between the national and BC offices of the CFS, but that Summer McFayden (a paid CFS-BC staffer) thought this up all on her own. Maybe she created the spreadsheet on her own, but should we really believe that its contents are just a figment of McFayden’s imagination?

NOTE: The law firm representing the CFS sent a letter to the Kwantlen Student Association which made the original document public last week, demanding they apologize. Aziz sent a letter to CFS member schools making arguments similar to the ones expressed to the Canadian University Press. The KSA made these responses public on Tuesday.

For starters, in addition to listing scores of potential campaigners from across the country, the plan detailes a number of tasks assigned to Aziz and Lucy Watson (CFS national director), and Aziz appears to be slated for employment in the CFS-BC office. But Aziz would have us believe that McFayden (despite the fact that the intended recipient of the document was a national office staffer) made all these plans independently, including plans for Aziz’s own employment. Really?

Of course, there is nothing “sinister” about having a game plan in and of itself. What is troubling is the extent to which the CFS will be both determining the rules governing the referendum and actively campaigning in it.

It appears that there will be scant regard for local regulations governing elections and referenda. The bylaws of the Simon Fraser Students Society (SFSS) require that all campaign expenses be limited to $50, but in the CFS document, there is a clear plan to spend as much as thousands of dollars. (Who will be footing the bill is not clear.)

These expenses are listed in the excel document and include such things as arranging flights and hotel rooms, and advertising in campus papers and Vancouver daily papers, not to mention all the photocopying and banner printing to be done.

It is telling that while the CFS national office is paying lawyers to solicit apologies and Aziz is denying involvement, she has not conceded that any wrongdoing has been done. After all, it is CFS’s bylaws and not the CFS-BC bylaws that govern referenda and lead to allegations of unbalanced spending.

CFS bylaws also suggest that rules that prohibit campaigning during voting (as the SFSS bylaws do) will likely be overridden. This is done either directly, as in this clause from their membership bylaws: “There shall be no less than ten (10) days on which campaigning is permitted, during which classes are in session, immediately preceding and during voting;” (emphasis mine), or indirectly through the oversight committee, which Lucy Watson and CFS national treasurer Ben Lewis will be sitting on at SFU. This committee is responsible for such things as, “overseeing all aspects of the voting”;“counting the ballots following the vote” and “establishing all other rules and regulations for the vote.”

Such responsibilities are normally deferred to local election boards and/or independent chief election officers. The leaked document, which is obviously not only intended for oversight committee people, lists many of these tasks as preparation for the campaign. It is also worth noting that prior to the mid-1990s when a number of schools pulled out of the CFS, CFS bylaws offered minimal guidance on referenda procedures, deferring to local union rules. The current rules clearly make it easier for the CFS to win votes either for schools to federate or against their defederation. Two recent cases demonstrate this point.

When in 2005 the University of Manitoba Students Union (UMSU) held a referendum to join the CFS, they voted to suspend their own by-laws. Regan Sarmatiuk, the Manitoban editor at the time, pointed out that, unlike in an election governed by UMSU rules, “While the official ‘yes’ and ‘no’ sides are allowed to submit receipts for campaign materials and will be reimbursed up to $250, there are no requirements to report to the Oversight Committee on spending, and thus the potential for unlimited and unbalanced spending exists.” During voting days students were handed free tuition pamphlets and practically pushed into the polls.

The CFS won with 87 per cent of the vote — not quite the numbers that Fidel Castro pulls down, but close. Incidentally, Aziz, who was the union president at the time, was elected to her current role as national chairperson in the same month she successfully campaigned to have the U of M join the CFS.

At the University of Saskatchewan, the same year, the student union opted to keep their election board (while the U of M did not) though the CFS mandated oversight committee was still put in place. When the election board ruled that the vote was invalid due to procedural problems, the student union ignored the decision, only to have a judge rule later the referendum “of no force or effect.” In other words, when CFS rules, which give sole authority to the oversight committee, are questioned — or subject to scrutiny — their purpose is clear: they do not exist to ensure fair campaigns.

Procedural checks on voting, which most student unions have, are in place to ensure fair campaigning and that votes are not manipulated. CFS voting parameters lead to concerns that such rules will not be enforced, or at least not to the extent they should be. That $50 spending limit required for elections at SFU is already a gonner.

The document unearthed last week is merely evidence of what anybody who has observed a CFS referendum or has any knowledge of the CFS already knows. It is interesting not because it is evidence of questionable behaviour, but because it gives greater insight into how such behaviour is planned, carried out and condoned.

CFS lawyers demand apology from student union over latest controversy

Canada’s largest student lobby group the Canadian Federation of Students has brought in lawyers to fight the latest battle in an on-going controversy that erupted when an email detailing campaign plans was mistakenly distributed to reps from all students’ unions in BC

Canada’s largest student lobby group the Canadian Federation of Students has brought in lawyers to fight the latest battle in an on-going controversy that erupted when an email detailing campaign plans was mistakenly distributed to all BC members early last week. The Kwantlen Student Association, which was one of the first students’ unions to make the campaign plans public, said in a news release that they have received a letter from the CFS’ lawyer demanding a public apology.

The controversy first came to light February 4 when the email was mistakenly sent to each member students’ union in British Columbia. It included a detailed plan to campaign in the upcoming defederation campaign at Simon Fraser University. SFU, Kwantlen, and graduate students at the University of Victoria are going to the polls this spring to decide whether to remain members of the CFS. The document includes details about campaign tactics and volunteers from other students’ unions (many in Ontario) that would be presumably flown in. Some of the volunteers listed are not students, but fulltime staffers of other organizations including the NDP.

Student leaders across the country have raised concerns about where the funding to fly students to BC would come from and whether the extensive campaign is an appropriate way to spend funding. The Kwantlen Student Association also pointed out that the document proves that the CFS does attempt to place CFS-friendly people in permanent staff positions at students’ unions, a practice that has been widely criticized. "This document is our ‘smoking gun’ on the lengths the CFS will go to just to maintain membership," said Laura Anderson, Kwantlen chairperson.

However, many students and students’ unions mentioned in the document have denied knowledge of the plan. CFS national chairperson Amanda Aziz told the Canadian University Press that the plan was authored by the BC chapter of the CFS and that the national organization was not responsible for it. She also denied that there are plans to fly volunteers to BC for the campaign but would not speculate whether such flights would be subsidized by the organization.

The letter from CFS lawyers to the Kwantlen Student Association demands a public apology for a press release written when the plan was first mistakenly distributed. The letter states that the plans were not indeed authored by the CFS, as stated in the press release. Rather, they were authored by CFS-BC.