MOVING FORWARD //FORWARD MUSIC GROUP MAKES WAVES >> pG. 12 Volume 143 • Issue 15 • January 13, 2010
thebruns.ca
brunswickan canada’s oldest official student publication.
UNB gets First Nations governance degree
UNB student may be kicked out of residence
Sarah Ratchford The Brunswickan Students at the University of New Brunswick are the first in the country to have an opportunity to study for a degree in First Nations governance and management. The bachelor’s degree was announced on Jan. 6 as part of a series of Aboriginal post-secondary initiatives for the province of New Brunswick for which the government is allotting $1 million. The standalone degree, the first of its kind in Canada, is being implemented at the request of First Nations communities, says Dr. Linda Doige, director of the Mi’kmaqMaliseet Institute at the UNB Fredericton campus. She says the process that’s being followed to form this degree is just as important as the final product. “We have already held a series of conversations with First Nations communities regarding the needs, the ideas, what the content might be for a degree, and what would be the topics that First Nations people feel are necessary to explore in a degree in governance.” The degree, Doige says, will assist First Nations people to “govern themselves as opposed to being dependant on other forms of governance, by giving them understanding of how governance functions. “This will assist First Nations people with self-governance within their own communities.” Details of the degree are still in preliminary stages, but it will be interdisciplinary in nature, including courses from a variety of different faculties. The degree will be granted through the school’s faculty of education. The First Nations education funding will be split between New Brunswick’s major post-secondary institutions, including UNB Fredericton and Saint John, St. Thomas University, l’Université de Moncton, the New Brunswick Community College campuses and the New Brunswick College of Craft and Design. The money is intended to recruit and
SEE DEGREE PAGE 3
James Brown, above, is the executive director of Residential Life. He says grad student Chris Ian may be searching for another place to live following the fire in McLeod, in which Ian played a role. Andrew Meade / The Brunswickan Hilary Paige Smith The Brunswickan Chris Ian’s future in residence at the University of New Brunswick is unclear. Ian, a graduate student and current resident of McLeod House, played a role in the fire that occurred in his residence on Nov. 17. The incident accumulated $25,000 in damages and was deemed an accident by emergency response authorities. Though the incident occurred close to two months ago, problems are still ongoing between Ian and UNB Residential Life. Recently, Residential Life made the decision to evict Ian from the residence community, a decision Ian will be appealing this week. Shortly after the incident, Ian said he
met with Angela Garnett, director of Residential Life for the university. Ian said that Garnett told him Residential Life had evaluated the reports from the police and fire department that deemed the fire an accident, but some action still had to occur from the incident. “Near the end [of the conversation] she said, ‘But we’re going to move you.’ And I asked why and she told me that it was due to my shaky relationship with the proctors and the don of McLeod House, the fact that there needed to be “consequences” for my role in the fire, as well as the fact that the proctors had apparently gauged the mood of the house and determined that there were ‘feelings of lingering hostility’ towards myself and my role in the fire,” he said. Ian was initially supposed to be moved to the suite style residence
shortly following the incident, however his family requested that he move in January. Both James Brown, executive director of Residential Life and Conference Services, and Ian confirmed that proctors from McLeod House submitted statements about “feelings of lingering hostility” within the residence. Both parties also said that the don of McLeod House approached Residential Life and claimed that Ian showed no true remorse for the fire, a claim that Ian disputes wholeheartedly. “I told [the don of McLeod] specifically in that interview that I felt terrible about the fire and these are my words literally, about having disrupted peoples well-being, about having possibly destroyed many of my friends’ as well as other peoples property,” he said.
“I also mention, against my better judgement, that I have not been sleeping well since the incident, and when I heard [the don’s comment] the response was ‘How can anybody say that about another person?’” Brown said that though Ian has accumulated several fines in residence, it is extremely rare for a resident to be evicted on these grounds alone and that Ian’s eviction revolves centrally around the fire. “I believe that the appeal of his eviction will be completely sorted out by Thursday and he’ll either move, you know we may still leave that open to him actually or we will change the locks and he will be evicted,” Brown said. Ian’s fate in residence will be decided at an appeal on Thursday.
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