A&E “Meaning through movement: McGill’s Alegria Contemporary Ballet Company” pg. 13
FEATURE “About Abortion: Why Canada still needs to talk about it ” pg. 8-9
The McGill Tribune
EDITORIAL: McGILL MUST DO MORE TO EMBRACE MONTREAL’S BILINGUALISM pg. 05
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 8, 2017 VOL. 36 ISSUE 21
PUBLISHED BY THE SPT, A STUDENT SOCIETY OF MCGILL UNIVERSITY
McGILLTRIBUNE.COM
Allegations of sexual violence lead to SSMU VP External David Aird’s resignation Organizations and Individuals speak about incidents Calvin Trottier-Chi News Editor
Every year, the festivities of Nuit Blanche summon Montrealers into the winter night, page 12. (Liam Kirkpatrick / The McGill Tribune)
Why I resigned from the SSMU Board of Directors Sean Taylor SSMU Science Senator The Students’ Society of McGill University (SSMU)—who could have expected that such an innocuous-sounding group could elicit such a divisive reaction? And yet, we the student body, are embroiled in yet another series of scandals involving SSMU. SSMU is a body that supplies many services to students that are rarely noticed—it lobbies for an easier
exam deferral system, advocates for sexual assault resources, provides on-call medical services nightly in residences, as well as numerous other services that the student body often takes for granted. The week leading up to the winter break, however, have called into question the judgement and credibility of the society’s leadership. That’s why, before reading week, I tendered my resignation from my position on the SSMU Board of Directors (BoD). I personally felt disdain for SSMU in my first year at McGill. I saw it as an annoying body that only led to undue
tension and stress on campus, exemplified by Farnangate, the mis-election of Tariq Khan, and the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) General Assembly motions that caused emotional strife on both sides of the debate. In light of all of this anger and frustration that I and my friends felt toward SSMU, I decided that whining wasn’t going to help anyone. Instead, I involved myself in SSMU to try to find ways to get past the surface scandals and focus on the important services and support networks that lay beneath.
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On Feb. 21, the Community Disclosure Network (CDN), a group of sexual assault survivors and allies, released a statement calling for David Aird’s resignation from his position as Students’ Society of McGill University (SSMU) Vice-President (VP) External. The CDN wrote that Aird had committed gendered and sexualized violence–based on testimonies from survivors–and called for SSMU to undertake a number of supportive initiatives to address future cases. Aird stepped down on Feb. 22 and issued an apology for his behaviour on Feb. 23, although the apology was removed when he deleted his Facebook account. Aird declined to comment. The members of CDN came together to protect their anonymity and to provide a collective response to several incidents in which Aird allegedly committed inappropriate acts. CDN published an anonymous form on Feb. 9 in order to collect disclosures while preserving survivors’ privacy. “CDN was formed when a small group of allies and survivors realized that there was a long history of disturbing behaviour [by Aird] beyond what they had experienced/was disclosed to them,” the CDN wrote in an email to The McGill Tribune. “CDN began to try and find a way to, as a first step, remove Aird from his position at SSMU in a way that would not require one survivor to go through what, due to his position, would most likely become a very public process.”
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