The McGill Tribune TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22 2019 | VOL. 39 | ISSUE 7
Published by the SPT, a student society of McGill University
McGILLTRIBUNE.COM | @McGILLTRIBUNE
EDITORIAL
FEATURE
TRIBUNE EXPLAINS
Construction is inevitable, accesibility barriers are not
Speak your truth
Academic appointment
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PGs. 8-9
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(Benjmain Joppke / The McGill Tribune)
Martlet hockey falls to Stingers in shootout
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Protest held for Indigenous people traumatized by child-welfare system
The Canadian government appealed a ruling ordering reparations to Indigenous children Abeer Almahdi Managing Editor The Canadian federal government has appealed a ruling by the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal, that ordered them to pay reparations to First Nations
children and their families who were separated by the child-welfare system. In response, on Oct. 19, Students’ Society of McGill University (SSMU) Indigenous Affairs Commissioner Tomas Jirousek and the Indigenous Student Alliance (ISA) organized a protest in solidarity with the victims, calling on the
government to improve on reconciliation. Jirousek, a member of the Kainai First Nation of the Blackfoot confederacy, began the protest with a land acknowledgment and spoke on the intense trauma that Indigenous survivors of the child-welfare system experience. PG. 3
Gentrification falls on university administrations too Jonah Fried Contributor Urban universities take up a lot of space, and their presence has a profound impact on local neighborhoods’ economies. When universities such as McGill, Concordia, or the University of Montreal (UdeM) expand their properties or develop new
ones, property values in the surrounding area tend to increase and developers pressure landowners to sell their properties. This is one example of gentrification, and it is directly abetted by Universities who fail to take preventative measures. UdeM recently came under fire for gentrifying the Parc-Extension area with its Montreal Innovation
New gallery ‘No.01’ offers insights through experimental creations
Laboratory project (MIL). While the project’s goal of turning Montreal into a hub for the growing AI industry is entirely legitimate, it has had unintended consequences. Vacancy rates in the ParcEx this year hit an unprecedented low, and some residents of the area have cited the recent UdeM development as the cause for rising rents. PG. 6
Student-run gallery provides space for new talent Jonathan Giammaria Staff Writer The Visual Arts Visuels’ (VAV) exhibition space at Concordia University may appear modest in its size and spare curation, but the industrial, Lshaped room presents artwork with the same sense
of ambition as those found in venues like the MAC and MMFA. It affirms that artistry isn’t found solely in institutions that project an aura of exclusivity. As one of Montreal’s few studentrun galleries, the VAV is a valuable outlet for burgeoning voices with new ideas. The VAV features a rolling
catalogue of work made mostly by Concordia’s art undergraduates, and on Oct. 17, the venue held a vernissage for its newest gallery, No.01. The venue hosted a large audience, with the accompaniment of DJ Jacqui Beaumont and appearances by some of the featured artists. PG. 11