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Monday, November 23, 2009
Volume 36, Issue 10
AGM proxy forms mishandled at UTM SAALIHA MALIK NEWS EDITOR
An investigation conducted by The Medium has exposed a mishandling of the collection and distribution of proxy forms at UTM for the 2009 Annual General Meeting of the University of Toronto Student’s Union, which took place last Thursday at the St. George campus. Proxy forms allow one student to hold up to as many as eleven votes, provided the voter gets ten other fulltime students to sign the proxy form and include their student numbers. Proxy forms can thus sway important votes in an Annual General Meeting. In last week’s UTSU AGM, where roughly 22 out of the 26 UTM students in attendance held proxy forms, their presence amounted to over 200 votes. In both the UTSU and the UTMSU’s constitutions, Annual General Meetings are to be held in the fall session of each year so that fulltime students can review their union’s financial statements and vote on any amendments of the constitution or proposed bylaw changes. As indicated in the UTSU website, U of T students could collect proxy forms in only two locations: Room 115 in UTM’s Student Centre, which is manned by UTMSU office manager
Matthew Filipowich/Medium File Photo
Students vote at last year’s UTMSU AGM, which was tainted with fraud allegations. Linda Feener, and the UTSU St. George office. No other location was authorized. Yet in an email sent to The Medium, Feener stated that not a single UTM student had picked up proxy forms at her office. “I had some here in my office in case anyone wanted one. [UTSU] sent out an email that indicated [students] could pick up one from me too, but I did not give any out.” Yet around 22 UTM students showed up at the AGM with proxy forms. It isn’t clear whether the students obtained the proxy forms at the St. George office, but their student
numbers would have been recorded. In their conversations with The Medium, no UTSU or UTMSU representative offered this explanation, and no student has come forth stating that they collected their forms at the St. George location. UTSU VP internal Adnan Najmi said that signed proxy forms were faxed to him by UTSMU staff member Dhananjai Kohli “once they were collected from UTMSU.” Najmi added that Kohli was “the staff member at UTMSU we were coordinating with about logistics for the AGM. It is common practice at a
students' union, and most organizations, for staff to support logistics.” The UTMSU website, however, does not list Kohli as an employee, even though every other full-time and part-time employee is listed “My comment is ‘no comment,’” said Kohli. UTMSU VP equity Vickita Bhatt admitted to urging students to collect proxy forms and to “get them in on time,” but when asked where she had directed students and to whom, Bhatt said, “I don’t know. You’ll have to ask [UTMSU President] Joey Santiago.” In a phone call with The Medium,
President Santiago’s confirmed that Kohli supervised the proxy distribution and collection at UTM from November 16 to November 17. Thomas Kristan, a division 3 director who sits on both the UTMSU and the UTSU Boards of Directors, said he was not given clear directions on how to collect a proxy form for the AGM, and therefore did not have any other votes besides his own. “The proxy forms have been destroyed,” said Najmi, arguing that they contained “[students’] personal information.” Najmi extended the deadline for proxy forms to students at only UTM without consultation with the UTSU Board of Directors. And although the forms were due last Monday at 5 p.m., proxy forms were only delivered to the UTM campus by a board member 30 minutes past the deadline. According to Santiago, executive director Mohammed Hashim made copies of proxy forms sent to him and distributed some to Feener’s office, and the rest to Kohli the morning of November 16. The unnumbered forms were faxed back to Najmi at UTSU by 8 p.m. on Tuesday. Henry Ssali, UTMSU VP external and, according to the Union’s constitution, the liaison between UTSU and UTMS, said that he was never contacted by the UTSU to organize logistics for the AGM. “I was never communicated with on issues pertaining to the UTSU AGM. The town hall for UTMSU was on the same day and my priority is to UTM students,” said Ssali.
Tensions run high at the UTSU AGM SAALIHA MALIK NEWS EDITOR
Last Thursday, the St. George campus student union, UTSU, held their Annual General Meeting (AGM), which saw approximately 75 students in attendance. The union represents approximately 41,000 full-time undergraduate students at both UTM and St. George. The meeting, scheduled to begin at 6 p.m., was delayed for approximately 45 minutes. Students in attendance became impatient and questioned the delay. The meeting was called to order at 6:47 p.m.
by the chair Ashkon Hashemi, who followed Robert’s Rules of Order for the proceedings. The meeting began with student Alex Heuton, who sits on the UTSU board of directors as the Innis College representative. Heuton questioned why the meeting began almost an hour after the provided notice time. The chair explained that UTM students were on their way and traffic delayed their arrival. Students questioned why the agenda for the meeting did not have an “other business” item, which would allow students to introduce new items for discussion. The chair allowed a vote to introduce the “other business” item which
passed unanimously. Several students lined up to speak at the microphone on issues the AGM attendees approved for the meeting. Heuton took to the microphone again to address his concerns that amendments to bylaws and policies could not be made at the AGM without first being approved at a policy and procedures committee meeting. Heuton argued that an exception should have been made to introduce new policy amendments, because no policy and procedure committee meeting was called prior to the AGM. Heuton held an e-mail from UTSU President Sandy Hudson, dated July 25, 2009, and stated that a request
for a policy meeting was denied by Hudson because there was no chair of the committee. He argued that a policy and procedures meeting has been called for this week, to which Heuton said “[It] doesn't make sense to have a policy meeting after the AGM.” Hudson responded by stating that any board member can call a meeting, and she had made attempts to call meetings but could not confirm attendance from members. “I take offence that you believe you completed your task as [UTSU] president,” said Heuton.
see UTSU on page 3
INSIDE Students get TTC break PAGE 3 New Moon PAGE 7 Rooftop Green House Page 8 A fine day for UTM Soccer PAGE 11
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