Volumer 45 Issue 5

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THE VOICE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO MISSISSAUGA

October 15, 201 8 Volume 45, Issue 5 themedium.c a

Cannabis laws & UTM

Critiquing U SPORTS Policy

Art and tech and nature

Making class engaging

U-Sports transgender policy

News, page 3

Opinion, page 4

Arts, page 5

Features, page 8

Sports, page 11

Mississauga mayoral platforms: A breakdown A closer look at the platforms for the current candidates, and what they hope to do about student issues MELISSA ARAGON ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITOR

On October 22nd, eligible voters will be able to elect a mayor, ward councilors, and school board trustees for the City of Mississauga in the 2018 municipal election. Since its incorporation in 1974, the city has seen four mayors, including the city’s longest serving mayor, Hazel McCallion. After McCallion’s 36 years of leadership, current mayor Bonnie Crombie took over in 2014. This year, the eight candidates running for mayor include: Bonnie Crombie, Scott E.W. Chapman, Kevin J. Johnston, Mohsin Khan, Andree Lee, Yasmin Pouragheli, Syed Qumber Rizvi, and Tiger Meng Wu. To help students make an informed decision on election day The Medium reviewed the mayoral candidates’ stances on issues UTM students are facing today. Transit: On transit, incumbent mayor Crombie told The Medium, “Over the last four years under my leadership, our City’s transit and transportation

EARL WERNER/INSAUGA.COM

Mayoral candidates Crombie, Chapman, Pouragheli, Rizvi, and Lee (left to right). map has grown. From securing full funding ($1.4 billion), for the Hurontario LRT, to completing the Bus Rapid Transit Way to the Airport Corporate Centre, to increasing MiWay service by 160,000 hours.” If re-elected, she stated that she will “advocate to the provincial government for rapid transit on Dundas

Street from the University of Toronto Mississauga to Kipling Subway Station.” She will also “continue to advocate to the province for all-day, two-way GO service on all three Mississauga GO train corridors, but in particular the Milton Corridor, the second busiest in the entire system.”

In Chapman’s campaign, he states that if elected he will ‘completely revamp Mississauga transit’ so that ‘during regular transit hours there will be a 15 minute or less connection time between all buses”. Johnston’s official website states, “we must freeze Mississauga Transit and MiWay fares for four years and

introduce 4-hour transfers from the time you request it.” Johnston hopes to ensure fewer empty busses by “fixing bus routes and bus scheduling.” He hopes to offset costs by “aggressively selling advertising space on, in and around all transit terminals.” Khan has not made any comments regarding transit affairs during his campaign. Lee, a retired engineer from Ontario Hydro Nuclear, told The Medium “if elected, [he] will personally take the bus (one more person joining the crowd).” He went on to say “I remember when I was a student, sometime[s] the bus company sent an empty bus to pick up passengers in the mid-route to lessen the load. That was years ago.” During the UTMSU’s mayoral candidate forum, Pouragheli said she was inspired by Turkey’s practice of discounting transit passes in exchange for one’s trash or recycling while Rizvi argued the upcoming construction of the Hurontario will increase instead of elevate congestion in the Hurontario corridor.

Mayoral continued on page 2

Kevin Johnston denied entry into candidates forum Current mayoral candidate for Mississauga reportedly not invited to forum, gives speech outside event KAYVAN AFLAKI WITH NOTES FROM ALI TAHA NEWS EDITOR The University of Toronto Mississauga Students’ Union (UTMSU) hosted Mississauga’s mayoral candidates on Thursday October 4th in the Kaneff Centre. The two-hour panel is the only scheduled debate involving Mississauga’s mayoral candidates. The event was livestreamed on the UTMSU Facebook page. Candidate Kevin Johnston, a Mississauga resident and operator of the online media outlet “The Freedom Report”, was reportedly not invited to participate in the debate. According to a video on Johnston’s official YouTube account, Johnston can be seen attempting to register for the forum outside of the venue. However, executive director of the UTMSU Munib Sajjad tells him that the event is at capacity. Johnston told The Medium in an interview that there looked to be approximately fifty people inside the venue. The maximum capacity for the room, Kaneff 137, is three hundred and fifteen.

METROLAND FILE PHOTO

Kevin Johnston was seen attempting to register for the forum. “I would say the auditorium was about one fifth full, perhaps less than that,” stated Johnston. “[They] were very secretive about the whole thing, which is something that I’ve gotten used to unfortunately with extremely left-leaning individuals,” he continued. “They never give an explanation—they just want to shut the debate down and never be held accountable for it.” In a press release on the mayoral

candidates forum, the UTMSU stated that it “believes that freedom of speech and freedom of expression is essential to our democratic system. It also supports students’ rights to study, work and socialize in an affirming environment that is free from harassment, violence and discrimination.” According to a mississauga.com news article, Johnston was accused of wilfully promoting hatred and charged under the Criminal Code of

Canada. Johnston told The News on March 7, that the charge relates to an allegation that he published material that “could be viewed as demeaning to Muslims.” Johnston told The Medium, “We’re fifteen months later after that charge was filed, and I haven’t even entered a plea yet. So, what’s happened here is that the only one taking it seriously now is the crown attorney. The judges

don’t even want this case, but I do. Part of it comes with being charged in my own country under Islamic blasphemy law. It’s going help me sell a whole lot of books in the future.” The Medium asked Johnston his opinion regarding Premier Doug Ford’s free speech policy, to which he replied, “I support free speech unto my dying breath.” “Unfortunately [students] have been babied and told that it’s a good idea to put your feelings before facts,” he continued, “and that it’s a good idea to call men like me and Doug Ford […] racist simply because we have an argument that’s different than what [students] have been told in school. The truth hurts, but it’s still going to help you a lot more than comfortable lies will.” UTMSU Media told The Medium that they extended invitations to six mayoral candidates: Scott E.W. Chapman, Bonnie Crombie, Andrew Lee, Yasmin Pouragheli, Syed Qumber Rizvi, and Tiger Meng Wu. “The event was extremely successful, with the candidates engaging in a dynamic debate [...] from all sides of the political spectrum,” they stated. Forum continued on page 3


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