The Queen's Journal, Volume 144, Issue 28

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the

Queen’s University

journal

Vol. 144, Issue 28

T h u r s day , A p r i l 6 , 2 0 1 7

Keren and Prescott resign

Commissioner of Social Issues and incoming AMS Speaker both issue written resignation notes after heated 72 hours in student governance

After 72 hours of fervour over a decision by the incoming AMS Assembly to elect Alexander Prescott as their Speaker, both Prescott and Commissioner of Social Issues Lea Keren tendered their resignations to the AMS on Wednesday. April 2 On Sunday evening, incoming members of Assembly and ex-officio members gathered for their first “mock” Assembly of the new academic year. The meeting was charged with electing a new Speaker, whose duties involve granting speaking rights and facilitating Assembly meetings for the next year. Prescott, who was the only individual who put their name forward in the meeting, was voted in unanimously and without debate. In 2013, Prescott — who sat on Assembly as an ASUS representative — was formally censured by Assembly during a Special Meeting for his Facebook comments about partial “onus” being placed back on survivors of sexual assault. Then-Assembly members Daniel Basilio, ASUS representative to the AMS, Chelsey Morphy, chair of ASUS Board of Directors, and Greg Allan, ASUS representative to the AMS publicly announced their resignations during the same meeting. Immediately after Sunday night’s meeting, current and former student leaders took to social media to express support for survivors of sexual violence and chastise the AMS’ decisions. Former AMS Commissioner of Social Issues Emily Wong discussed the impact of comments like Prescott’s, and how the AMS’ decisions could affect the student body. “I was in second year during the ASUS special assembly in 2013. I went to support a friend of mine who was sexually assaulted when we were in first year,” she wrote in a statement to The Journal. “There’s something seriously wrong with the social environment when you need to have a professional counsellor who specializes in sexual violence present at assembly (which there was).” Though she said that everyone is capable of going through “the process to unlearn oppression,” Wong maintained that comments like Prescott’s contribute to rape culture on campus, and that listening to the

Features

Reflections born from University District Summit in February Sarina Grewal Staff Writer

Looking back At the biggest

stories of the year

See Keren on page 3

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY JULIA BALAKRISHNAN

In the wake of the AMS’ inaugural University District Summit in February, a first draft report detailing the findings, identifying problems and proposing solutions was released on March 31. The report was compiled by Commissioner of Municipal Affairs Francis Campbell, with an open request for feedback. The response period for the questions posed about current student living conditions was approximately two months. The report received 509 responses, with 87 per cent students, three per cent landlords and 10 per cent residents. For students living in the district, 43 per cent presented a negative or somewhat negative view of University District housing, with 68 per cent satisfied with interior housing quality. Seventy per cent of students say they’ve signed leases with responsive and approachable landlords, while 46 per cent believe that their landlords offset costs onto their tenants. Fifty-nine per cent of student respondents say they are knowledgeable — or at least minimally aware — of their tenants’ rights, and overall, 81 per cent of students report positive off campus living experiences. Eighty-six per cent of landlords reported satisfactory quality of care for their rental properties, with 87 per cent happy with their tenants’ behaviour overall. An average rental cost is also disclosed, with most landlords charging between $500 to $750 per month, utilities not included. Sixty-seven per cent of landlords feel knowledgeable of their rights and responsibilities, with a sizeable 93 per cent overall confirming a positive landlording experience. Residents of Kingston, on the other hand, seem the most dissatisfied with the current housing and neighbourhood situation in the district. Of the resident respondents, 38 per cent describe their neighbourhood as an even mix of students and non-student residents. The biggest problem for most residents seems to be the noise level and cleanliness within their areas, and in total, approximately 55 per cent of residents who responded

INSIDE THIS ISSUE Editorials

Opinions

1873

University District draft report released

Year in Review

Victoria Gibson News Editor

since

Sports

See Primary on page 3

Lifestyle

Peer-to-peer discipline on trial

Darts and laurels: the highs and lows of 2016-17

Long hours in Stauffer need to end

Colour Awards highlight student athletes

Hockey inspired student start-up

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