theconcordian
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Cyberstalking- who are your Facebook friends? P. 7
Stingers win the Cup P. 17
Quiet in the boardroom Editorial P. 20
Tuesday, Oct. 4, 2011
arts Steve James gives viewers something to chew on P. 10
music Christina Gentile draws sounds from gypsy lifestyle P. 14
opinions Students to BoG: let’s get a room P. 21
Volume 29 Issue 6
Graphic by Katie Brioux
Concordia students CSU rejects student lose seats on board centre proposal Students walk out of meeting in protest on ‘dark day’ Sarah Deshaies CUP Quebec Bureau Chief Concordia University is one step closer to reforming its bloated Board of Governors but in taking that step, it has reduced students’ presence on the highest university body, and that has student representatives crying foul. At a heated meeting on Sept. 28, the number of seats was cut from 40 to 25 in a 27-7 secret ballot vote on an omnibus series of recommendations. “I think it’s a dark day for Concordia. Students have been disempowered,” said undergraduate student governor Laura Beach. “Other voices on the board have also been silenced.” Previously, undergraduate stu-
dents held four positions on the board, with one seat representing graduate students. Now, one person will represent each group, with a third “alternate” who can replace the undergraduate governor in case they are absent. This student will only have speaking rights at meetings of the full board, but will be able to vote at the committee level. Retired staff and faculty have also lost their one observer seat on the board. “In both cases, there was absolutely no adequate justification or motivation provided,” said Beach. “There’s a complete disrespect for the process,” said undergraduate representative Cameron Monagle, who lamented the lack of prior consultation and the fact that the motion bypassed the university’s senate. “It’s disappointing because we’re going to be fighting this battle for a long time, and it’s really time for Concordia to turn the page.”
See “New board” on P. 5
Union will now turn to students for consultation
Jacqueline Di Bartolomeo and Alyssa Tremblay News and assistant news editors The Concordia Student Union council of representatives unanimously rejected the university’s current proposal to convert the Faubourg Ste-Catherine into a student centre at a special council meeting held last Tuesday evening. “This university has abandoned its students,” CSU president Lex Gill said in her opening statement to the 27 council members. She also admitted that the recent vote to decrease student representation on the Board of Governors influenced her and VP clubs and student space Gonzalo Nieto’s final recommendation that the CSU should not enter what would have been a 25-year, 51.4 million dollar agreement with Concordia University. The passing of the six-part motion
composed of recommendations made by Gill and Nieto incited cheers and applause from council, a reaction that Nieto later described as “validating.” Discussions between the current CSU executive and Concordia’s administration regarding the student centre proposal have been ongoing since June. Other issues listed in the report included worries about the loss of current student space and a lack of clarity over which university policies regarding student behaviour would apply to the student centre, as well as several noted instances in which the tricky wording of legal documents held potential for the CSU to lose both money and management power of the Faubourg to the university. “We feel that in some ways the process has been a little bit backwards,” said Nieto in an interview, referring to the fact that the CSU began collecting money from students for a student centre early in the new millennium via a $2 per credit fee levy without having any concrete plans regarding the centre itself.
See “Executive” on P. 3
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