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Forget the boycott P. 6
Learn how the weather affects your mood P. 11
arts No aging blues for FIFA P. 13
editorial It’s time to have a chat with Line Beauchamp P. 21
Volume 29 Issue 24
Season ends for Stingers P. 19
a striking moment
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
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Full coverage on P. 4-5 Education minister fines ConU $2 million
Photo by Navneet Pall
Two CSU executive candidates disqualified from race
A Better Concordia’s Laforest and Fine imposed over severance Gallardo allegedly not registered packages; decision receives negative students reaction from unions Jacques Gallant Editor-in-chief Education Minister Line Beauchamp has fined Concordia $2 million for approving millions of dollars in severance packages handed out to former senior employees over the past several years. The decision was communicated to Board of Governors Chair Peter Kruyt in a letter dated March 8. Although Concordia President Frederick Lowy has indicated that the university will “act in accordance with its responsibilities,” the minister’s decision to pull the $2 million from the university’s 2012-2013 provincial funding has sparked widespread condemnation from the campus community. “It’s unfair to make the entire Concordia community pay for the actions of a few people,” said Concordia University Faculty Association President Lucie Lequin. “Maybe this will mean less services for students, or make it
more difficult for employees to negotiate better salaries. For us, the minister’s letter is nothing more than a political and public relations move. In the face of student unrest and people citing Concordia as an example of mismanagement of funds, the minister felt she had to act.” In her letter to Kruyt, Beauchamp wrote of past communications with Kruyt in January and February when she expressed her concern over the number of people leaving senior positions at Concordia, and ultimately over the university’s “management of public funds.” She also criticized Concordia for rehiring and remunerating former Concordia President Judith Woodsworth, who left the university with a severance package worth $703,500 in December 2010. Woodsworth, who returned in January, is currently a translation professor with tenure in the French department.
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Joel Ashak Co-news editor
The two candidates disqualified after one week into the Concordia Student Union general election campaign, A Better Concordia’s presidential candidate Schubert Laforest and VP academic and advocacy candidate Lucia Gallardo, have filed a request to the CSU’s judicial board asking to be temporarily reinstated. Both candidates sent their requests just after midnight on Monday asking for their candidacies to be temporarily reinstated until the JB finds a resolution to the case. Gallardo and Laforest claim that if the outcome of the appeal rules in their favour, they would have unfairly lost several days of campaigning. They are also asking that chief electoral officer Ismail Holoubi review his decision to not put the candidates’ names on the ballots. In addition to their disqualifications, the candidates were also “shocked” to find out about a leak of
an “outdated and inaccurate version of [their] private student records,” according to an official statement sent by the affiliation. The statement went on to say that the “origins of the private documents are currently being investigated by multiple parties. It was also indicated that the leak most likely came from a faculty or department member.” “How can someone get this document if not from us and why was it leaked to the press?,” said Laforest. “These documents do not just contain grades, but also very personal information that should not be made public. We filed a report to security saying that our privacy has been breached by someone within the faculty administration.” Laforest said the affiliation did not know who was behind the leak, but he said that the dean’s office and the registrar were working to find out what happened and how the information got out.
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