Feed The Bus.
Campus food drive runs until Friday Mar. 19. Bring your non-perishables to the bus in front of the McMaster Museum of Art. See A3
www.thesil.ca
McMASTER UNIVERSITY'S STUDENT NEWSPAPER / THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 2010
Est. 1930
1280 losses tally over $1.5M Management team let go following continued losses at campus bar JEFF GREEN
EXECUTIVE EDITOR
After undergoing a $400,000 face-lift, the McMaster Student Union (MSU) owned and operated campus bar, 1280, continues to sink. Sunday’s Student Representative Assembly (SRA) meeting highlighted that the bar is expected to lose $242,000 this year, bringing the total losses since opening in 2002 to nearly $1.5 million. This announcement came on the heels of a memo that was sent out to MSU full-time staff, outlining that the management team of 1280, “will be leaving the organization to pursue opportunities outside the MSU.” The staff changes are a new
move for the MSU, considering that manager Ismael Viegas was promoted following last year’s loss of $356,089. Viegas declined to comment on the issue. Leaving with Viegas will be head cook Don Jackson, and service manager LeRoy Douglas. While Douglas will run out the end of his current contract, both Viegas and Jackson are expected to receive settlement packages, although no details were provided by the MSU. Since opening in 2002, 1280’s losses are estimated to total $1.5 million. For the past two years, the vice presidents (finance) of the MSU has maintained that the bar can make a profit.
Sources inside the MSU speculate that this was a move to save business manager John McGowan, who is ultimately responsible for the business operations of the union. The MSU has been under fire this year with poor management practices resulting in significant cost to the union. A recent government audit revealed that the MSU failed to pay provincial sales taxes on the health plan. The cost of the PST errors is presently over $503,000. The MSU is appealing the PST audit, and vice president (finance) Andrew Caterine said that they will be getting “$15,000 to $20,000 back.” Those numbers are not final. MSU Comptroller Maggie Gal-
lagher clarified that they are expecting the final PST statements to arrive in mid-April. Speaking to 1280’s losses this year, Caterine highlighted that December and January have been extremely bad months for the bar, and that the average loss per month at 1280 is around $10,000. Currently, the bar has lost $150,000. Caterine expects the loss to be under $200,000 – contrary to the $242,000 figure reported at SRA this past Sunday by the financial commissioner Daniel Boccaccio. “We let the management staff go,” confirmed MSU president Vishal Tiwari about the 1280 team, “they didn’t leave on their own • PLEASE SEE MANAGER, A4
General Clear Out: General Assembly clears out after motion to dissolve Kin caucus is denied
VOLUME 80, NO. 24
CLA profs may be odd ones out SELMA AL-SAMARRAI SENIOR NEWS EDITOR
The lack of renewal for the contracts of at least two of the four Political Science professors under full-time Contractually Limited Appointments (CLA) has quickly ignited a political science student petition. Todd Alway, Greg Flynn, Andrew Lui and Govind Rao are the four CLA professors in the political science department facing possible contract conclusion as of the 20102011 academic year. Some of the reasons provided for the expected lack of the annually renewed CLA contracts include budget changes, differing research priorities and funding restrictions that limit the ability of the political science department to provide professors with tenure-track positions. Robert O’Brien, the professor and chair of the political science department, explained that he currently does not know how many CLA professors will be at the department in the next academic year. “Right now I haven’t heard from [the Dean of Social Sciences] because she’s still going to the budget meeting with the University Budget Committee so the Budget Committee tells the dean how much money she can have in her budget and then the dean tells me what kind of teaching resources I have and whether I can spend it on sessionals or CLAs because CLAs are more expensive than sessionals,” explained O’Brien. Tanya Kuzman-Cagna, a third year McMaster student and one of the newly elected members of the Student Representatives Assembly (SRA) humanities, expressed her opinion regarding the potential change in the political science department “This is a major disappointment to students who have benefited • PLEASE SEE TENURE, A4
CHRISTOPHER CHANG / SILHOUETTE STAFF
Leaders building leaders EWB referendum misses quorum Public Service internship opens up for McMaster students
LILY PANAMSKY
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR
Third year McMaster students will be happy to hear that twenty internship opportunities in the federal government have emerged for the summer. McMaster University is one of two schools to take part of the “Leaders Building Leaders” public service leadership development internship. The first of its kind in Canada, the internship was developed in collaboration with the federal government, the University of Waterloo, and McMaster University. The internship is offered to students who will be entering their final year of study in September 2010. Students selected for the internship will be required to work for an agency during the summer and then to take a research credit course under the department of political science. Employment services leader at McMaster Career Services Kim
Pedlar is very optimistic about the doors it will open for McMaster students. “There are so many people that are going to be retiring from the public service,” she said, “that they need to recruit new leaders. We could also offer our students the opportunity to go in and to perhaps gain experience in the summer, to join full time within a certain agency…the sky’s the limit, really.” Specific summer work opportunities have not been announced yet. Gisela Oliveira, employment services coordinator at Career Services, explained, “The agencies are working together and seeing which agency needs summer students to work in these different projects. So once they have these agencies together, then I’ll know what kinds of positions, but right now, no one knows, not even the federal government. They’re pulling all of those resources together right now.” Applications should be made • PLEASE SEE PUBLIC, A4
LILY PANAMSKY
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR
The results for the 2010 Student Representative Assembly (SRA) elections are in. The SRA is the governing body of the McMaster Student Union and consists of 31 undergraduate
students and four full-time Board of Directors members. SRA seats are based on representation by faculty population. There is one Arts and Science faculty seat, and there are three Commerce seats, five Engineering seats, two Health Sciences seats, four Humanities seats, two Kinesiology seats, two Nurs-
ing seats, six Science seats, and six Social Science seats. The SRA elections were held on Wednesday, Mar. 10 and Thursday, Mar. 11. Going into the elections, the Arts and Science, Engineering, Kinesiology, and Nursing seats were all acclaimed, meaning the • PLEASE SEE SRA, A4
SRA winners by faculty Arts and Science David Campbell (acclaimed)
Health Science George Farjou Theresa Tang
Commerce Greg Lagerquist James Steels Ali Wadood
Humanities Jessie Bauman Tanya Cagna Matthew Dillon-Leitch Joe Finkle
Engineering Matt Wright (acclaimed) Andrew Toyr Oj (acclaimed) Adrian Burlacu (acclaimed) Michael Carriv (acclaimed)
Kinesiology Nashwa Khan (acclaimed) Social Science Hadi Behdad Amber DuBois
Jones Musara Alex Ramirez Huzaifa Saeed Hagop Terzian Nursing Monica Polania (acclaimed) Davey Taijen Hamada (acclaimed) Science Chris Adkins Richard Cioci Aspasia Manos John McIntyre Heather Fisher Andra Popescu