February 27, 2017

Page 1

Vol. CXXXVII, No. 19 February 27, 2017 thevarsity.ca —— The University of Toronto’s Student Newspaper Since 1880

Governing Council election results released Successful candidates call for fossil fuel divestment, fee reforms, nap space Josie Kao Varsity Staff

After nearly a month of campaigning, the results for the recent Governing Council election were released on February 21. The Governing Council is the highest decision-making body at U of T. It is made up of 50 members, of which eight are students. Victoria College student Robert Xu and Trinity College student Amanda Harvey-Sánchez were elected for the Constituency I seats, which represent full-time undergraduate students in the Faculty of Arts and Science, UTM, and UTSC. Xu won a total of 1,057 votes, well ahead of Harvey-Sánchez’s 636. He ran on a platform of ten unique campaign promises, which included the pledges that school should never start on a Thursday and that Robarts should have beds. One of his largest goals is to reform the University of Toronto Students’ Union (UTSU), which he believes is dysfunctional and racist. In his campaign statement, he wrote, “The Student Union is incompetent, [sic] cut cost, decrease size, fix election procedure.” “UTSU has been a pretty bad student union with a lot of scandals, ... [and] has wasted way too much of our money,” Xu told The Varsity. “Last year, they disqualify [sic] an elected Chinese student simply because she used Chinese to campaign during the UTSU election. The international student population, at least I can say for the Chinese ones, are extremely unsatisfied with the way our student government is.” Xu’s statement is in reference to the 1UofT slate’s disqualification after posting non-English campaign material without approval from the Chief Returning Officer. Since the UTSU is a federally incorporated non-profit that is independent of the university, it is unlikely that Governing Council will have a significant impact on how the union is run.

U of T at odds with city over 698 Spadina

e torey residenc to build a 23-s and e at du ra U of T wants rg ty for 549 unde on the proper ents. ud st te gradua

Heritage de signation fo located on r the Ten Ed 698 Spadin itions book a Avenue is store approval, w pending Cit hich could y Council affect U of T’s plans to build a residence on the lot.

Tensions flare at UTSU over in camera meetings VP UA releases statement criticizing February 9 meeting proceedings Tom Yun News Editor

Questions regarding in camera meeting sessions have been raised after a tense Board of Directors meeting at the University of Toronto Students’ Union. When the Board of Directors votes to move in camera, anyone who is not a director, executive, or staff member must exit the room and any discussions that happen during the in camera session are not recorded in the minutes. During the February 9 meeting, the board voted to move in camera to discuss the union’s ongoing lawsuit against its former executive director, Sandra Hudson, and to continue the discussion from an in camera session that took place at the January 27 board meeting. The union’s legal dispute with Hudson began in September 2015, and it alleges that Hudson was improperly issued almost a quarter of a million dollars in severance pay. Hudson subsequently countersued the union for $300,000, alleging racism and harassment from leaders within the UTSU. “Going in camera when we did was a breach of our duties to our students, and quoting policy at me and others is just a distraction from UTSU’s refusal to engage in good faith with Black students about issues of anti-Black racism,” said UTSU Vice-President University Affairs Cassandra Williams. Mathias Memmel, VP Internal declined to comment on anything that was said in camera, writing in an email to The Varsity, “That’s how going in camera works.” He explained that the union’s Board of Directors has “consistently discussed the lawsuit, and everything related to the lawsuit, in camera.” Williams revealed that during the in camera session, she attempted to add a motion on the agenda regarding the lawsuit.

Governing Council, page 2

UTSU, page 3

Comment — page 8

Arts — page 10

Sports — page 15

Exploitation or exposure Considering the merits of unpaid internships

Goodnight, sweet sounds Why Toronto’s music venues are closing

Blades of fury Blues women’s hockey team skate to semis after double overtime win


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