March 20, 2017

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Vol. CXXXVII, No. 22 March 20, 2017 thevarsity.ca —— The University of Toronto’s Student Newspaper Since 1880

UTSU executives-elect react to election results Incoming executives include candidates from two slates and an independent

Stories of sexual assault, university response brought into focus with Survivors Speak Back campaign

Jack O. Denton Associate News Editor

page 2 MUBASHIR BAWEJA/THE VARSITY

SMCSU financial audit executive summary details kickbacks, falsified invoices, inappropriate expenditures Full report to be kept confidential Tom Yun & Kaitlyn Simpson News Editor & Associate News Editor

After completing a financial investigation into the St. Michael’s College Student Union (SMCSU), the University of St. Michael’s College (SMC) has released an executive summary of the resulting report. In July 2016, SMC announced that a financial investigation into SMCSU was underway. The college is not releasing the full report, which was prepared by Williams & Partners Forensic Auditors, to the public, citing privacy concerns for the individuals named in the report. In addition to the executive summary, SMC President David Mulroney released a statement on the matter. According to the executive summary, “Certain individuals admitted to receiving kickback payments in the form of cash from third parties for the procurement of goods and services,” but it notes that some of the kickbacks were repaid. It states that the individual who issued the kickbacks may have done so through overbilling or “fictitious billing to accommodate the kickback payments received” and the kickbacks have spanned over six years. The executive summary also details “poor controls over cash managements,”

which has led to money going missing. This includes cash payments being kept off the books, unidentified cash deposits of $120,075, unidentified expenditures of $123,632, and falsified invoices. $50,677.90 of SMCSU monies went towards “professional development,” which included yearly trips to Blue Mountain at approximately $6,300 per trip, as well as $412.45 paid out of SMCSU’s funds to cover damage repairs at the retreats. Other “inappropriate expenditures” listed in the report

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include $400–$600 for a dinner for four people and $300–$350 for a dinner for two people. Furthermore, the executive summary highlights a lack of records and transitional documents available when newly elected SMCSU council members take over. In one instance, the incoming Finance Commissioner was not aware of the existence of a PayPal account set up to collect fees for orientation. It also states that “proper bookkeeping records were not maintained or did not exist.” The executive summary recommends SMCSU convert to a cashless system and utilize online, debit, or credit card payments for its transactions. In addition, it recommends hiring a permanent third-party bookkeeper and establishing a code of ethics to prevent “the acceptance of any direct or indirect gifts/ benefits or bribes, etc. from vendors and the promise that assets of SMCSU will be safeguarded and not misappropriated for personal use or for events/usage which is contrary to the constitution.” SMC President David Mulroney released a statement on the report, in which he notes what he calls a “culture of entitlement” among “some of the most senior officials in recent SMCSU administrators.” He also stated that hazing was a part of this tradition.

The conclusion to the University of Toronto Students’ Union (UTSU) election season came in a bag of mixed, and as yet unofficial, results on March 16. The Demand Better slate dominated the executive positions, with We the Students placing a single candidate on the Executive and a rare outcome of an independent candidate winning a position. President-elect Mathias Memmel said he’s “indescribably grateful to have been given the chance to do some good.” He noted that faith in new possibilities for the union was part of both the campaign and what he intends to bring into his term in office. “Students put their faith in us, but also in people who didn’t run with us” he said. “So I need to have faith that those people also want something better.” While Hello UofT and Brighter UofT swept the Executive last year and the year before, respectively, Demand Better was unable to claim the Vice-President University Affairs and Vice-President External positions, which went to We the Students’ Carina Zhang and independent Anne Boucher, respectively. “I’m sad that we lost Josie and Fasiha, but I also want to make things work with Carina and Anne,” Memmel said. “It won’t be business as usual at the UTSU, and we can’t afford another year of infighting.” Vice-President Internal-elect Daman Singh expressed gratitude for having been given the mandate to fulfill the promises he made during Rounding up the campaign. “I’m all the demerit excited to work with points given everyone on the inthis campaign coming team on our season common goal of fix— page 3 ing the UTSU,” he said. “If there is one thing that this Accessibility, election shows, aerospace [it’s] that students levies pass aren’t happy with — page 5 the UTSU,” Singh continued. “[It’s] not a coincidence that every candidate in this election ran on a platform of some sort of change.”

SMCSU, page 4

UTSU election, page 4

News — page 2

Arts — page 12

Science — page 16

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Blades of fury Students compete for Hult prize with a coffee-fueled idea


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