Addressing sexual violence Editorial
Feature
Arts & Culture
Informing the public ethically and accurately
The Varsity and Silence is Violence’s panel on responsible reporting
Hollywood legacies require scrutiny
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Vol. CXXXVIII, No. 10 November 20, 2017 thevarsity.ca —— University of Toronto’s Student Newspaper Since 1880
College faculty strike ends with back-to-work legislation Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne introduces legislation to force end of strike
Governing Council delays mandatory leave of absence policy vote for two months Move comes amidst community concern over policy regarding students with mental health issues Ilya Bañares Associate News Editor
The University of Toronto’s Governing Council is delaying a vote on a policy that would allow the university to put students whose mental health issues posed a physical threat to themselves or others, or impacted their academics negatively, on a nonpunitive yet mandatory leave of absence. Slated to be voted on this year, the vote will be shifted to the next cycle for the meeting of the Academic Board and University Affairs Board, on January 25 and January 30 of 2018, respectively. The proposed policy is distinct from regular mandatory leaves. Stu-
dents in this situation would currently be placed on under the Code of Student Conduct. On November 16, the University of Toronto Students’ Union (UTSU) announced that it had secured an agreement with Governing Council to postpone the vote on the new policy for two months to allow for more consultation and feedback from the community. The University Affairs Board and Academic Board were initially supposed to conduct their votes to recommend it to Governing Council the week of November 20. “We proposed changes and made it clear that we wouldn’t support the policy until those changes had been made,” said Mathias Memmel, UTSU Leave policy, page 3
CONNOR MALBEUF/GAZETTE
Aidan Currie, Nouran Sakr, & Jillian Schuler Varsity Staff
Since October 15, over 12,000 Ontario college professors, instructors, counselors, and librarians have been on strike, demanding academic autonomy and longer contracts. Last weekend, the Ontario legislature passed a bill that will force them back to work on Tuesday, November 21, ending the strike and pushing outstanding issues to a binding mediationarbitration. MPPs debated in a special weekend sitting of legislature to get the bill through. It passed by a vote of 39 in favour and 18 against, with all Liberal and Progressive Conservative (PC) MPPs present voting for it and all New Democratic Party (NDP) MPPs voting against. The bill would have sent students back to class on Monday, November 20 if it had reached unanimous consent in legislature, but it was blocked by the NDP,
with party leader Andrea Horwath claiming, “I want students back in classrooms Monday, and I want that achieved through a deal.” The PC party has supported the back-to-work legislation from the beginning. Classes for students will now resume on Tuesday, November 21. The strike has affected 1,000 students in joint UTM-Sheridan programs and less than half of the 170 in UTSC-Centennial programs.Province-wide, approximately 500,000 students found themselves “caught in the crossfire,” of the strike, said Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU) President Warren Thomas. Efforts to end the strike diminished when striking faculty members voted overwhelmingly to reject a contract offer by the College Employer Council, which approached the Ontario Labour Relations Board to force a vote — at least 50 per cent plus one vote in favour would have been required to
approve the offer. A total of 95 per cent of the 12,841 striking faculty voted, with 86 per cent voting to reject the council’s offer. Thomas called the bill “the worst kind of political theatre,” claiming that it pitted students against faculty. “I am disappointed in the extreme that, even after the College Employer Council extended the strike by two weeks by forcing a vote on its last contract offer, and even after 86 per cent of faculty emphatically rejected that offer, the Premier has put forward a bill that does nothing to hold the colleges responsible for their bad behaviour throughout this process,” said Thomas in a bulletin posted on the OPSEU web site. Thomas blamed the council for the length of the strike, claiming that they knew they would get the back-to-work legislation and then “ran the clock down” until that occurred. He goes on to claim that the council has been “vying all along” for the return to work Strike, page 3
Desmond Cole for mayor?
Let’s get physiological
Toronto’s ‘Best Activist’ would shake up Toronto’s politics
Well-loved professor Dr. Sandeep Dhillon talks teaching, his career, and pursuing higher education
Comment, page 7
Science, page 15