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Volume 1 Issue 4 25 January 2000 www.law.utoronto.ca/ultravires
Discussion Paper Suggests Major Changes to First Year Bridge weeks, Civil Procedure receive criticism BY }AMES HOI'B'IER
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The Curriculum Review Committee at the Faculty of Law recently released a discussion paper that could significantly change the firstyear curriculum. Recommendations may fundamentally affect the Civil Procedure, Perspectives on the Law and Constitutional Law courses. "The Committee has made tentative proposals, rather than a laundry list, in order to focus discuss1on," explained Chair Kent Roach. He emphasized that the proposals are open to revision. Over the next two months, the Committee hopes to engage the opinions of students and faculty and it has scheduled a town hall meeting and a Faculty Council meeting to discuss The University of Toronto was well reprc~cntcd at the recent La"' Game~ in Ottawa. Pictured the paper. The Committee will submit a rehere nrc Noah Gmcrman, Anne Graham, GinnyTsai, Kcya Dasgupta and Karen Park. Sec port to Faculty Council at the end of,this term. story on page l 0. Dean Ron Daniels in1t1ated this discussion paper last November by mandating a broad review of the first-year cu~r~culum . The pre vtous cumculum rev1ew occurreo in 1996 and was chaired by Professor Patrick Macklem. Student members of this year's commitfrom her schoolbag - wh1ch was at her feet BY }E:-.::-.:IFER \VEI:'o,'BERGER tee were qutck to canvass student opinion. for the entire duration of her stay at a study According to their survey conducted last Nocubicle. She recalled placing her wallet in vember, 80% of students found first year overthe front pocket of her knapsack after using The rate at which wallets are disappearall to be an appropnately focused introducthe photocopier. Students should be careful ing from the backpacks and book bags of stution to the study of law. Only about 60%, not to draw any attention to their wallets or dents at the Bora Laskin Law Library has however, found the Bridge Weeks to be an change purses while at Bora Laskin. sparked significant concern from both the lieffective way to mcorporate different perspecAttempts by students to report suspicious brary staff and students The grav•ty of the tives mto the curriculum. According to Katie problem is illustrated by the prominence of behav•our In the library have not always proved Sykes, a first-year Faculty Council represeneffective One student who confronted a signs throughout the library warning students tative and the key organizer of the surveys, to guard their valuables due to an increasing stranger rummaging through a classmate's the ''Committee was very receptive to the unattended belongings reported to library staff amount of wallet theft. surveys and took seriously student opinions." immediately following the incident. DisapTed Tjaden, co-ordinator of information Civil Procedure may be the course most funpointingly, pollee took from ten to twelve minservices at the library, confirmed that library damentally affected by the eventual recomutes to respond, leaving ample opportunity staff is aware of the problem and are doing mendations. Students and faculty have long for the would-be pickpocket to escape everythmg within their power to prevent theft. been dissatisfied with this rules-oriented through an emergency exit. The staff's principal approaches have been course but have had to endure it because the Some students believe that theft has esto circulate through the l1brary as much as Law Society of Upper Canada requires instruccalated to a point where more stringent sepossible, to be mindful and alert at all times, tion in civil procedure prior to taking the Bar and to offer prompt assistance to anyone who curity measures are necessary. Policy proposAdmissions Course. als mclude random student identification appears suspicious. This discussion paper categorically states: checks, or the introduction of a nominal Tjaden stated, however, that the ability ~f "civil procedure cannot be justified as a funthe library staff to deal with the problem 1s membership fee, to ensure that public library damental building block in the first year access remains available. Others argue that limited. "We are librarians," he remarked, programme." It notes that, in Canada, only a security guard is required during library hours. "not police officers." Although the library staff Toronto and Osgoode Hall law schools still A guard could deter theft and also offer secudoes its best to take action when. they see offer civil procedure in first year. The discusrity to solitary students and staff members questionable behaviour, the assistanc~ of sion paper recommends that rules of civil prowho often close the library alone. Tjaden Campus Police is required when a senous cedure be taught in upper years and that a crime control issue arises. Although Campus acknowledged the merit to these suggestions, new Legal Process course be added to first but responded that budget cuts and Police does conduct periodic checks of the year. According to Roach, this course _wou~d understaffing impede the effort to bolster selibrary, Tjaden stated that the visits are spoexamine how the process of law funct1ons 10 curity. radic. society by examining concrete cases of legal Against a backdrop of budget cutbacks and According to security personnel who have process such as those involving residential looked into the problem, they believe that staffing shortages, it is difficult to muster the schools and tainted blood. level of surveillance needed to eliminate lithe recent spate of wallet theft may be the The Bridge Weeks may also be changed. brary wallet theft. This intensifies the need work of professional thieves who scope out However, the discussion paper states: "the where students keep their wallets. Unat- for increased student vigilance for the safety fate of the bridges is the most difficult issue tended backpacks are perfect invitations for of their personal items. Students are advised that the Committee faces." Bridge Weeks are any pickpocket to steal valuables. Even sitto take responsibility for themselves as mu.ch as possible, keep money and valuable~ ':"'th ting next to one's belongings does not offer them at all times, and report any susp1c•ous complete protection from thieves. Secondsee "Evaluation" on page 2 behaviour to library personnel. year student Lori Stein's wallet was taken
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libraryThefts Spark Concerns
FaLulty Proposal for Increased Salaries Draws Mixed Support Dean concedes tuition increase could be result BY RICHARD M ELOFF & }EFF TORKlN
In response to an anonymous letter requesting an mvestigation, Ultra Vires has confirmed that in November 1999, professors at the Faculty of Law initiated a proposal to increase their salaries dramat1cally. The letter identi· fied Professor Bruce Chapman as a l<ey player in bringmg the proposal forward \o U o1 T admmistration at Simcoe Ha\\. Whi\e Chapman was re\uc\an\ to comment on \he issue, he o11i say \hat \he pro-posa\ "en\O"JS \he o'llei"Nhe\mlfl\1. suppot\ o\ members o\ \he facu\\y" ana h1t\her oescn~ 1\ as "s1mp\~ \he ~\ tecc.n\ 1t1 a \on?, \\t m~ o\ -.uc:.\\ \n\ trotrvcs and therefore not all that unusual "
Chapman cla1med that the proposal "s1mply forms part of the general backdrop to how salarres have been determined at the faculty tor some time." The initrative, however, is not without its crrtics. One professor, who w1shed to remarn anonymous, commented on several concerns about the inttiative. "I don't see how fees can possrbly stay at current levels if this proposal is accepted. Where is the money going to come from? It will erther come at the ex· pense of other professors at the University or from the students at the law school. Where will the next fees plateau be? I can't see how it's going to be less than $12,000." Another reservation is the rift that can develop when the salaries of professors in one faculty increase so dramatically in compari. son w1th the salaries of their colleagues tn other faculties . This professor concluded that, "There's a concern amongst some staff that we risk creating an even larger gulf between us as faculty members teaching law versus other faculty members at the university." Salanes for all University of Toronto professors come out of the school's general operating budget but, according to Ron Dan•els, Dean of the Faculty of Law, th•s is not the sole source of revenue for the law school. Dean Daniels did acknowledge that student tuition is an important revenue stream, but "corporate, alumni and governmental sources are also key." The Faculty's endowment currently stands at $35 million, most of which was raised from the Faculty's alumni. Although the professors at the Faculty of Law have not made an independent proposal to Simcoe Hall since 1989, dramatic changes in Ontario's educational system have resulted
see "Faculty" on page 3