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BUSTED! London police had a productive day breaking up St. Paddy’s Day parties yesterday — and tweeting photos like this. >> pg. 3
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CANADA’S ONLY DAILY STUDENT NEWSPAPER • FOUNDED 1906
VOLUME 107, ISSUE 85
2014–15 USC elects new vice-presidents
Photos: Kelly Samuel, Taylor Lasota & Spencer Fairweather Graphics: Mike Laine GAZETTE
Richard Raycraft NEWS EDITOR The 2014–15 University Students’ Council executive is now complete, following the second USC annual general meeting on Saturday. Council has elected Emerson Tithecott, Andrew Lalka and Sam Kilgour as next year’s vice-president communications, finance and student events, respectively. They will join president Matt Helfand, vicepresident internal Emily Addison and vice-president external Jen Carter to form the executive. Last Wednesday, each candidate gave a speech to council at the first half of the AGM. Saturday saw debates between all candidates
for the positions, who fielded questions from councillors. Councillors then voted to determine the elected candidate. “I think it was my focus on empowering councillors specifically,” Emerson Tithecott, vicepresident communications-elect, said about his success. “I think it really showed my experience having been on council and it really demonstrated the importance of giving [councillors] the means to do a lot of things we said we want students to do naturally.” “What I mean by that is giving [councillors] the power to actually facilitate that interaction with students that will allow them to actually be engaged with the USC,” he
continued. Tithecott, currently a student senator-at-large and a former vice-president communications at the Huron University College Students’ Council, faced competition from Sarah Emms, the current Arts and Humanities Students’ Council president. A strong trio of candidates made up the vice-president finance debate. Lalka, the current speaker of council, came out on top over Daniel Bain, a former Social Science councillor, and Fahad Khan, finance commissioner-at-large for the USC. “A big part of my campaign was looking at the VP finance from council’s perspective,” Lalka said. “More than just sort of keeping the wheels
turning and making sure the bills are paid, it’s actually about talking to council and empowering them and making it so they can make the best decision they’re equipped to make.” Lalka added that he looks forward to broadening the scope of the finance portfolio. “There’s a lot that the VP finance does because they have to do it, there’s a couple of things the VP finance can do because they have the ability to do it,” he said. “I’d like to focus more on those and what I can do with my discretion.” Vice-president student events had the most candidates at five. The vote was a blowout, however, with Kilgour, a member of this year’s
orientation staff, taking a significant majority of the votes. “I started out the campaign with the vision of ‘an event for everybody,’” Kilgour said. “I think that really rings true when you’re talking to people and events that they want to see one.” With new associate vice-president positions coming in next year, Kilgour campaigned on the idea that this would free up time for the VPSE to focus on more diverse programming. “I want to make sure we’re leaving it open for commissioners and coordinators and club presidents and faculty councils and students at large to plan events the way they want to plan them,” Kilgour added.
Iain Boekhoff GAZETTE
ALL IN FAVOUR... On Saturday, incoming and outgoing councillors of the University Students’ Council elected the three remaining vicepresidents for the 2014–15 executive. Emerson Tithecott, Sam Kilgour and Andrew Lalka were elected vicepresident communications, student events and finance, respectively. At the end of the meeting, the outgoing council was deratified, and the incoming council was ratified, meaning the councillors elected in February are now officially in power. The six executives will take power in June after a training and turnover period in May.