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SFSS staff member resigns

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By David Dyck

After 32 years, Hattie Aitken leaves the society

After over 30 years of working with the Simon Fraser Student Society, policy and university relations coordinator Hattie Aitken has resigned from her position. “I have worked for the society for 32 years, and made the decision in the last few weeks that I would be leaving work. My last day of work is actually tomorrow,” said Aitken at the end of last week’s board meeting.

“Thirty-two years is a long time having invested in this society. I really enjoyed working with students, I’ve enjoyed working with boards, and I appreciate that every board who comes to office comes with fresh ideas and lots of energy, and I hope that this board has a really good year,” she added.

Aitken was the subject of controversy in 2006, when the board of directors at the time attempted to fire Aitken on allegations of insubordination and breach of confidentiality. At the time, she had the title of graduate issues and university relations coordinator. Her dismissal “triggered months of scandal, conflict, and eventual impeachment within the SFSS,” according to a Peak reporter at the time. There were seven board members impeached in the fallout from this action, and Aitken was reinstated several months later. The details surrounding this incident remain confidential.

“Hattie has been a large part of the society for over 30 years, and she’s shown a lot of dedication to her role and to students,” said SFSS president Lorenz Yeung. “We’re sorry to see her go.”

McCann leaves controversial year behind

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By David Dyck

Outgoing SFSS president speaks with The Peak about the lockout, the CFS settlement, and more

At the beginning of this month, after completing his term as president of the Simon Fraser Student Society in one of the most controversial years in SFSS history, Jeff McCann has left the presidency to take the position of university relations officer in the upcoming term. Under the McCann administration, the society locked out staff, negotiated a new collective agreement, increased library hours, settled the CFS dispute, and set aside $30,000 to put towards a men’s centre. He sat down with The Peak to discuss these things and more.

 

On the past year:

I had a lot of fun. I learned more this year than I had learned in my entire life combined. Not many 23-year-olds bargain collective agreements, or multimillion-dollar lawsuits, or buildings, or anything. For the next 20 years I’m going to work in a cubicle and it’s going to suck. I’m going to have no authority. I’m going to be told what to do. But for this past year, we accomplished a lot, and I was challenged.

 

On being a student politician:

It’s impossible; you can’t be a student. It’s ironic. The way I’ve found to look at it is like a co-op term . . . If you’re a business student and you become president of the student society, you want to talk about learning about business really quick? If you’re a communications major and you become president of the student society, you want to talk about learning to communicate?

It’s almost like when your parents give you a goldfish to teach you how to own a dog, the student society gives you that crash course in life. I don’t care what your GPA is — mine’s okay — because the theory that you have means nothing if you can’t actually apply it.

 

On the lockout:

I think we knew bargaining wasn’t going anywhere. I couldn’t say we saw the lockout coming because everyone had to vote on it. Did I know as president that if we didn’t get anywhere in bargaining, that was an option? Absolutely. We put proposals on the table that we thought they would go for, even during the lockout, and nothing. Status quo was not an option. They would come back to us with either status quo or status quo plus.

I challenge any single individual who disagreed with the lockout to come to me and bargain the collective agreement. I will sit in convo mall and bargain the collective agreement with anyone who would like to show up and they can tell me the answer. I would love it for them to balance my budget.

 

On the CFS settlement:

We had the mandate [from the 2008 referendum] to get out. We got out.

I guess all it comes down to in the end is that you elect people to make decisions on your behalf. I got elected, Jordan got elected, and the rest of the board got elected. We made a decision that we thought was best for students, the board ratified it; all elected people. You have to trust in the abilities of those you elect, right? If you don’t like that, then run for election.

 

On consultations:

I never felt like the victim this year. Everyone else tried to say they were the victim, poor us. Well, take some responsibility. You want to be involved? Come be involved. I’m not closing the door on anybody. You want information? Here.

 

On the structure of the board:

I think we need to reform the board. I think we need a bigger executive, and this isn’t a new conversation, don’t be alarmed: eliminate faculty reps. . . . Either increase the hours for faculty reps, or make the exec larger, make it like eight or nine people, and then eliminate faculty reps. Then use the structure within forum to represent that faculty rep voice, because it’s redundant . . . that’s where you’d have to figure out a way to give forum a little bit of power.

I think forum has a great role, they have their ear to the ground, they know what’s going on . . . They know what’s going on on their level as a student, and that’s why it’s great feedback, but they don’t know what’s going on on a board level.

 

On BuildSFU:

I think a student union building is huge for campus community . . . my first semester at SFU was the most depressing of my life. That’s why I started playing football again, and that’s why I ran for the board.

People want to get brought in, and I respect that. Well, Mark and me work every day from 8 or 9 a.m. to about 11:30 p.m., so I’ll see you at nine, and don’t have dinner plans. Then they’d come for an hour, and wonder why they weren’t brought in. People think that what we created, they could have done with a blindfold on walking backwards, well I’m sorry but I doubt it.

 

On library hours:

I know that I’ve been herded out of the library, but we weren’t sure how to go about it. And this is where the left wing people get it wrong. The left wing people would have had a sit in, or a march for library hours. They would try to shame the library into doing something. Instead I talked to some people from the university who I have relationships with . . . Mark and I go in all amped up, prepared to argue our point, and they said, “This is a really great idea. I’m glad you asked us to talk about this.”

The university isn’t a big bad thing, they want to help students, they just don’t always know how.

Environment important in prevention of childhood disabilities: study

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By Graham Cook

Award-winning SFU researcher looks into the importance of the environment when considering children’s health

Bruce Lanphear, a professor and researcher in the Faculty of Health Sciences at SFU, has co-authored a paper in the Future of Children journal which asserts that the elimination of risk factors in a child’s environment should take priority over the development of medicines. Lanphear co-authored the work with Stephen Rauch, a data analyst at the Child & Family Research Institute in Vancouver.

The paper, “Prevention of Disability in Children: Elevating the Role of Environment,” was published in May 2012 and compares trends in disabilities in children such as asthma, behavioural problems, and obesity to the emergence of chronic disease in adults, and contrasts those with traditional childhood infections such as polio or measles. Bruce Lanphear spoke with The Peak and shared his opinion that too much emphasis has been put on treatment of such problems and not enough attention has been given to prevention. He blamed this in part on the prevalence of the medical model, wherein medical issues are treated for profit.

Lanphear also asserted that those ailments with a proven or emerging link to environmental risk factors should be dealt with using a prevention model. Such factors include, but are not limited to, environmental toxicants, social inequities, injury risk factors, marketing to children, unsafe housing, and air pollution.

As an example, Bruce Lanphear pointed to the poorer neighbourhoods of Vancouver which generally have higher levels of traffic and, therefore, higher levels of pollutants. In addition, they contain older housing that may not be maintained properly as well as social issues such as violence and lack of access to recreational areas.

Lanphear won the 2011 Nora and Ted Sterling Prize in Support of Controversy following his extensive work in exposing the risks that lead poses to humans. He is the 17th winner of this award and the first from the Faculty of Health Sciences who was involved in studies that showed there is no safe level of lead for children.

Stuff We Hate: May 14th

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Stuff We Hate: Pollen

Picture this, okay, it’s summer. The birds are chirping, the air is clear and the sun is out with nary a cloud in the sky. A rolling wave of plant ejaculate wafts tenderly on the breeze — what. Pollen, as it’s better known, is nature’s cruelest joke on man. You see, plants have no game as far as, say, seducing and getting with the opposite plant sex. To combat this, they release as much plant sperm as they can in all directions in hopes of some of it making it into the right plant hoo-hah. Meanwhile I’m popping antihistamines like it’s PEZ. I mean, the botfly breeds in festering wounds of its host, and even that’s more appealing than the red-eyed, mouth-breathing drowsy monster that allergy season turns me into. Disgusting.

Tanvir Singh


Stuff We Hate: First class of the semester

Alright class, welcome to 100 level course du jour. Now how many of you have ever heard of WebCT. Oop, looks like 3 of you didn’t raise your hands. Well, first you open a web browser. Any questions up to this point? Okay, then you’re going to want to click on the address bar and type double-u double-u double-u dot, actually on second thought, it’s probably easier if you google SFUWebCT. Here you’ll find an online copy of the syllabus, the same one I just handed out to you and will now read straight from for the next 45 minutes, aaand I see someone’s head has exploded in the back row, so I think that’s where I’ll end today’s lecture. This Wednesday’s lecture I’ll go over what an iclicker is.

Gary Lim

Listless: Grateful Children

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Mother’s Day is a time of year when we get together to collectively thank our moms for squirting us out like so many waterslides; you’ll now never be able to go on without cringing. It’s this nigh universal appreciation and respect between mother and child that makes it oh-so-satisfying when someone’s momma gets scorched! I’m talking yo momma jokes, son. Specifically, how to insult of the mother of a given major. Day-um.

  • English Lit.

Yo momma’s so fat, she tripped and fell on modernism and it became depressionism.

  • MBB

Yo momma’s so stupid, she thinks the Krebs Cycle is something you can ride.

  • Philosophy

Yo momma’s so dumb, she thinks Descartes is pulled by Dey Horses.

  • Archaeology

Yo momma’s so old, her first period was the Devonian.

  • Political Science

Yo momma’s so dumb, she thinks the Bloc Quebecois is a street downtown

  • Physics

Yo momma’s so fat, she sat on a wave function and collapsed it.

  • Womens’ Studies

Your mother is a fine matriarchal candidate, capable of standing up to any misogynistic ridicule and mockery that juvenile minds can throw at her.

By Gary Lim

Punishments for those caught texting and driving need to be harsher

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By Megan Gibson – Camosun College (CUP)

A lot of drivers have this narcissistic notion that they are the best motorists in the world. It’s as if they believe Jeff Gordon taught them to drive, when in reality most drivers behave as if they’ve ingested Charlie Sheen’s tiger blood.

Worse yet, some of these same people text behind the wheel when the vehicle’s actually in motion. It really ought to be illegal to text and drive. Oh, wait: it is. Well, it’s illegal everywhere in Canada except Nunavut, anyway. There’s even a punishment of sorts: in B.C., it’s a measly fine of $167 and a three-point penalty.

According to the B.C. government, from February 2010 to September 2011, 47,000 drivers were caught with a mobile device in one hand and a steering wheel in the other. Of those caught, 1,300 were texting. Clearly, many drivers still don’t understand the severe impact that texting while driving can have.

In 2010, distracted driving was a contributing factor in 104 collision fatalities in B.C., according to the Canadian Automobile Association (CAA).

More recently, in Quebec, a young woman drove into the back of a truck while texting with her fiance. She’s dead now.

Imagine how awful her fiance feels. Imagine if she had taken more lives than just her own. He’d feel even worse. Sadly, many people who hear this story won’t heed its warning and will continue to text and drive. But people would be less likely to ignore the laws if the fines were heftier. Better still, why not prevent texting while driving from happening in the first place? Car manufacturers could work to create a mobile deactivator that turns off cell phones as soon as the ignition is started.

And that’s what society has come to: drivers need to be treated like children so they will behave and obey the rules. Misbehave and toys start being taken away. Continue to misbehave and privileges will be revoked. Misbehave again, well, there’s a nice 10 by 10 cell where a lengthy ‘time out’ could be served.

SFSS a private, not-for-profit organization

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By Michael McDonell

As students, we need to be aware of what public education means and the role of student organizations within our educational experience and development. We need to carefully define what not-for-profit means. The membership fees we pay to the SFSS keep increasing (along with our tuition rates) every year, with full-time students soon paying even more each semester to fund a student union building & football stadium package that was barely passed through a referendum vote. The SFSS hires students as employees to run many of the services it offers, and different ethics should apply for running ‘enterprises’ in the not-for-profit sector compared to for-profit businesses.

A not-for-profit is a private association run on the basis of member fees, and not subject to the same constitutional and policy requirements as governmental organizations. As an organization, it can have different objectives and practices, shaped more by particular constituencies. It can and should be about fostering community, whereas government associations are primarily about maintaining stability and administrative regularity.

Our Student Society, the SFSS, is a private organization. In section 2.c) of the SFSS Constitution, there is a mandate to provide “public, universally accessible, high quality post-secondary education” to students. This does not mean that the SFSS can fulfill the same functions as a public, taxpayer funded organization. For example, while it can promote SFU athletics by sending its External Relations Officer to speak diplomatically with other universities, it cannot do things like, say, funding football stadiums. That is a university responsibility, requiring provincial allocation of revenue, and should not be decided by the 1,193 students who happened to vote for the flawed Build SFU referendum question. While “private sector” is a wider term than is commonly spoken, the interference in providing public education, which the current proposal encourages, will open the door for other for-profit private organizations to do the same. And the worst part is that even if we wanted to question the SFSS Board on this, and to find out what they mean by “rigorous consultation,” the Build SFU Think Tank was closed down immediately after the narrow vote passed in favour of the referendum question. Yes, the SFSS is a private organization, but it is still supposed to be run democratically.

The SFSS does run a number of ‘enterprises’ on campus, but is obligated to apply very different principles than for-profit businesses. For example, the Highland Pub is a service to students, one which can be a foundation of community life and friendships on campus. It has run an increasing deficit over the last 5 years, which has led some Board members to be sceptical about revitalizing it. Yet, because it is not a business aiming to generate a surplus, it only needs to reduce its deficit to a manageable level and reverse the trend. The lower, renovated section of the Pub could be opened more frequently and other steps relating to menus and marketing could be taken, rather than blaming workers. All of them are students who, as part of Food and Beverage Services, will be negotiating with the SFSS when the current contract expires at the end of the year. Instead of allowing workers to be attacked again like they were during the Summer-Fall 2011 lockout of SFSS staff, I suggest that the three returning SFSS Board members, those newly elected representatives sitting on Forum, and students in general, should hold the society accountable to its not-for-profit mandate.

Applying for-profit methods to a not-for-profit organization does not actually improve things. It undermines the creation of community by treating people and the public as capital. It thus prevents SFU from moving beyond commuter campus status. Other organizations on campus, particularly those in the Rotunda, actively involve students. Yet, the SFSS has been silent about renewing SFPIRG’s lease agreement, and the recent Men’s Centre proposal initially threatened to take half of either the Women’s Centre’s or SFPIRG’s space away. All this while the Forum has been reduced to an advisory body to the board. Are we really creating community?

Petter Watch: May 14th

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