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Renney earns 500th win

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By Adam Ovenell-Carter

Entering the year with a lot of promise and just as much intrigue, the 2012 edition of the Clan softball team is off to a fantastic start. The team, at the time of press, is rolling along with an 8–1 record and a perfect 4–0 mark in the GNAC. They’ve outscored opponents 61–35 and are at, or near the top of almost every statistical category. Still, none of those figures could be classified as the story of the season. That honour would belong to head coach Mike Renney, who earned his 500th career collegiate victory last week.

The big win came in a two-game sweep of Western Washington University last week at home on Beedie Field. In that sweep, the Clan rolled over the WWU Wolves 11–1 before besting them 7–5 in the second half of the doubleheader. Those two wins have helped the Clan move right into top spot in the GNAC.

Buoyed by solid pitching from former walk-on wonder Cara Lukawesky and strong hitting through the lineup, the Clan mercied the Wolves and ended the first game in just five innings, giving Renney 499 wins and a chance to earn the milestone in the second match.

The second match, as the score would indicate, was much more competitive. The Clan hopped out to a 5–1 lead, but sophomore pitcher Kelsie Hawkins got herself into some hot water when she loaded the bases in the sixth inning. With the potential go-ahead run at the plate, Renney made a decision to bring Lukawesky back in. The Clan’s lead quickly disappeared, but Lukawesky at least got them out of the inning tied at five apiece. It would be Brittany Ribeiro who would play hero, as she cranked a two-run home run in the top of the seventh to give the Clan the lead, more than enough room for Lukawesky to work with to seal the game.

“It’s big to beat Western Washington,” said Renney of the two victories. “They were one of the top teams in the GNAC last year and . . . they were still ranked ahead of us in the preseason.”

But it was his coaching decision to put Lukawesky into the second game that arguably saved the game and earned him his impressive 500th win. It’s those types of tough decisions which more often than not end up being the right ones,that put Renney in the position to reach his incredible milestone. He’s had 499 others before it, but this one,he’ll savour.

“They all add up pretty quick, it was good to get the monkey off the back early in the season,” said Renney.  “I’ll probably remember that one for awhile.  The athletes played well today and I’m happy for them.

“They deserved to win,” he added. But if anyone deserved the win, it was the man in the dugout, cheering them on.

Clan make history with first-ever NCAA playoff win

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By Adam Ovenell-Carter

An apology, for at the time of writing, the Clan women’s basketball team’s post-season has yet to be finished. However, with one playoff victory in the books, the Clan have already made history. With their 69–61 victory over the Seattle Pacific University Falcons on Thursday night, the Clan have recorded the team’s first-ever NCAA playoff victory, and are the first Canadian team to ever win an NCAA playoff game.

The team never trailed, but as has been the case all year long, someone new stepped up with so much on the line. It had been Chelsea Resit in the past, along with the continued impressive outings from Nayo Raincock-Ekunwe and Kristina Collins, but this time, Carla Wyman emerged to help the team make history.

“Carla had one of the best games of her career,” said head coach Bruce Langford. It couldn’t have come at a better time.

Wyman finished second on the team in both points (16) and rebounds (seven), but her biggest play unquestionably came with under 90 seconds to play. With the Clan up by just four points, the third-year guard hit a three-pointer to put the team up seven with time running out.

“I had an open look and I just took it,” said a very matter-of-fact Wyman. She may have played it off, but there was no denying the magnitude of her shot that punctuated the Clan’s late lead. SFU would only
build on that lead to earn themselves a bout with top-ranked Alaska Anchorage.

Raincock-Ekunwe had already rewritten history with a GNAC-record 22 double-doubles in the regular season, and she was her usual dominant self against Seattle Pacific as well. She finished with 20 points and 12 rebounds, and along with Wyman was the driving force of the Clan’s historic effort.

“We knew we had a chance to advance in a lose-and-you’re-out situation,” said Wyman. “it was a bit of a roller coaster game but we ended up pulling it off.”

With barely 24 hours to turn around and take on the GNAC’s top team, it’s easy to understand how the significance of the win could be lost on the team; they’ve not been a team to pay attention to stats and records, either. Nevertheless, the Clan have made history, in a couple different ways. They’ve set the bar high for next season, but with almost their entire team returning, there’s not much stopping this squad from being next year’s Alaska Anchorage.

Celebration of past shines light on future

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By Adam Ovenell-Carter

“I think the future is unlimited,” said SFU athletics director Milton Richards on SFU athletics’ outlook. “When you look throughout SFU’s history, at all the people here, I think it proves that.”

By ‘here’, Richards is referring to the SFU Athletics Hall of Fame induction ceremony that took place last Wednesday at the Diamond Alumni Centre. And the people he was referring to, well, where to begin.

SFU’s athletics Hall of Fame is already full of big names, such as football’s Lui Passaglia and basketball’s Jay Triano. And for the first time in almost two decades, more were finally, and deservedly, added to the ranks.

The 2012 inductee class consisted of nine athletes, three coaches, and two teams, highlighted by the likes of Daniel Igali, Brit Townsend and Doug Brown. As much as the ceremony was to honour each individual (or team) accomplishment, it was just as much an opportunity to reflect and appreciate the unheralded tradition and history of SFU athletics.

Each inductee was called to stage by Giulio Caravatta — a former Clansmen and CFL quarterback who is now the colour commentator for the B.C. Lions — received a plaque, and moved on, and while that was naturally the main event, it seemed more like a formality. The heart of the ceremony came before and after, as new and old members of the Hall of Fame and SFU athletics shared laughs, stories, and even dessert. This was not about each person as they crossed the stage individually, it was about them all together on the other side.

“That’s always been the thing about SFU, its incredible sense of community,” said Doug Brown, the massive six-foot-eight Winnipeg Blue Bomber. “That alone helped me prepare for my professional career, knowing it was never just about me.

“The program as a whole helped me. I knew I could get a top education here that would benefit me whether I made it big or not, and still play against top competition. Now I’m always drawn in. Every time I come out here, whether it’s to play against the Lions or see my family, I take one day to come back up here. They’ve been unbelievable keeping me involved, and now I’ve been able to give back by lending some of my experiences.

“That’s one of the things about being a member of Clan athletics — it’s that you’re always a member. When you look at the other names on this list [of inductees], it’s just humbling to be nominated and included in such a prestigious group,” conceded Brown.

But it’s exactly that tradition of humility and prestige that Richards is trying to foster, and he believes events such as this one will be a great start. In fact, bringing back the Hall of Fame was one of the first things he wanted to change when he was brought on as the athletics director just a few months ago.

“One of the first meetings I had here was with [SFU’s first athletic director and former Hall of Fame inductee] Lorne Davies, and we right away set out to bring this back. Any
opportunity I had, especially as the new guy on board, to embrace the tradition of SFU athletics is an even better opportunity for the program. I don’t think we celebrate our success enough, and
this shows just how great it is, and has been.”

If nothing else, such a celebration shows just how formidable SFU athletics can be. And if the past is any indicator of what could come, then the future could very well be unlimited.

Of straw men and Straw Dogs

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By Will Ross

In my first column, I said I wouldn’t limit discussion of remakes to whether they are “better” or “worse”. This is partly because I think that most filmic reiterations are harmless. Even when they’re poorly made, their heart is more often than not in the same place as their forerunners, or at worst they’re no worse than vapid. There are special cases, however, when I object to remakes that reinterpret sensitive material in a morally irresponsible way.

Enter Straw Dogs vs. Straw Dogs. The original 1971 film by Sam Peckinpah was a radically nihilistic take on the psychology of violence. Its plot is often mistaken for a slow-burn thriller, but it’s actually a domestic-drama demolition: Wussy mathematician David Summer and his attractive wife Amy flee the protest culture of America to the latter’s hometown, an English village. The locals, one of whom is an old flame of Amy’s, begin to intimidate the couple, leading to a breakdown of relations between wife, who demands that David confront the villagers, and husband, who seems passive on the matter.

But the film’s real purpose is to annihilate first impressions of this spat when the conflict becomes violent. Straw Dogs’s complicated victimhood comes to a head in its infamous rape scene. Some of the local antagonists invite David hunting, then abandon him. Amy’s ex-lover takes advantage of David’s predicament by finding and forcing himself on her. The scene has two disturbing wrinkles: first, it intercuts with David in the wilderness, apparently disinterested in finding his way home, and, by implication, complicit in the rape; second, Amy seems to be at least partially enjoying the rape, though afterwards she is traumatized.

Peckinpah makes it clear that he doesn’t believe that women generally enjoy rape: another villager soon arrives and rapes her as well, and this time Amy is obviously miserable throughout. It’s an extremely unpleasant sequence, but a daring and ultimately responsible one. Peckinpah knows these acts are despicable, and though he doesn’t blame the victims, he acknowledges that violence is closely tied to interpersonal relationships, and suggests that its appeal as a tool for sublimation makes it impossible to eradicate.

What makes Rod Lurie’s 2011 remake so reprehensible is its commitment to its potential as entertainment over duty to its subject matter. In his version, David is actively looking for a way out of the forest, and Amy is inarguably suffering throughout the entire rape. When the second rapist arrives, Lurie foregoes showing the act by fading out the sounds of the assault over a close-up of the other. Consequently, the rape ultimately reveals nothing. It only serves as ‘drama’, to ‘raise the emotional stakes’. In other words, it’s exploitation.

To respond to an honest, complex psychological dialogue of a sensitive issue with soft peddling is to cheapen both the discourse and the subject at hand. Lurie has said that Amy’s momentary enjoyment of rape ruined the original Straw Dogs, and that removing it makes his film the better of the two, but he’s got it the wrong way around. When a difficult and disturbing subject is seriously explored, it’s arrogant and immoral to ostensibly ‘improve’ it by playing it safe for the sake of enjoyment. Such gratuitously tame treatment of rape must not be allowed to masquerade as feminist revisionism.

Something rotten in the state of Greece

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By Reid Standish

 

Neither a borrower nor a lender be;
For loan oft loses both itself and friend,
And borrowing dulls the edge of husbandry.

– Hamlet Act I, Sc. III

 

It all began innocently enough.

Back in 2002, as Greece first adopted the Euro as its currency, the country’s economic forecast was overwhelmingly optimistic. With its new currency and fresh access to the privileges of EU membership, Greece began a bacchanalia of large-scale borrowing. This manifested in a wild period of high-profile projects that went well over budget, such as the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens. Although the 2008 economic crisis was the straw that broke the camel’s back, Greece’s economic problems were well underway before the ghost of the global meltdown appeared.

Slow growth meant that the government had to shore out more in state benefits and received less through taxation. This was compounded by widespread tax evasion, government corruption, and some startling inconsistencies in Greece’s official economic statistics. By the time that Greece’s economic problems began to surface, lenders began charging higher interest rates and market speculation ran wild as many began to doubt Greece’s ability to repay its massive debt. Since then, Greece has been stalling off default, having accepted a bailout package in 2010 worth EUR 110 billion, with a second bailout package of EUR 130 billion currently on its way. The price has been increased austerity, which has resulted in many state entitlements being cut. This in turn has sparked massive protests and in some cases, riots.

A little more than kin, and less than kind

It would be poetic to call what is happening in Greece hubris. The country’s massive debt was accumulated over a period of shortsighted borrowing and an overestimated balance between taxation and entitlement programs. But beyond the poetic nature of the sovereign debt crisis, the country is on the verge of economic and social collapse. The austerity measures imposed as part of the bailout package have triggered unrest, most recently on February 12 when hooded youths torched and looted buildings across central Athens as lawmakers backed more than EUR 3 billion in cuts to wages, jobs, and pensions. Greeks are now bracing for a decade of hardship.

The most recent bailout averts a chaotic default next month, but does little to allay doubts over Greece’s long-term financial and social stability as the country faces spiraling unemployment and a recession in its fifth year. Moreover, the credit agency Fitch further downgraded Greece’s rating from CCC to C. It was the first of widely expected cuts from all rating agencies because Greece will pass into technical default on its liabilities once the transaction is completed, which finance minister Evangelos Venizelos said must take place by March 12. The complex deal reached on Tuesday buys time to stabilize the 17-nation currency bloc and strengthen its financial protection against a Greek default, but it leaves doubts about Greece’s ability to avoid difficulties in the longer term.

Meanwhile, tensions with the Eurozone are on the rise, particularly between Greece and one of its main lender nations, Germany. A draft enabling law for new budget cuts that was introduced into parliament on February 21 showed that Greece now sees a budget deficit of 6.7 per cent of gross domestic product, up from an original target of 5.4 per cent in its initial 2012 budget. The new figure retroactively reflected a more pessimistic view of the economy that already emerged last year as Greece and its lenders set out to work on the bailout package. Besides sending permanent foreign inspectors, the bailout plan requires Greece to set aside revenue to cover debt service into a special reserved account.

The plan reflects the mistrust between Greece and foreign lenders — in particular EU paymaster Germany. After years of backsliding on reforms by Athens, the EU is desperate to oversee a Greek recovery. But restrictive stipulations have riled Greeks whose sense of national pride has been hurt by the threat of bankruptcy. Laying the groundwork for political infighting within the EU and adding to growing anti-EU sentiment on the streets of Athens.

To default, or not to default, that is the question

As austerity measures continue to be imposed onto the Greek people through EU concessions, social unrest is destined to rise. This, combined with the ominous outlook for the Greek economy has prompted numerous suggestions of how best to deal with Greece’s sovereign debt crisis.  One idea has been to let Greece default on its debt.

Both Argentina in 2001 and Iceland in 2008 have gone down similar paths and have managed to recover. Just last week Iceland’s credit rating was upgraded to BB+ by Fitch. The credit upgrade was a signal of Iceland’s course to recovery as Fitch once again labeled the country as safe to invest in. Nouriel Roubini, the chairman of Roubini Global Economics and an NYU professor has openly stated that a similar route would provide Greece with the best opportunity of rebuilding its economy.

By remaining in the Euro, which is still a strong currency, Greece is relinquishing the opportunity of letting its currency devalue and becoming more competitive. “A return to a national currency and a sharp depreciation would quickly restore competitiveness and growth, as it did in Argentina and many other emerging markets that abandoned their currency pegs,” said Roubini, while speaking at an economic summit at NYU last week.

Such a maneuver would see Greece leave the Eurozone and could be traumatic to the region, due to capital losses from financial institutions within the EU that are tied to Greek debt. However, this is not to say that these problems could not be overcome. Although dealing with capital losses would be a major hurdle to overcome, it is not without precedent. In 2001, Argentina “pesified” its debts, as it converted all debt incurred in U.S. dollars into pesos as a means of restructuring its debt and preventing capital flight out of Argentina.

A Greek default may prove to be inevitable. Therefore preventive means might be the most prudent way forward. “Like a broken marriage that requires a break-up, it is better to have rules that make separation less costly to both sides. Breaking up and divorcing is painful and costly, even when such rules exist. Make no mistake: an orderly Euro exit will be hard. But watching the slow disorderly implosion of the Greek economy and society will be much worse,” said Roubini during his closing statement at the NYU economic summit.

The rest is silence

At the Four Seasons Vancouver on February 17, the Fraser Institute hosted a talk with Greek parliamentarian, Kyriakos Mitsotakis about the growing debt crisis in Greece. At the event, Mitsotakis tackled the possibility of a default, but remained firmly against the idea. “The violent shake up of our reforms is starting to create new opportunities. A default is not the answer now,” said Mitsotakis.

This does hold some merit. Despite its recovery from the 2001 crisis, Argentina still remains politically and economically isolated and a similar fate would follow Greece most likely should Athens follow Buenos Aires’ lead. Moreover, the reintroduction of a new currency could cause a host of practical problems that could hinder economic recovery further. For the time being, the Hellenic parliament remains determined to tackle the familiar problem, rather than risk a whole new one.

However, the most pressing problem for Greece may be the Greeks themselves. While much of the attention has been focused on bailouts and the possibility of a default, more and more Greeks are taking to the streets in protest. On February 12, Athens experienced the worst episode of violence in years and as unemployment continues along with the deadly combination of austerity measures and a deepened recession takes hold, its safe to say that Athens hasn’t burned for the last time. Such dire circumstances could create a vile political climate, which Greece is already beginning to display symptoms of. Far-left and far-right political parties are gaining prominence, and soon the legitimacy of the political status quo will expire.

“We have about six to nine months to start and get some results. Otherwise, reform fatigue will set in and people will begin to question what their sacrifices have been for,” said Mitsotakis, who voted in favour of both bailout packages for Greece. Yet, despite the anger on the streets, Mitsotakis appeared cautiously optimistic, citing future legislation on tax reform, combatting unemployment, and reprivatizing the Greek banks. “We may be running a primary surplus by the end of this year.”

Even though such reforms may be worthwhile, Mitsotakis has failed to acknowledge that there is something fundamentally rotten in the state of Greece. Austerity measures and Greece’s debt tragedy will only continue and along with them comes social unrest on the streets, inflammatory rhetoric from Brussels, and an economy in desperate need of a jumpstart. The past few years have been filled with empty promises of reform in Greece and although the new bailout stipulations may help to achieve these reforms, much of the damage has already been done through inaction.

Indecisiveness coupled with hasty actions makes for a tragic ending. With elections slated for April, it is safe to say that many of the current political cast of characters will not make it to the next act. There is no happy ending here — just a country in need of repair.

Casual attitude about levies sucking students dry

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By Cedric Chen

I’m a forum representative. Last month, another student organization (referred to as “Organization X” after here) came to the SFSS Forum meeting, advocating their referendum question to impose yet another levy on all students, whether they accept it or not. Organization X asked for the forum’s endorsement, and I refused to support them. Later, when I was reporting back to my DSU about this in a DSU general meeting, the attendees became furiously and blatantly hostile to this proposal, and this gave us yet another indication that the practice of on-campus organizations collecting levies is going too far and getting out of control.

Before I get started, allow me to draw a clear distinction: I’m in no way advocating against any cause of any on-campus organization collecting levies; my point is simply that the practice of collecting levies is getting far too acceptable.

First of all, let’s be brutally honest: SFU students and students at other institutions are already bearing heavy financial burdens thanks to government cut-backs and corporate greed (think about your hundred-dollar textbooks). Unlike the wealthy, just one more dollar can always be the last straw on a student’s back. Also, unlike the governments, who can always increase taxes as a mean of income, we cannot ask for unlimited treasure from our parents. With many of us already bearing unbearable student debts, most of us would do whatever we can to cut down our expenses. Opening up another levy is certainly in counterproductive to this goal.

More importantly, students are sometimes not given any other choices. If a student does not agree with how The Peak or SFPIRG is behaving, they have the option of opting out and reclaiming their levies. For some other organizations, opting out has not been an option, and if you refuse to pay these levies, your account becomes outstanding, preventing you from enrolling courses for the  next semester. Taking Organization X as an example, when I was trying to add an opt-out clause into their referendum question proposal, my motion was turned down.

Another reason why I’m against such practices is that once levies are approved, we can hardly find a way to track how they’re used, let alone decide how they should be used. In these cases, ‘Don’t worry. They’ll know how to use the money,’ is plain old bullshit. If the Simon Fraser Student Society, big enough to supposedly represent all SFU students, commits financial misconduct like using our money to renovate their office instead of repairing the recharging machine at the Copy Centre until last semester, then how can we just expect a random on-campus organization to financially behave as well?

Again, I’m not alleging that all these organizations have been committing financial misconduct, and if one organization doesn’t commit financial misconduct, its people know that my comments here won’t affect them. I’m just proposing that we cannot just trust any organization when we’re deprived of information.

Last but certainly not least, call me selfish, but some of these organizations and their causes just aren’t going to bring any benefit to SFU or the SFU community. While The Peak is providing SFU students a platform to spill out their dissatisfaction with this university, and SFPIRG is providing SFU students good alternative sources for knowledge, I can’t see how some other of these organizations are to our benefit. In the example of the Organization X, they’re starting big projects outside of Canada. How are those big projects going to benefit SFU? Organization X kept arguing that they’re practicing SFU’s motto ‘Thinking of the World’, but have they been thinking about SFU, whose very survival is under threat from all sides?

Let’s be honest: We’re just not ‘enlightened’ to the point where we’re willing to give out levies from our pockets without seeing any potential benefit or reward, especially when we’re about to starve to death. Are these big projects going to produce talents that will help SFU build itself in return? Maybe. Maybe not.

In conclusion, I just don’t see the necessity of opening up another levy that will be imposed on already-struggling SFU students. Other than that, the practice of random on-campus organizations collecting levies may be justifiable when this practice is well under control, but now it’s spiraling out of control.

My final words to the Organization X are: if you want money, you can always do what all DSUs have been doing. Hosting fund-raisers or applying for a grant. You can also sign a sponsorship agreement with a big corporation, just like what the BASS has done. If students don’t want to give you money, you really shouldn’t just go to the SFSS and ask them to force students into giving you money.

Soon there’ll be a referendum regarding this proposed new levy, and I would encourage you all to vote ‘No’. Because if the question is passed, other organizations will do the same, and eventually SFU students will be dragged into a bottomless whirlpool.

The SUB is a scam

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By Joel Warren

Eleven years ago, the SFSS held a referendum encouraging students to radically alter the SFSS governance structure. Previously, the board of directors was composed of six executives — inclding one for grad students — plus a representative from each departmental student union. The new structure was to be more efficient. As such, DSUs were demoted to an advisory role on forum. The board created faculty representatives, two at-large positions and a seventh executive, the member services officer.

I remember disagreeing with this proposal, as the centralization of power would not only weaken any sense of student ownership of the SFSS, but it would reduce meaningful, inclusive participation in SFSS governance. But most importantly, I knew it would turn the board into a dirty site of ideological contest and petty alliances because a voting block of less than 10 students could hold the authority to promote personal interests rather than students’ interests. I genuinely wish I had been wrong.

The influence of the Canadian Federation of Students back then was more complicated, as they knew they could only appease, not control, a 35 to 40-member board. The CFS meddling then was minor compared to the following six years, where the dominant theme of SFSS board politics became CFS versus anybody else. This battleground dynamic led to the alienation of and eventual secession by Grad students, the impeachment of the CFS, half of the board and, eventually, SFU’s defederation from the CFS.

Progressive-minded students, which traditionally comprised an unaligned majority at forum, gradually shunned the SFSS, focusing their efforts inward towards various constituency groups, SFPIRG groups, DSUs, and clubs, creating a vacuum in SFSS politics which, absent the CFS presence, allowed a radical rightward shift culminating in this last year’s fascistic coup of the Leninistic party vanguard structure of SFSS governance.

If forum was the board like it used to be, the tragic events of this last year would never have happened. Forum-as-board would not abide a three-month lockout and cuts to services. Instead of taking an IMF austerity approach to budget deficits, more inventive measures to balancing the budget would have been taken. There would have been transparency, debates, and meaningfully inclusive participation in the discussions and decision-making surrounding the student union building (SUB). Arry Dhillon would have never been capable of saying, to paraphrase, that there is to be no debate on the SUB levy outside of a ‘No’ campaign for the referendum. [Eds. Note – Dhillon denies this quote, and maintains that debate over referendum questions is under the purview of the IEC, the BuildSFU campaign is informational only, and that the SFSS is not currently running a ‘Yes’ campaign on the referendum question as the period to do so has not started.]

The SUB is the largest initiative the SFSS has ever undertaken and  according to Arts Representative Kyle Acernio, the levy proposed is the largest in Canadian student political history [Eds. Note – The Peak could not independently confirm this figure.] The process to introduce it unfolded at the last possible board meeting available to put referendum questions to ballot, a deadline conveniently prior to a chance for forum representatives to consult their constituencies and advise the Board. This is the student politics equivalent of proroguing Parliament because the minority in power fears the majority might prefer something resembling a democratic institutional process.

Less than a half-dozen board members sat in secret negotiations with the SFU administration, hacked out a deal, and manipulated timeframes and deadlines to ensure nobody but them had a say — either in the nature of the referendum question or on the SUB proposal marketed to students. The Board is asking for an incremental levy, eventually capping at $270 per year in 2022  — but has done nothing to earn students’ trust that we should support them. Like the snake-oil salesman, they claim a SUB is a panacea of all student ills then set up a propaganda office to close the deal.

A closer look at the deal presented is revealing. Surrey and Downtown students will not benefit much from this SUB but will pay the same as Burnaby students so the board is likely to encounter significant opposition there. Throw in a football stadium (athletics and rec being under university jurisdiction, and is thus SFU’s responsibility to pay for) and you can buy jock ‘Yes’ votes to counter satellite campus ‘No’ votes.

In exchange we get an old building requiring massive retrofits and upgrades to become our SUB. On any hierarchy of needs, an upgrade to, say, student family residences outweighs a sports complex, but that would not buy enough votes. So instead of meeting real needs, or utilizing a more accessible space between the MBC and AQ, where we are not architecturally hindered by aging structures, a couple of SFSS autocrats chose the inferior site, throwing in a perk that will benefit a few to secure an unequal levy. Aside from these dirty political tricks, the board bowed to university pressure for student money as if the deal would crumble without immediate guaranteed funds. Bollocks! SFU wants a SUB too, because it helps their place-marketing.

Ultimately, however, the SUB hustle — “the McCann Scam” — may prove the catalyst to the end of the decade-long failed experiment in centralized SFSS governance. Many DSU’s and constituency groups are livid, not over the SUB, but over the secrecy and manipulation candy-coated with hollow appeals for post-hoc community input. My prediction is that come summer semester you will likely see forum pushing back and itself instituting legally binding procedural standards for the SUB project rooted in inclusion, transparency, and accountability which the Board must meet before one cent can ever be collected. This momentum may give rise to the self-confidence needed for a complimentary push by Forum for a return to decentralized SFSS governance, ensuring a handful of self-interested and ideologically aligned students cannot treat our non-profit society like their own private enterprise.

Ends may ‘justify’ means in business, but in non-profits, the means are ends themselves. Indeed, no board-designed procedural standards for the SUB are acceptable. Accountability must be imposed from below. Viva forum!

SFU infrastructure needs your help

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By Mike Soron

 

The offices, labs, and public spaces at SFU have seriously deteriorated because they are not maintained as needed. It saddens me to see the monumental steps of Arthur Erikson’s Convocation Mall literally crumbling, marked off by orange safety pylons on rainy days. Some buildings are unsafe and others so degraded that they can only be demolished. This is not an acceptable environment for world-class teaching, learning and research and graduate students are calling on the B.C. government to restore funding for the maintenance and renewal of campus buildings.

SFU’s Capital Plan, approved by the Board of Governors last spring, indicates that more than half of SFU’s buildings are in ‘poor’ condition. The plan warns that the WAC Bennett Library building is seismically unsafe. Considering this, I’m not surprised that building maintenance and renewal is a top priority for university administrators. Considering that SFU’s report to the Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities (NWCCU) indicates a backlog of over $700 million at SFU Burnaby alone, building maintenance and renewal will remain a priority for many, many years. Yet, SFU cannot even meet ordinary yearly maintenance costs, let alone address the backlog of repairs postponed because of recent funding cuts.

In Canada, the provinces are responsible for post-secondary education, and British Columbia has historically funded maintenance through an annual capital allowance (ACA) to universities and colleges. Funding for SFU ACA has been dramatically slashed, from approximately $4.6 million in 2008–2009 to just over $500,000 in 2010–2011 — a 90 per cent decrease! SFU’s is asking for $20 million a year in provincial maintenance funding starting in 2012, just to keep our buildings and infrastructure from degrading further. But, administration’s report to the NWCCU says a value twice that is needed. If appropriate funding is not soon provided, SFU warns that its operations will be affected. At our university, operations must mean teaching, learning and research. These are SFU’s core functions and — at minimum — we need safe and healthy classrooms, labs, and washrooms kept in good repair.

Everyday, next to unsealed windows and closed-off hallways, students feel the consequences of not maintaining our buildings and infrastructure. I hear stories from graduate students about leaky ceilings, unheated offices, and unrepaired fixtures. I see the damage at SFU Vancouver, too, where malfunctioning elevators and locked stairwells soured my early classwork at Harbour Centre. Feedback from concerned students in these buildings should encourage the province to restore and prioritize maintenance funding through the ACA.

Renewing buildings in Burnaby, Vancouver, and Surrey is a socially, fiscally, and environmentally responsible use of provincial resources. Repairing and rebuilding our campus employs British Columbian workers and can reduce the greenhouse gas emissions that contribute to dangerous global warming. Undertaking these repairs can improve the health and well-being of students, faculty, and staff on campus. Further delaying this work will only increase risk and long-term costs, while impairing the teaching, learning and research taking place at SFU today. So, grab a camera, document the urgent need around you, and help the GSS advocate for the provincial funds needed to repair our campus.

You can help advocate for restored funding by photographing examples of the under-maintained campus and its impact on your learning, research, and teaching. Take photographs and send them to [email protected] or by visiting iheartsfu.tumblr.com. The Graduate Student Society will collect these stories and photos showing how postponing maintenance affects teaching, learning and research and use them in making a strong case for urgent action by the B.C. government.

Canada’s apartheid

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Are we 20 years behind South Africa?

By Christopher Nichols

I’m sitting on a metal bunk in a medium-security prison in South Africa as I write this.  The blazing sunlight and gorgeous natural scenery outside seem strangely juxtaposed with the barred windows and razor wire-topped walls, but I suppose Africa has always been a land of contradictions. The cold concrete walls do something to alleviate the 35 degree temperature outside, but I can’t quite stave off a slick of sweat.

I am, by the way, referring to the long-defunct prison on Robben Island, just off the coast of Cape Town, where I am currently spending three weeks working in heritage conservation. The island itself is quite beautiful, which — speaking of contradictions — is also at odds with its unsavoury history. It has served as a leper colony, a mental asylum, a military outpost, and several forms of prison. Most famously, Robben Island was for many years the dumping ground for South Africa’s political dissidents — including Nelson Mandela, who finally broke the back of the apartheid system in 1991.

Institutionalised racism is not what you’d call a new problem. It is so old a problem, in fact, that it boggles the mind to think that it was still in place as recently as 1991. Surely, in our world of genetic science and understanding of DNA, we should be passed the concept of race itself, let alone of racism. That is, of course, wishful thinking, as the obsessive need to classify and divide is one of the defining features of humanity, and not something that we have much chance of wiping out entirely (despite it also being one of our most problematic and conflictive tendencies). Once humans do begin to spot petty differences among things, especially themselves, it’s all but inevitable that a pecking order is established — usually somewhat less-than-diplomatically. Apartheid, in some form or another, has existed since the dawn of colonialism. South Africa was simply the first country to give it its own name.

In many ways, while researching the history of the racial struggles here as close to first-hand as one can get today, I am reminded of our own racial conflicts in Canada. The colonial efforts in both countries show a very distinct strategy designed to dehumanise the indigenous populations: a policy of attempted assimilation followed by one of segregation, with the two policies overlapping to various degrees; the ‘innovation’ of ID cards; heavy stereotyping and distortion of history to portray the people as inferior and savage; and systems of enforced poverty.

With all these similarities in mind, however, there is one major difference that does need to be pointed out. South Africa managed to free itself from this archaic system 20 years ago and establish for itself a new, non-racist order. Difficulties still exist among the people, as they are prone to, but the government is, finally, officially colour-blind (one absurd exception being that employers are required to give preference to non-white job candidates — a bizarre twist of prejudice, though I refuse to use the phrase ‘reverse racism’). The question does have to be asked, therefore: why is Canada so far behind in this — pardon the expression — race?

While Canada is not an overtly or intentionally racially oppressive country, and has made great efforts to rectify past injustices (correction of history and stereotypes and repatriation of artefacts, for instance), it continues to retain some of those hallmarks of racism that South Africa shed so decisively in the ‘90s. In particular, segregation and ID carding persist, via reservations and status cards, respectively. But they have been somewhat watered down and warped, being presented as a) voluntary, and b) beneficial.

Segregation via the reserve system is still going strong. It’s not an enforced situation; anyone has the right to move out of the reservation if they want to. However, it is nevertheless a system whereby a single denomination of people can become isolated from all others —segregation by choice! Similarly, no one will be arrested for failing to produce a status card, but the card’s demeaning effect still takes hold: a document that identifies you as disparate from all other humans (not simply from white people; there are no status cards for people of black, Hispanic, or any other descent) — which is dehumanization of the self.

The key point is that instead of rectifying the situation, the government has merely offset the responsibility for it: they place the decision in the hands of the minority whether or not to shed these remnants of oppression and unite with ‘mainstream’ society. And though I do not believe the legislation regarding the problem is designed to actively oppress native people, neither does it encourage them to free themselves. By presenting things such as reservations and status cards as benefits, and moreover as entirely optional, the government is able to maintain a façade of equality while retaining those old elements of colonialism.

I realize I may sound a bit contradictory here: if I don’t believe the government is still being deliberately racist, what explanation can I offer for the retention of those colonial elements? Why would they not just get rid of them now? I present to you the rub: they have backed themselves into a corner. In their zeal to compensate  for the wrongs of the past, they have created a situation from which they cannot escape without a further indictment of racism. Were they to abolish reservations and status cards now, apparently revoking First Nations’ benefits, they would look straightforwardly racist. But by leaving things the way they are, they can be accused of backhanded racism instead.

While I think the first choice would ultimately be more humanistic and a step towards truer equality, this would sadly not be the outward impression. And as appearances are usually so much more important in politics than undercurrents, this catch-22 may persist for some time. What a beautiful example of that famous Canadian fence-sitting.

“Ordinary Canadians don’t care about the arts”

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How arts organizations in B.C. are impacted by funding cuts, and why they aren’t giving up

By Esther Tung
Photos By Mark Burnham

It’s official — arts and culture funding in B.C. will be frozen for the next three years. The 2012 B.C. provincial budget, released last week, was projected to bring the province from its current deficit to a $154 million surplus for 2014. While other areas of the budget were also frozen, the province’s freeze on funding will put B.C. in dead last among all Canadian provinces for available arts funding. Even the one silver lining — $9 million set aside for a $500 tax credit for each child enrolled in sports or arts programs —  comes with a catch: that credit only comes into effect if over $1,000 in fees is spent to begin with, which does little to make the arts any more accessible or affordable. Yet the B.C. government managed to find wiggle room for over $80 million in tax credits of up to $42,500 for purchases of recreational properties under $850,000.

Harper once notoriously said, “Ordinary Canadians don’t care about the arts,” to explain emptying $45 million out of the federal arts funding coffers in 2008. This is despite a federally-funded report’s findings that there has been a 107 per cent increase in spending on visual arts and a 50 per cent increase in spending on live performing arts in the last decade. No one has argued that we should increase arts funding at the expense of education and healthcare, or that the two can even be compared. However, there is an important place for the arts in our society. “An attitude in the culture that is particular to North America is that the government doesn’t have a responsibility to fund arts and culture, which I agree with,” Minna Schendlinger, the managing director of PuSh, a performance art festival, said. “They have a responsibility to invest in it, however.” The arts is more like post-secondary education — it’s beyond the basic set of human rights, but when accessible, is extremely enriching and valuable to a person, and it fosters critical, analytical, and creative thinking. There aren’t quite the same sneers when it comes to people wanting to see more subsidies and funding to post-secondary institutions, however.

An attitude in the culture that is particular to North America is that the government doesn’t have a responsibility to fund arts and culture, which I agree with. They have a responsibility to invest in it, however.

– Minna Schendlinger, managing director of PuSh

Contrary to popular opinion, ‘art’ is not limited to interpretive dance, vagina monologues, and abstract paintings. “When you pick up a newspaper, somebody wrote that. When you look at a website, somebody designed that,” said Schendlinger. “Because arts is [sic] so tightly woven into the fabric of society, it’s very easy to take for granted.” Art is your school choir and ensemble; it is your film, dance, and theatre electives. Art is reading a book; it is playing tambourine in a band. Art is doodling in the margins.

Furthermore, art spaces function as a kind of public sphere where grievances, good news, ideas, questions, and critiques come together. A healthy arts community creates social cohesion through real human interaction (because a live concert is never the same as the record). A developed cultural identity can bring a certain amount of prestige to a region. For example, we immediately think of Western European countries when we imagine a place with cool venues, progressive attitudes, and a cutting-edge artistic scene — and it correlates with the arts being assigned a much higher societal value in those countries.

On top of creating cultural prestige, the government at least won’t lose money by funding the arts, and may even earn some back. Directly after the Campbell arts cuts, then-executive director of the Alliance of Arts Amir Ali Alibhai held a talk at the VAG, citing this from a study funded by the City of Vancouver: “Every dollar invested in arts and culture returns between $1.05 and $1.36 in taxes back to the provincial government.” Furthermore, B.C.’s former minister of tourism, culture, and the arts, Kevin Krueger, reported that B.C.’s heritage and arts industry generate approximately 78,000 jobs in the creative industry and $5.2 billion in economic activity annually.

The arts are important for a number of reasons, and government funding cuts do not help them flourish. However, they are not solely responsible for the struggles faced by the arts community: the direct provincial spending makes up a small fraction of what B.C. arts organizations receive. What has affected the arts in B.C. far more are the changes made to the community gaming grants. Taxes collected by the province from gambling activities, including lotto tickets and horse racing, are reorganized into gaming grants, which are given out on the basis of an organization’s community engagement. $36 million was cut from gaming grants under Gordon Campbell’s government, and the eligibilities shifted to exclude arts, environmental, and sports programs that did not cater primarily to children and youth. Christy Clark, however, reinstated previous eligibilities and added $15 million to the fund in January — but that still leaves a $20 million shortfall from its earlier numbers.

Perhaps the one upside to all these cuts is that they allowed many arts organizations to prove that their sustainability was rooted in more than just government money and demonstrate how much “ordinary people” really do care about the arts. The Vancouver International Fringe Festival, considered a large independent theatre festival with a budget of over $1 million, was lucky to lock in a three-year term with a $70,000 gaming grant before the eligibilities changed, keeping them on track with the festival’s projected 30 per cent expansion. When their term ended, Fringe was resourceful in making up for the difference. “We’ve had to shift a lot of our focus to donations and fundraising,” said Executive Director David Jordan. “This meant we had to change the way we communicated with the community, which really had a positive effect, as now more people are aware that we are a charity, not just an entertainment event.”

For all non-profit organizations, including Fringe and many other arts festivals and organizations in B.C., surplus money is invested back into the organization — as opposed to being distributed as profit to owners and shareholders. In the Fringe’s case, that includes a mentoring program. Last year’s obvious pick was Awkward Stage Productions, which put on Smile, which alternated between a senior and junior youth cast. At Awkward Stage, older actors mentor newcomers, and all tech and design work is handled by youth as well.

Grants are vital to non-profits, precisely because grants are not loans. Without the pressure of needing to put together an event that must appeal to a wide enough audience so as to both repay the loan and earn enough money for next year, organizations are allowed that bit of leeway to step outside their comfort zone, nurture their artists, and sharpen their edges. The Fringe is one such instance. “The Fringe acts as an incubator for emerging ideas and artists,” said Jordan. The Fringe has a bit of a curious curatorial approach, in which they literally pick their shows out of a hat. “It’s very against the grain in terms of our society, which is so organized around excellence. We’re the opposite of that.” And if a weird show happens to get picked? “Then we have a weird show, and usually there will be weird people that like it,” he laughed. The only quality control in place is the artist application fee of $800, though participating artists keep everything earned at the box office after. “It’s a little mix of capitalism of socialism.” According to Jordan, the average group makes about $2,500, while top-tier shows, such as last year’s media darling Grim and Fischer, make around $5,000, which doesn’t amount to much of an hourly wage.

Of course, grants are not handed out indiscriminately. There is still pressure to create an end product that displays stability and a potential for growth if the organization wants to have a shot at applying for the grant again. Organizations still need to work hard to raise money on their own through donations and sales. “Grants are not handouts. You don’t get in line, put your hand out, and then someone drops a few thousand dollars in it.” Schendlinger said, explaining the long, arduous grant application process. She spends an average of 80 to 100 hours per grant proposal, which can include up to four separate reports. The bottom line is that arts organizations don’t just squander taxpayer money. Many festivals have contingent measures in place, whether it be following the for-profit model of having three months’ operating costs in reserve at all times, or having an endowment fund, which are both strategies adopted by the Vancouver International Writer’s Festival.

Arts in B.C. have definitely not reached their full potential, and dismal arts funding is only one factor among many. Consider the Writers’ Festival again. Their programming targeted at school-age children allowed them to remain eligible for the gaming grants, though ironically, it has been the attendance of that very demographic that has suffered in the past. “The teachers’ job action is hurting many arts organizations aimed at school-age audiences overall,” began Camilla Tibbs, operations manager of the festival. While teachers under the current B.C. Teachers’ Federation job action are still in classes, they have refused to pick up extra tasks, which include the arrangement of field trips. The year prior, cuts at the school board level affected ticket sales to school groups. Tibbs considered the Writer’s Festival fortunate in that this only afflicted half their programming, and added that many tickets were instead given away to schools that otherwise could not attend.

Despite all of these struggles, the arts community in B.C. is still trying to hold on. Going back to Harper’s sentiment on the arts, which has appeared to seep down to lower levels of government — if ordinary Canadians don’t care about the arts, then who are the people volunteering to man box offices in the cold, or working minimum wage while keeping their eye on the Pulitzer Prize? Why bother organizing free outdoor movies in the summer when no one supposedly cares? If it’s not ordinary Canadians who are behind the resurgence of book clubs in the last decade, then who is?