Out on Campus locked out
GAY SPACE / SFU student society says cuts must be made
Matthew DiMera / Vancouver / Friday, September 16, 2011
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The 10-week-old lockout and effective closure of Simon Fraser University’s Out on Campus and Women’s Centre is unfairly targeting queer and trans students, locked-out employees and student volunteers say.

The Simon Fraser Student Society [SFSS] board voted unanimously on July 6 to lock out its unionized office staff, affecting 15 full-time and five student members, including those who operate the Women’s Centre and Out on Campus.
 
Craig Pavelich, the replacement Out on Campus volunteer and office coordinator, says the lockout hurts students who may not have other places to go. “It’s depriving students of fair access to space where they can feel safe. It’s really felt like home for a lot of people. [The lockout has] deprived them of that community space.”

Out on Campus provides lounge space and a resource library and serves as a place to socialize, organize and educate. It defines itself as a safe space for queer students, faculty, staff and their allies.

Third-year molecular biology and biochemistry student Alice Jourmel says that Out on Campus has been a pivotal part of her university experience and that it was one of the reasons she chose to attend SFU.

“I hope that it’s open again as soon as possible because it’s an absolutely vital resource to so many students here, and they deserve it,” says Jourmel.

"It's depriving students of fair access to space where they can feel safe," says locked-out Out on Campus volunteer and office coordinator Craig Pavelich.
(Matthew DiMera photo)
Coordinator Nadine Chambers says the Women’s Centre is another critical resource on campus for many students. She explains that it is often the place where students come to ask questions about gender or sexuality before they’re ready to visit Out on Campus.

“The signs of a progressive and supportive university are spaces like these,” says Chambers.

She says that even if the lockout were to end tomorrow, the damage to often-marginalized student groups is not something that will be easily reversed. “[The board] need[s] to use the rest of their term to turn back this damage that they’ve done in this useless and pointless attack on these services,” says Chambers.

SFSS president Jeff McCann says the society is broke and the cuts need to be made for the sake of all students.

“It’s kind of interesting when people say, ‘End the lockout because those services aren’t being provided,’” says McCann. “Yes, right now and for the last 10 weeks those services aren’t being provided, but every single year the budget cuts are reducing programming by 40 percent, year after year after year.”

He says that unless the union makes concessions, other cuts will have to be made.

“We need to be able to find that balance,” says McCann. “Otherwise we’re not going to have an Out on Campus. We’re not going to be able to afford it. We’re not going to be able to afford anything that we do.”

Chambers says the board is making a false argument.

“The union has spent a considerable amount of time doing comparisons to other student unions and doing a really sound five-year financial plan,” says Chambers.

“I think that it is a lack of will and interest on the part of this current board to actually seriously entertain that, because it’s very clear that these services don’t matter to them,” she claims.


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Reader Comments


 
One-dimensional and biased
Let me preface this all by stating the following about myself: I am a left-wing, queer, Asian woman. Minority to the max. I am not a self-hater. I have to put this all out there, because I have been called out on all of this childishly by people on CUPE's side. Ok. I know it's supposed to be a quote, but the SFSS did not "target" gay and transgender students and you putting it right at the top of the piece directs readers into thinking that it was indeed the intentions of the SFSS. The SFSS doesn't have the option of only locking out some people - it's all or nothing. Also, there is are at least two gay members of the SFSS, and no, they're not self-haters/traitors. A student society is not a big corporate boardroom of fat cat shareholders who are not cutting CUPE wages because they want to have a pay raise and bonuses. They are cutting wages because they need to be fiscally responsible to the students that they represent. They can't run a student society to employ ANY workers to begin with if they don't have money. I mean, the SFSS could cut all club funding, cut out the space expansion fund. But hey, guess what? At least we'll still have the copy center and Clubs Days (because we all know that's so hard to run). The SFSS is running a $800K deficit. They spent 7 times the amount paying staff as they did to fund over 100 clubs/DSUs. They have cut out a student bursary and club/departmental student union funding already, and I believe they have agreed to reallocate their space expansion fund as well. CUPE needs to grow up, sit down, and face the reality that things need to be cut. In their overzealous demonizing of the SFSS, they've demonized themselves and alienated people like me, who might otherwise have been aligned with their agenda.
SB, Surrey British Columbia
09/22/11 8:37 PM EST
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Broke?
Interesting statements by Jeff the head of the SFSS...the union had provided the society with a sound 5 year financial plan to fullfill its obligations to the students and have a surplus...also, the student fees have not increased in 20 years!!! Nothing has stayed the same for that length of time, not even your daily coffee or lunch! Increases are necessary to keep up with the costs of running an office (and I don't mean wages...but the society has given themselves a raise!?!?). What about the vacant office that has gone without rent for almost 9 months and the cost negotiated by the society to pay for the renovations to accomodate a possible tenant? Hmmm...students should ask why is the society running near bankrupt? Mismanagement of your student fees? The point is...if this was your mom or dad being locked out you would want them to be working!!! Let them get back to work and negotiate a contract!
Joyce Griffiths, North Vancouver BC
09/23/11 6:01 PM EST
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