Student Society officials were surprised this spring when Camosun College Administration informed them of plans to force them out of their Lansdowne offices in the Library building to make way for a new coffee shop on campus. This despite a memorandum of understanding between the CCSS and Camosun that guarantees the space to the Student Society.
The College has temporarily offered the use of Richmond house offices as compensation which failed to satisfy student leaders because it is far from the centre of campus and would be a huge reduction visibility for the CCSS. The parties have since entered into negotiations to reach a mutually agreeable settlement on building issues. This process may result in the student society constructing or renovating space where the Hully house currently located between the library building and the Dawson building.
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CCSS Fall 2009 Election Results Spring 2010 - Preliminary Results
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| Position | Name | Interurban | Lansdowne | Total | Result | |||
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| Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | No |
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| External Executive | Matteus Clement | 103 | 12 | 287 | 38 | 390 | 50 | Elected |
| Lansdowne Executive | Roxanne Smillie |
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| 287 | 33 | 287 | 33 | Elected |
| Interurban Executive | Christopher Gillespie | 102 | 20 |
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| 102 | 20 | Elected |
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| Finance Executive | Darragh Grove-White | 53 |
| 172 |
| 225 |
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| Finance Executive | Matthew Martin | 76 |
| 157 |
| 233 |
| Elected |
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| International Director | Luis Carlos Suarez Rubio | 30 |
| 77 |
| 107 |
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| International Director | Gurinder Pal Singh Banwait | 49 |
| 117 |
| 166 |
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| International Director | Edward Lai | 45 |
| 134 |
| 179 |
| Elected |
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| Sustainability Director | Jordan Sandwith | 52 |
| 162 |
| 214 |
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| Sustainability Director | Richard Kao | 69 |
| 173 |
| 242 |
| Elected |
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| Pride Director | Dani Desrosiers | 52 |
| 164 |
| 216 |
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| Pride Director | Marissa Johnston | 69 |
| 154 |
| 223 |
| Elected |
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| Women's Director | Lauren Blakey | 84 |
| 186 |
| 270 |
| Elected |
| Women's Director | Chloe Markgraf | 42 |
| 134 |
| 176 |
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| SWD Director | Chris Marks | 106 | 9 | 291 | 20 | 397 | 29 | Elected |
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| Events Levy Referendum | 72 | 69 | 179 | 167 | 251 | 236 |
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| $0.25 Levy | 25 |
| 79 |
| 104 |
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| $0.50 Levy | 45 |
| 95 |
| 140 |
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| $2.00 Operational Levy | 62 | 74 | 179 | 168 | 241 | 242 | Defeated | |
| TOTAL Voters (9400 aprox members) | 151 | 353 | 504 |
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In this podcast we let you know where a few important places on campus are, info about the applied communication program as well as some new late night downtown ideas that have been put in place thanks to the mayor and CCSS.
In conjunction with the election of directors to the Student Society board, students will be asked 2 referendum questions.
This is all of the information at press time. Official wording and background documentation to follow. There are traditionally materials and resources (and rules) for the "yes" and "no" side of the Referendum.
VICTORIA—The Camosun College Student Society (CCSS) will be hosting a free soup kitchen for students tomorrow as part of a day of campus events throughout Vancouver Island for the Education Shouldn't be a Debt Sentence campaign. Students at UVic, Camosun College, Vancouver Island University, and North Island College will be gathering signatures on the provincial petition to reduce student debt at the events.
The events come on the heels of last week's government report on the public consultations held for the 2010 BC budget. The report recommended that the government address BC's high student loan interest rates and inadequate funding for universities and colleges.
"Camosun Students are calling on the government to take concrete action in the 2010 BC Budget to reduce student debt and make education affordable", said CCSS External Executive Matteus Clement, "The government needs to realise that students are really suffering and help now."
WHAT: Soup Kitchen for Student Debt
WHEN: 11am - 12pm, Wednesday November 18, 2009
WHERE: Outside the Fisher Building, Lansdowne Campus
WHO: CCSS & Canadian Federation of Students representatives
The Camosun College Student Society represents 9,000 students at the Lansdowne and Interurban Campuses of Camosun College.
One year ago, the BC government received the Campus 2020 Report on BC’s post-secondary education system, recommending major investment in research, and equalization of participation in post-secondary education from Aboriginal students and those from low-income backgrounds. Yet, the government has put it off for a year, and will continue to dawdle until the late fall. Then, just a month before the beginning of the fiscal year, while budgets were being finalized, colleges and universities got a nasty shock with a 2.6% cut to the funding they had been promised a month before in the provincial budget on top of cutbacks to funding new student seats. With economic forecasts worsening, and an election in May 2009, it seems the Liberals needed a fall reserve for their pre-election funding announcements.
As a result, many students will be writing their final exams this week not knowing whether the classes they need next year will continue to be offered, or if that great instructor will still have a job.
Here are just a few examples of the damage so far:
At the time of the BC Budget announcement, UBC already faced a $24 million structural deficit that it planned to deal with through recurring cuts. The surprise budget cut from the government amounts to an additional $11.3 million. Like its Okanagan campus, UBC Vancouver is already experiencing staff cuts, scaling back faculty hiring, and considering cuts to certain programs.
To attempt to justify the cut, the Liberal government has pointed to enrolment targets not being met by many colleges and universities. We must point out that the government caused BC’s enrolment woes by doubling tuition fees, cutting BC’s grants program, and allowing student debt to rise to highest in Canada outside the Maritimes, at an average of $27,000 upon graduation. With tuition fees increasing again this year to a collective $989 million, all this most recent cut achieves is forcing students to pay more for less in September, while thousands of others continue to be forced into dead-end jobs because they cannot afford an education.
British Columbians have seen this kind of pre-election ploy before. The government first starves colleges and universities of the funding that is needed to provide high-quality accessible post-secondary education. We can now expect that over the coming months, there will be numerous photo ops and press releases at universities and colleges throughout the province, as the government targets funding to achieve its political goals.
Students and British Columbians cannot accept the government playing political games with our futures. This government needs to set politics aside, and actually address the problems in BC’s post-secondary education system. The Campbell government must invest in grants and reducing tuition fees in order to spur enrolment. And this government must properly fund universities and colleges as a way to build the backbone of strong communities and a strong economy.
Until enrolment declines are no longer an issue, until faculty and staff layoffs are reversed, until programs are restored, and until low- and middle-income students no longer face massive student debt, students are not going to allow this government to build a re-election platform on its education record.
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