Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Dentistry investigation should be done externally, Dalhousie senate told

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jan, 2015 10:48 AM

    HALIFAX — Members of Dalhousie University's senate argued Monday that the disciplinary process facing male dentistry students alleged to have posted sexually violent comments on Facebook about their female classmates should be conducted outside the faculty of dentistry.

    Philosophy professor Letitia Meynell, a member of the senate, presented a motion calling on the academic governing body to take over the investigation of whether the 13 men in the Facebook group violated academic and professional standards.

    "There's a real question of perception in the general public and whether it (the faculty investigation) will be enough to restore confidence," she said during the meeting.

    Meynell's motion wasn't considered because the meeting ran out of time. A majority of the senate voted against extending the meeting for 15 minutes.

    Steven Baur, a professor of music and another member of the senate, said he will call for a special meeting to consider the motion.

    Baur also said he has lost confidence in the ability of the academic standards committee at the faculty to handle the complaints against the 13 male students.

    He also questioned how university president Richard Florizone would be able to receive a thorough review of facts in the case, including whether only 13 male students were involved.

    "I'm uncomfortable the disciplinary proceedings are happening within the faculty of dentistry and I'm upset we didn't get to discuss more thoroughly today means by which the senate can oversee the disciplinary process," he said after the meeting ended.

    Florizone said an independent task force and a restorative justice process will look into what happened.

    He also said he welcomed the senate's input on the disciplinary process, but didn't indicate if he would support a motion to move it out of the faculty of dentistry.

    He repeatedly told the senate meeting that the university had to follow a process, warning that to do otherwise risked legal consequences in the future.

    "We won't rush to judgment," he said. "We'll follow a just process ... and we won't sweep this under the rug."

    The senate meeting took place hours after the university's dentistry students resumed classes after the holiday break. Students wearing blue scrubs refused to comment as they went in.

    Dalhousie University delayed classes by a week as it dealt with the ongoing controversy. The male dentistry students alleged to be part of the Facebook group have been ordered to attend classes remotely.

    The university also delayed the reopening of a dental clinic at the school and stripped the 13 male students of their clinical privileges there.

    Patients going to the clinic Monday had mixed feelings about the incident, with some saying the male students should be expelled while others said they should be allowed to finish their studies.

    "They should get rid of them," said Winston Teal as he took his granddaughter in for her appointment, adding that he was pleased the members of the Facebook group were not practising in the clinic.

    Steve Olsen, who has been going to the clinic for 30 years, said the public and the school have reacted too harshly, and that all of the students should be allowed to carry on with their studies.

    "It's too big a deal, as far as I'm concerned," he said as he headed into his appointment. "I think they've already been beaten up good enough."

    The university has launched an independent investigation that will explore the environment, training and policies at the dentistry school to determine if they contributed to a tolerance for misogyny and sexist conduct.

    Meynell raised questions during the senate meeting about whether the task force plans to investigate how the university responded to the posts and who exactly was involved.

    Florizone said he would consult with the task force's chair and get back to Meynell with answers to her questions.

    Reports of the offensive posts and the university's initial response prompted rallies and calls for the expulsion of the 13 students.

    The Facebook page at the centre of the controversy has been taken down. But according to the CBC, members of the Class of DDS Gentlemen page on Facebook voted on which woman they'd like to have "hate" sex with and joked about using chloroform on women. The CBC said in another post, a woman is shown in a bikini with a caption that says, "Bang until stress is relieved or unconscious (girl)."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Search For 3 Suspects After Sawed-Off Shotgun Fired In BC Liquor Store

    Police Search For 3 Suspects After Sawed-Off Shotgun Fired In BC Liquor Store
    NANAIMO, B.C. — Police in Nanaimo, B.C., are searching for three men suspected of firing a sawed-off shotgun into the ceiling of a liquor store and discharging bear spray at an employee.

    Police Search For 3 Suspects After Sawed-Off Shotgun Fired In BC Liquor Store

    Exxon Says Prince Rupert LNG Plant Worth $25-billion And Could Create 6,000 Jobs

    Exxon Says Prince Rupert LNG Plant Worth $25-billion And Could Create 6,000 Jobs
    VICTORIA — Exxon Mobil Corp. says it plans to spend up to $25 billion to build a liquefied natural gas export plant at Tuck Inlet, located within the city limits of Prince Rupert on British Columbia's north coast.

    Exxon Says Prince Rupert LNG Plant Worth $25-billion And Could Create 6,000 Jobs

    RCMP Make Third Terror-related Arrest Following Charges Against Twins

    RCMP Make Third Terror-related Arrest Following Charges Against Twins
    OTTAWA — The RCMP have arrested a third Ottawa man in an alleged terrorist conspiracy.

    RCMP Make Third Terror-related Arrest Following Charges Against Twins

    Hockey legend Guy Lafleur suing Quebec Crown and Montreal police for $2 million

    Hockey legend Guy Lafleur suing Quebec Crown and Montreal police for $2 million
    MONTREAL — Former Canadiens superstar Guy Lafleur is seeking more than $2 million from the Crown and Montreal police in legal proceedings that began today.

    Hockey legend Guy Lafleur suing Quebec Crown and Montreal police for $2 million

    Three Ice Climbers Found Dead North Of Whistler: Police

    Three Ice Climbers Found Dead North Of Whistler: Police
    RCMP say the bodies of the two women and a man were discovered in a crevasse about 300 metres below Joffre Peak.

    Three Ice Climbers Found Dead North Of Whistler: Police

    Perjury case against RCMP related to Dziekanski's death can proceed: B.C. judge

    VANCOUVER — A judge has rejected an RCMP officer's attempt to have a perjury case thrown out related to the inquiry into the death of Robert Dziekanski.

    Perjury case against RCMP related to Dziekanski's death can proceed: B.C. judge