Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

UBC Chairman John Montalbano Says He Didn't Threaten To Pull Professor's Funding

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Aug, 2015 11:21 AM
    VANCOUVER — A key player in a public battle about academic freedom at the University of British Columbia vows to remain chairman of the board of governors and says an outspoken critic should file a formal grievance.
     
    John Montalbano responded Tuesday to allegations by Prof. Jennifer Berdahl involving the Aug. 7 resignation of former president Arvind Gupta.
     
    Berdahl has accused Montalbano of trying to muzzle her. She wrote in a blog last week that Gupta, who she noted isn't a tall or physically imposing man, "lost the masculinity contest" among the university's leaders "as most women and minorities do at institutions dominated by men."
     
    In a blog posted Monday, she said Montalbano criticized her for "embarrassing" UBC's governors.
     
    "I have never in my life felt more institutional pressure to be silent," she wrote, though Montalbano has denied that he issued any kind of gag order.
     
    The faculty association said in a statement that it has lost confidence in Montalbano because of his "apparent lack of understanding'' of academic freedom.
     
    It noted the "serious weaknesses" in the governance of the university and the "apparent failure to manage significant and perceived high-risk personal conflicts of interest involving Mr. Montalbano."
     
    Montalbano is chief executive officer of RBC Global Asset Management, which is the asset management division of Royal Bank of Canada. In April 2014, the university announced that he provided $2 million in funding for Berdahl's gender and diversity professorship under his name at UBC's Sauder School of Business.
     
     
    "At no time did I ask the professor to retract any of her blogs and at no time did I threaten her funding," Montalbano said in a written statement Tuesday. "In fact, I reinforced that her funding would continue. At no time did I intend to impinge her academic freedom."
     
    Berdahl and the faculty association declined interviews.
     
    Montalbano said it is important for an independent and objective process to determine the validity of Berdahl's allegations.
     
    "The faculty association collective agreement includes a thoughtful, thorough grievance process and I welcome — in fact, I ask — the professor to engage in this process. I commit to fully engaging in the grievance process if and when the professor lodges a formal grievance request."
     
    Gupta has not provided any explanation about why he resigned one year into a five-year term, and the university board has citing confidentiality in not offering any details.
     
    "President Gupta was the first brown man to be UBC president," Berdahl wrote in a blog post, though she said she didn't know all the "ins and outs" of why he quit.
     
    Gupta has said he will return to the university as a computer science professor.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Coroner's Jury Rules Deaths Of Two Mill Workers In Burns Lake, B.C., Accidental

    Coroner's Jury Rules Deaths Of Two Mill Workers In Burns Lake, B.C., Accidental
    Forty-five-year-old Robert Luggi and 42-year-old Carl Charlie were working at Babine Forest Products in the community 225 kilometres west of Prince George, when the explosion occurred

    Coroner's Jury Rules Deaths Of Two Mill Workers In Burns Lake, B.C., Accidental

    Stop Abbotsford From Denying Homeless Rights: Lawyer

    Stop Abbotsford From Denying Homeless Rights: Lawyer
    City officials have dumped chicken manure on campsites, said David Wotherspoon, a lawyer with Pivot Legal Society.

    Stop Abbotsford From Denying Homeless Rights: Lawyer

    Bulldozer And Excavator Worth $500,000 Go Missing, B.C. Police Attempt To Dredge Up Suspects

    Bulldozer And Excavator Worth $500,000 Go Missing, B.C. Police Attempt To Dredge Up Suspects
    Police were called out to a site down a forest service road near Tumbler Ridge on July 15.

    Bulldozer And Excavator Worth $500,000 Go Missing, B.C. Police Attempt To Dredge Up Suspects

    'Confusion' And 'Miscommunication' Slowed Vancouver Fuel Spill Response: Report

    'Confusion' And 'Miscommunication' Slowed Vancouver Fuel Spill Response: Report
    The review released Friday also found that Canadian Coast Guard staff were unsure of their roles and a faulty provincial alert system meant the city was not notified until 12 hours later.

    'Confusion' And 'Miscommunication' Slowed Vancouver Fuel Spill Response: Report

    Northern B.C. Man Accused Of Second Degree Murder, Held In Custody

    Northern B.C. Man Accused Of Second Degree Murder, Held In Custody
    FORT NELSON, B.C. — A 22-year-old man from northeastern British Columbia has been charged with second-degree murder.

    Northern B.C. Man Accused Of Second Degree Murder, Held In Custody

    Drought Forces Fishing Ban And Water Restrictions On Several B.C. Rivers

    Drought Forces Fishing Ban And Water Restrictions On Several B.C. Rivers
    VICTORIA — Drought conditions are forcing the provincial government to ban fishing and impose water restrictions for farms in parts of southern British Columbia in a bid to help fish stocks through a hot, dry summer.

    Drought Forces Fishing Ban And Water Restrictions On Several B.C. Rivers