Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

UBC Faculty Members Apologize For 'Not Demanding Better' On Sexual Assaults On Students

The Canadian Press, 08 Jan, 2016 10:46 AM
    VANCOUVER — University of British Columbia faculty members have signed an open letter apologizing for not doing more to ensure the institution protects students from sexual assaults.
     
    More than 80 faculty members from a wide range of disciplines have signed the letter dated Jan. 6 and addressed to the UBC community.
     
     
    The university has come under fire after a group of students and alumni complained that it took a year and a half for school administrators to act on multiple sexual assault allegations against a PhD student.
     
    UBC has hired an independent investigator to review its response to the allegations and has promised to begin a discussion to develop a stand-alone sexual assault policy.
     
    But the open letter says the current problems do not seem limited to efficiency or timeliness, and the community needs more than a discussion.
     
     
    The signees pledge that they will take an active part in improving UBC's sexual assault policy in order to have new procedures in place by the start of the next academic year in September.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Government Has Tarnished Views Of Muslims, Says Zunera Ishaq, Woman At Heart Of Niqab Debate

    Government Has Tarnished Views Of Muslims, Says Zunera Ishaq, Woman At Heart Of Niqab Debate
    She attributed much of that misinformation to the Conservative government, accusing Prime Minister Stephen Harper of turning her personal choice into a national vote-getting strategy

    Government Has Tarnished Views Of Muslims, Says Zunera Ishaq, Woman At Heart Of Niqab Debate

    Victims Of Lac-Megantic Disaster Close To Receiving Part Of $450-million Fund

    Victims Of Lac-Megantic Disaster Close To Receiving Part Of $450-million Fund
    Jeff Orenstein, whose Consumer Law Group represents the victims of the derailment, said attorneys from all sides have agreed to recommend giving Canadian Pacific (TSX:CP) legal assurances in exchange for it dropping its appeal against the $450-million fund.

    Victims Of Lac-Megantic Disaster Close To Receiving Part Of $450-million Fund

    NDP Candidate Harbaljit Singh Kahlon Apologizes For Former Views On Gay Marriage, Homosexuality

    Harbaljit Singh Kahlon also said during the 2005 OMNI TV show that there is no research that gays are born homosexual.

    NDP Candidate Harbaljit Singh Kahlon Apologizes For Former Views On Gay Marriage, Homosexuality

    13 Accused Of Bringing Drugs And Weapons Into Canada; 48 Charges Laid

    13 Accused Of Bringing Drugs And Weapons Into Canada; 48 Charges Laid
    Ontario Provincial Police say illegal drugs — mostly cocaine — were being brought into Canada from Trinidad and Tobago, St. Lucia and Guyana, then distributed through the Toronto area and in Newfoundland and Labrador.

    13 Accused Of Bringing Drugs And Weapons Into Canada; 48 Charges Laid

    American Actor Randy Quaid Ordered Released; Facing Removal From Canada Next Week

    American Actor Randy Quaid Ordered Released; Facing Removal From Canada Next Week
    A Canada Border Services Agency official told the board member hearing the case that Quaid was arrested because it was felt he wouldn't comply with an order to leave the country next Wednesday.

    American Actor Randy Quaid Ordered Released; Facing Removal From Canada Next Week

    Advocate Says B.C.'s Children In Government Care Need More Social Workers Now

    Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond says the province has fewer social workers now compared to 13 years ago and that the government must hire more by boosting funding for the Children's Ministry.

    Advocate Says B.C.'s Children In Government Care Need More Social Workers Now