Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

UBC Says Acclaimed Writer Steven Galloway Removed Over Breach Of Trust

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Jun, 2016 12:26 PM
    VANCOUVER — The University of British Columbia says the chair of its creative writing program is no longer employed by the school over what it calls an "irreparable breach of trust."
     
    In a statement, the school says acclaimed writer Steven Galloway was suspended in November of last year while an investigation was completed over what it said were serious allegations of misconduct.
     
    Addition complaints were also received after he was suspended and former B.C. Supreme Court justice Mary Ellen Boyd was appointed to conduct an investigation.
     
    Details of those allegations weren't released, but the school says Galloway did not dispute any of the critical findings. 
     
     
     
    Philip Steenkamp, the vice-president external relations at UBC, wouldn't say if Galloway quit or if he was fired.
     
    He noted that when the president recommends termination of a faculty member it needs to be approved by the board and that approval was given on Tuesday.   
     
    Galloway could not immediately be reached for comment.
     
    Steenkamp says all of the complainants who came forward have been offered support and counselling services by the university.
     
    Galloway is the author of three novels, including "The Confabulist" and "The Cellist of Sarajevo" and was nominated for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award and the Scotiabank Giller Prize.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Bylaw Charges Laid Against Calgary Officer After Police Dog Bites Boy

    Bylaw Charges Laid Against Calgary Officer After Police Dog Bites Boy
    CALGARY — A Calgary police dog handler faces charges after his canine escaped from his yard and bit a 12-year-old boy.

    Bylaw Charges Laid Against Calgary Officer After Police Dog Bites Boy

    Delayed Victoria Bridge Project Spans Continents, Cultural Issues

    Delayed Victoria Bridge Project Spans Continents, Cultural Issues
    VICTORIA — It's less than 100 metres long, but costs and delays have ballooned for Victoria's Johnson Street Bridge replacement project in a cautionary tale involving standards for steel and a cultural divide that spans continents.

    Delayed Victoria Bridge Project Spans Continents, Cultural Issues

    Toronto Bar Pays Tribute To Site Of Orlando Shooting With Replica Of Pulse Logo

    Toronto Bar Pays Tribute To Site Of Orlando Shooting With Replica Of Pulse Logo
      The idea came from Rob Shostak, a Toronto-based designer who works for an architectural firm.

    Toronto Bar Pays Tribute To Site Of Orlando Shooting With Replica Of Pulse Logo

    Federal Labour Minister Would Cheer End Of Temporary Foreign Workers Program

    Federal Labour Minister Would Cheer End Of Temporary Foreign Workers Program
    The federal Liberal cabinet minister says she meant it as a joke — but Mihychuk is nonetheless standing by her message that she hopes one day soon, the program will no longer be necessary.

    Federal Labour Minister Would Cheer End Of Temporary Foreign Workers Program

    Young Voter Turnout Jumped Sharply In 2015 Contest, Elections Canada Reports

    Young Voter Turnout Jumped Sharply In 2015 Contest, Elections Canada Reports
    The agency says voter participation among those aged 18 to 24 rose by 18.3 percentage points to 57.1 per cent, up from 38.8 per cent in 2011.

    Young Voter Turnout Jumped Sharply In 2015 Contest, Elections Canada Reports

    Visa Accuses Walmart Of Using Consumers As Pawns To Strike Cost-Saving Deal

    Visa Accuses Walmart Of Using Consumers As Pawns To Strike Cost-Saving Deal
    MONTREAL — Visa is accusing Walmart of using consumers as pawns in its battle over merchant fees by threatening to ban the popular credit card from its Canadian stores.

    Visa Accuses Walmart Of Using Consumers As Pawns To Strike Cost-Saving Deal