Edmonton Journal

‘CRISIS OF TRUST’ AT U OF A?

Honour for Suzuki causes uproar

- GORDON KENT gkent@postmedia.com twitter.com/ GKentYEG

The dean of the University of Alberta engineerin­g faculty has posted a scathing letter on his own school’s website criticizin­g the decision to grant an honorary doctorate to environmen­talist David Suzuki.

“It truly saddens me to know that many of you are, as am I, left feeling that one of Alberta’s most favoured children, the University of Alberta, has betrayed you by choosing to confer this honorary degree,” says the Monday post attributed to Fraser Forbes, which doesn’t mention Suzuki by name.

“I am not surprised by the level of outrage being expressed across the entire breadth of our engineerin­g community — surely such is to be expected when one’s fundamenta­l values are so directly questioned!”

Suzuki, a scientist, broadcaste­r and companion of the Order of Canada, is scheduled to receive an honorary doctorate of science during the spring convocatio­n June 7.

Themovehas­drawnoutra­gefrom people upset with his position that the oilsands should be shut down and pipeline constructi­on stopped to protect the environmen­t.

The Calgary law firm Moodys Gartner said in a letter sent Monday to the U of A it was cancelling its five-year, $100,000 funding commitment to the university’s law school. The deal would have run until 2020.

Semi-retired businessma­n Dennis Erker said he has donated money to the U of A and helped with fundraisin­g campaigns since the 1970s, but that will end if Suzuki’s doctorate isn’t rescinded. He has heard others make similar vows.

“It will probably be the most expensive degree ever granted by the university when you consider the amount of money the university gets from people from the energy sector or related to the energy sector in our province,” Erker said.

“We will probably lose 50 per cent of those contributi­ons.”

Forbes, who couldn’t be reached for further comment, wrote the decision has precipitat­ed a “crisis of trust” in the engineerin­g faculty and the university has become disconnect­ed from the people it’s meant to serve.

He feels the problem is that recipients are chosen by the university senate without faculty input.

“That the impact of this year’s honorary degree selection has created such a rift between our university and Albertans shows the university didn’t simply miss the mark, but, as you have told me loud and clear, left many of you, its supporters, feeling hurt and devalued,” he wrote. ”It should not have happened. My apologies.”

An email campaign started by Calgary lawyer Robert Iverach last week urges people to write to U of A president David Turpin, chancellor Doug Stollery and others demanding the senate reverse what Iverach calls a “stupid decision.”

“This is a complete slap in the face to the entire energy industry in Alberta …”

A university spokesman declined to comment.

The institutio­n says in a post such moves are intended to honour recipients’ contributi­ons in various fields rather than indicate agreement with their perspectiv­es, and “as an institutio­n of higher learning the university is committed to the expression of, exposure to and debate of diverse points of view.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Environmen­talist David Suzuki is set to receive an honorary doctorate of science from U of A at its spring convocatio­n June 7.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Environmen­talist David Suzuki is set to receive an honorary doctorate of science from U of A at its spring convocatio­n June 7.

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