Calgary Herald

UBC declares a climate emergency

- TIFFANY CRAWFORD

VANCOUVER The University of B.C. has joined a growing list of schools, communitie­s and countries around the world in declaring a climate emergency.

UBC president Santa Ono said the UBC board of governors endorsed the declaratio­n on Thursday, and he thanked students and staff for their activism in pushing UBC to act.

At least one climate activist group on campus wasn’t happy with the announceme­nt, and is calling for a firmer commitment to move away from fossil fuels. The UBC Extinction Rebellion group is planning a hunger strike in January if UBC doesn’t meet their demands.

In declaring an emergency, UBC acknowledg­es “the climate crisis is posing and will continue to pose extensive and disastrous threats to peoples’ lives and livelihood­s both locally and globally, contributi­ng to famine, migration, and disease worldwide, including impact on individual physical and mental well-being.”

UBC said it will make decisions that will reduce emissions and shift away from fossil fuels to alternativ­e energy sources.

This decision, UBC says, is based on the best available science laid out by the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, the UN Production Gap Report and the Paris Agreement.

UBC also recognizes that addressing the climate crisis is “critical to the university’s key functions of research, learning and engagement as UBC strives to prepare students for their futures and conduct leading research on pressing societal issues.”

Ono said he is establishi­ng a climate emergency community process to help manage a transition from fossil fuels. He said it will be essential that this process leads to transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, connects to the school’s Indigenous strategic plan and inclusion plan, and commits to charting a globally ambitious future for climate action on campus. The process will include, among other things, establishi­ng a climate emergency committee, and a resource website for community members to submit ideas and provide updates on progress.

Ono says the committee will make a report by spring with recommenda­tions for action. The report will be submitted to the new Sustainabi­lity Committee of the UBC Board of Governors for considerat­ion.

UBC’S announceme­nt was met with skepticism by the UBC chapter of Extinction Rebellion. The climate activist group acknowledg­ed that the board voted to move 22 per cent of the funds from UBC’S endowment, or $380 million, to a fossil-free fund and explore options to move to a full divestment.

The UBC board also removed a condition from the original motion, which stated that divestment would only occur if it is shown not to hurt the financial performanc­e of the endowment.

But Extinction Rebellion said this isn’t enough and wants the university dispose of the stroller, which had Raine’s blood on the headrest. Police arrested Mack and Crier with the stroller aboard an Edmonton transit bus the day after Raine’s body was discovered.

While watching a TV news report about the discovery of the baby’s body, Mack’s mother’s boyfriend told court Crier had no reaction.

“He described it as a bit of a hang of the head and sighed, because it was a child,” Downey-damato said. “There was nothing, no indication anything was wrong. Just a sort of normal, ‘That’s sad to hear’ conversati­on.” to commit to a withdrawal from all fossil fuel investment­s.

The group is threatenin­g a hunger strike by students — to begin Jan. 6, the first day of term — if full divestment is not promised by the end of the year.

“The climate and ecological crisis takes precedence over our individual needs. This January, we will be putting our healthy bodies on the line. We will enact starvation so that this institutio­n can visualize the real life consequenc­es of its failure to act,” said Laura Sullivan, a student organizer at Extinction Rebellion UBC. “As of today, UBC remains complicit in this catastroph­e. UBC has 27 days to commit to our demands and avoid risks to their students today and the next seven generation­s to come.”

UBC treasurer Yale Loh said he has requested reviews of full divestment be presented in “as expeditiou­s a manner as possible” but it will take time. UBC’S investment in the fossil fuel industry, which includes oil, gas and coal, is two per cent, or $43 million, of UBC’S portfolio, Loh said Friday. He said UBC has asked for a legal and financial analysis of divesting from oil and gas by March 31. He applauded the passion of the Extinction Rebellion students but urged them to consider another method of protest.

“We are very concerned about this action and about their safety,” he said, noting the board will continue outreach to the group to discuss other options.

The university must consider the penalties for removing investment­s, and the legal ramificati­ons, and at the same time investigat­e more sustainabl­e approaches, he said.

“This is very much a journey for us,” he said, adding that the university is on track to reduce emissions by 67 per cent by 2021.

Laura Chen, a UBC student and member of Ono’s climate advisory group, said students from UBCC350, Climate Hub and the Social Justice Centre drafted the climate strike open letter that 1,600 students and faculty signed calling for UBC to declare a climate emergency.

She said she understand­s the frustratio­n and demands of Extinction Rebellion, but added it’s important to recognize how hard the students have worked to get the board to make these changes, and to hear from the UBC community to ensure there is justice and equity for all members.

“People are waking up to the climate crisis, and we are glad the board is committing to exploring full divestment. This is a really exciting developmen­t,” said Chen.

This is not a fleeting, momentary loss of control, this assault would have involved multiple brutal applicatio­ns of force over time.

Downey-damato said Crier’s actions were not those of “an unequipped parent who suffered a momentary loss of control.” While one of the injuries in isolation might have been an accident, “what the defence cannot account for is the sheer scope and number of injuries on Anthony,” she said.

Defence lawyer Alexandra Seaman said during trial Crier could be found guilty of manslaught­er, but argued Friday the Crown hasn’t proven the case for murder.

“It’s a circumstan­tial case,” she said. “The ultimate inquiry that this court must grapple with is whether Mr. Crier is guilty of murder or guilty of manslaught­er,” Seaman told Justice David Labrenz, who is hearing the case without a jury.

“This court does not know how exactly Anthony Raine died,” she said. “It’s not the court’s function to guess.” Crier sat in the prisoner’s box wearing a white t-shirt, jeans and a cross necklace. Court of Queen’s Bench Justice David Labrenz is expected to deliver his decision Jan. 10.

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