The Telegram (St. John's)

University of B.C. says $250,000 pledged for anti-rape counsellin­g, education

- BY CAMILLE BAINS

A University of British Columbia undergradu­ate society involved in a frosh week chant glorifying the abuse of underage girls has pledged to contribute $250,000 for sexual abuse counsellin­g and education for students.

The university released a report Wednesday about the incident, saying student leaders of the Commerce Undergradu­ate Society will be held accountabl­e because they did nothing to stop the offensive chant heard by most first-year business students.

However, the report found no evidence that any of the student leaders involved planned or directed students to use the chant, though four of them resigned over the scandal last week. The report called the chant an “oral tradition.”

The song students sang on buses going back and forth to the university from a hotel in Richmond, B.C., spelled out the word “young” with the lyrics, “Y is for your sister … U is for underage, N is for no consent.”

Robert Helsley, dean at the Sauder School of Business, said he will ensure such inappropri­ate events never happen again so all students can feel safe and welcome.

The entire UBC community must embark on complete and lasting change that will make such chants unacceptab­le, said university president Stephen Toope.

“We all need to be involved — those who made serious mistakes and misjudgmen­ts, and those who didn’t,” he said in a statement.

Toope has appointed Louise Cowin, the vice-president of students, to lead a task force to come up with broader measures to address the deeper problem.

Cowin said the task force, which will report back to Toope by early next year, will bring together academic experts in sexualized violence to consider what the university can do to make “transforma­tive and robust change.”

She said the $250,000 will be used to hire a counsellor to work in the university’s counsellin­g service for three years and that the position may be extended.

Cowin said the chant on buses during the Labour Day weekend “became something of a secret, a mark of misguided enthusiasm or attempt to build camaraderi­e.”

“I think there’s been a lot of soul searching going on and I would imagine some level of anxiety,” she said of the aftermath at the Sauder School of Business.

In its report, the university said a four-member fact-finding team interviewe­d 62 students and four staff members over three days.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada