
York University Picket Line
Since the start of November, students at York University in North York, Ontario have been sitting at the edge of their seats awaiting their classes to resume after a strike began with the re-negotiation of the Teaching Assistants (TA’s), Graduate Assistants (GA’s) and contract faculty contracts. The Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) started a strike after local 3903’s demands were not met by York Administration. The first semester has already been thrown out, exams could not be held, classes could not be finished, and students were given high hopes that after the holidays, classes would resume for the second semester.
Negotiations resumed on January 5th after the winter holidays with high hopes. A vote for their last offer was requested by York Administration, only to be denied by CUPE’s bargaining team to be brought to its members on January 7th. With York Administration and CUPE local 3903 butting heads, we are shown yet again that the value of education will always be undermined by the pursuit of profitability. As York University Administration continues to prove to us that it is no better than any corporation losing the trust of its consumers for the better good of maximum profits, we seem to be losing our hope in any kind of organization. Sure, it was easy to accept the fact that the gas companies were sky rocketing the prices of our fuel while brandishing a false 2% profit; that the big-three automobile companies dropped all kinds of innovation to save a few million dollars by not updating its factories to include the mass production of the electric car or the hydro-powered car – and thus probably sending them into oblivion; that the heads of banks in the U.S. cared less about the billions given to them by the government and wasting valuable tax payers’ money than the spa treatments they took as soon as the cheque cleared. Hell it was even easy to accept the fact that most charitable organizations only end up giving (maybe) 10 cents to every dollar given to them to those who need it. But when even those in charge of educating the future leaders of our world care less about resuming education promised to 50,000 students than the money they raised for their 50th anniversary celebrations (an estimated $180 Million), we know we have come to a very sad time.
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