7/31/2009

Support remaining 'Fight Fees 2'

Court to hear Motion on Violation of Charter rights


Community Release - Toronto
Rally at Old City Hall
Wednesday, August 5th, 10:00 a.m.

Seventeen months of delayed justice will be challenged in court on August 5th. The remaining two of the Fight Fees 14 will present a Charter Challenge on the basis of the right to trial without unreasonable delay. Join us at Old City Hall to send a clear community statement in support of Charter Rights and Justice.

The Toronto police, working with the University of Toronto Administration, have pressed charges in what appears to be an attempt to criminalize dissent and discourage students from resisting unreasonable fee hikes. More than a year ago, 14 people, including students and allies were criminally charged for alleged involvement in a sit-in against fee increases at the University of Toronto.

Over a year later some pieces of relevant evidence (disclosure) still have not been provided. All but two of the 14 have had their charges stayed, withdrawn or have accepted peace bonds that limit their right to protest in campus buildings.

The remaining Fight Fees 2 will be presenting a motion to the Court on August 5th on the basis of violation of their Charter Rights under section 11(b), the right to be tried without reasonable delay. Two of the remaining accused, both of whom are major community advocates at U of T and former student governors, have refused to sign away their Charter Rights. Oriel Varga states,

I will not waive my own Charter Rights because of charges that clearly violate our basic and fundamental rights to freedom of expression and academic freedom. This matter should long ago have been thrown out by the Courts. The fact that over a year has passed without full disclosure and without a fair trial adds substantially to the growing list of Charter violations.

The community has overwhelmingly supported the Fight Fees 14. Students, organizations, unions, and over 115 professors thus far, have expressed their condemnation of the U of T regarding this blatant attempt to criminalize and silence dissent.

Joeita Gupta, Vice-President External of APUS and a student governor says,

Recently, U of T has pushed through Flat fees, which will mean those previously defined as part-time will witness a 66% fee increase. We need to stand up against fee hikes and the fundamental right to fight for access and justice on campus, and do so without the threat of police persecution.

The court date has finally been set for September 28-Oct 2, 2009. Supporters will come together on August 5th to stand in solidarity with the Fight Fees 2. Join us

and prove to UofT that criminalizing dissent will not silence opposition !

More information at http://fightfeescoalition.blogspot.com Contact: Joeita Gupta 416 918-1935

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6/18/2009

Fight Fees Coalition Meeting

Letters of support keep rolling in from professors and unions with strong messages:


"The Code of Conduct should not be used as a tool of authority with
which to bludgeon student activists. This action also serves to
further diminish the core issues at stake on March 20, which were
protection against fee increases and opportunities for real engagement
with the University’s governance processes." - CUPE 3902

The growing support is fabulous and we need to continue our important
work. The University has been threatening other students with
investigations under the Code of Student Conduct and we cannot let
this happen. As two of the alleged participants are still facing
criminal charges and their court date is quickly approaching in early
fall we need to organize and raise awareness about UofT’s tactics of
criminalizing dissent on campus.

Please come to the next Fight Fees Coalition meeting for updates and
to discuss our next steps.

Date: Thursday July 16th
Time: 5:00 pm
Location: CUPE 3907 office: 252 Bloor Street West (OISE building), Room 8-104.

Sincerely,
Fight Fees Coalition

5/12/2009

Flat Fees Rally, May 20th



The Governing Council will meet at University of Toronto at Mississauga (UTM) on Wednesday May 20 at 4:30 p.m. to vote on the Flat Fees proposal which will increase tuition fees by 66%. Join us at UTM to get this undemocratic proposal shut down! Buses will be leaving from the St. George campus at 2 p.m. from 100 Devonshire Place (1 Block East of St.George Street & 1 Block South of Bloor). The Rally begins at 4 pm at UTM, South Building.

4/16/2009

RALLY: DEMAND ACCESS to EDUCATION

RALLY APRIL 16th DEMANDING ACCESSIBLE EDUCATION & AN END TO THE CRIMINALIZATION OF DISSENT
As many students are struggling just to survive and afford their education, the University of Toronto and other universities across Ontario are plotting to raise tuition fees. The U of T Governing Council seeks to pass a motion at their next meeting on Thursday, April 16 for further increases of almost 5%. This fee hike will amount to close to $40 million in revenue coming directly from students’ pockets! In addition, last week the Faculty of Arts and Science voted for flat fees, which will force students taking 3 or more courses to pay as much as those taking a FULL COURSE LOAD. Education is a right and should be free and accessible to all.

The U of T administration has shown that their interests lie in turning a profit off the backs of students, while criminalizing those who take a stand against tuition increases. A year later, bogus charges are STILL being pursued against four community members for allegedly participating in a peaceful sit-in against fee increases on March 20, 2008. However, community support continues to grow. Over 100 professors have signed a letter calling to drop the charges and the student code of conduct investigations against the Fight Fees14, and thousands have signed the online petition.

The message is clear; students will not be deterred from exercising their Charter Rights and right to academic freedom. We will join together to take a collective stand against this systemic assault on equity and access on campus and gather outside the upcoming Governing Council meeting.


Join us in sending a message to President David Naylor to STOP CHARGING STUDENTS!

WHAT: Rally Demanding Accessible Education and an End to Charges

WHEN: Thursday, April 16 at 4 pm

WHERE: Simcoe Hall, 27 Kings College Circle, University of Toronto

BRING: Pots, pans and anything loud; banners; and all your friends

4/15/2009

Press Release

For Immediate Release: Toronto - Wednesday, April 15, 2009

RALLY DEMANDS ACCESSIBLE EDUCATION
And an end to the criminalization of dissent at the University of Toronto

Rally at UofT’s Governing Council Meeting:
Thursday, April 16th, 4:00 p.m.
Simcoe Hall, 27 Kings College Circle
Speakers, performances, free food

U of T’s Governing Council is proposing a further 4.5% tuition fee increase. This fee hike will amount to close to $40 million in revenue coming directly from students’ pockets. In addition, last week theFaculty of Arts and Science voted for ‘flat fees’, which will force students taking 3 or more courses to pay as much as those taking a FULL COURSE LOAD.

The community will gather Thursday, April 16 at 4 p.m. to protest these unprecedented fee hikes and also to support the remaining four out of 14 students/allies with charges from last year’s demonstration against rising fees at the University of Toronto. Over 100 professors have since signed a letter addressed to U of T President David Naylor in support of the Fight Fees 14 and against UofT’s attempts to penalize student dissent. These tactics are clearly meant to deter students from protesting against the University’s continual fee hikes. Toronto Police charged the 14 individuals a month after the peaceful sit-in on March 20, 2008 following UofT’s threats to investigate students under the Code of Student Conduct. The letter, signed by most of the 100 professors states:

"It is evident that the University of Toronto’s administration collaborated with Toronto Police in pressing charges against fourteen members of our university community. It is further evident that this move was taken to repress the expression of dissent at a time when the University administration is publicly and aggressively calling for the commercialization of student fees through deregulation."

A year later the case is unwinding as charges against most have been dropped; four others await trial in September after refusing to sign a peace bond that prevents them from exercising their Charter Rights to participate in peaceful protest on campus and attend Governing Council meetings. Joeita Gupta, VP External of the Association of Part-time Undergraduate Students (APUS) and incoming UofT Student Governor says,

"Students are saying ‘enough is enough’. Across the board U of T is cutting access programs and increasing tuition fees to unprecedented levels. Simultaneously they put millions towards elite sports and expanding business administration. This time they have crossed the line. We will stand together to speak up against these increases andagainst the criminalization of students who are leaders in advocating for the rights of students.

Join students and concerned community members on Thursday, April 16th, 4:00 p.m. to hear speakers and live performances.

Contact for media interviews: Joeita Gupta 416-918-1935 and Katie Wolk 647-830-5283

More information: fightfeescoalition.blogspot.com and www.fightfees.ca or email us fightfeescoalition@gmail.com

4/03/2009

Over 100 Professors Signed Letter of Support

Read the list of professors below

To the University of Toronto Community:

On March 20, 2008, a group of over forty students and their allies staged a nonviolent sit-in at the
University of Toronto’s Simcoe Hall to protest rising student fees. Nearly one month later, eleven students, two staff members working at the University, and one alumnus were charged and arrested for alleged forcible confinement, mischief to property, and forcible detainment. The fourteen were released on strict bail conditions. Initially, all were prevented from participating in any demonstration on campus. This condition was challenged by the accused and was found to be unconstitutional. Current bail conditions prevent the accused from communicating with one another, and the University administration has banned some from setting foot on university property via trespass orders.

The University of Toronto’s administration has disingenuously distanced itself from the trumped-up
criminal charges and the restrictive bail conditions, relegating them instead to the exclusive purview of the Toronto Police, while continuing to press forward with Code of Student Conduct investigations against those same students. The twist is that the University administration threatened the students in question with investigation long before the Toronto Police did.

It is evident that the University of Toronto’s administration collaborated with Toronto Police in pressing
charges against fourteen members of our university community. It is further evident that this move was taken to repress the expression of dissent at a time when the University administration is publicly and aggressively calling for the commercialization of student fees through deregulation. This repression is all the more striking given that the University’s own purpose statement indicates that

Within the unique university context, the most crucial of all human rights are the rights of

freedom of speech, academic freedom, and freedom of research. And we affirm that these rights
are meaningless unless they entail the right to raise deeply disturbing questions and provocative
challenges to the cherished beliefs of society at large and of the university itself.

When the University of Toronto’s administration criminalizes the rights of students and activists to
question and criticize University policies, their “rights of freedom of speech” are being violated. The University administration’s crackdown on the protests and on those allegedly involved therein directly contradicts its stated position on the fundamental rights of individuals to express dissent against those in power. The criminalization of activists is clearly an attempt at silencing the voices of dissidents and critics of the University administration’s policies on the commercialization of post-secondary education, and must be vehemently opposed.

We assert that this university exists as a space for critical dialogue only because of the participation of its
students, workers, faculty members, alumni and other community members – and in particular we recognize those whose involvement goes unrecognized because they are not the ones with millions of dollars to donate. As faculty members at the University of Toronto, we express our dissent against the administration’s actions. The right to academic freedom is meaningless if the right to freedom of speech – and especially the right to speak truth to power – is being violated.

We call on the University of Toronto’s administration to immediately stop all proceedings against the
students being investigated under the Code of Student Conduct and repeal the trespass orders. We further call on the University of Toronto’s administration to immediately express, clearly and unequivocally, that it has no interest in pursuing criminal charges in connection to this or any other peaceful protest.
________________________________________________________________________
CC: David Naylor, President of the University of Toronto

Chris Bentley, Attorney General of the Province of Ontario
George Luste, President of the University of Toronto Faculty Association
Penni Stewart, President of the Canadian Association of University Teachers