While Laurentian is set to move out of the CCAA process, members of the Tricultural Committee for University Education say otherwise: there are still many challenges to overcome
After 20 torturous months of the CCAA, the Laurentian administration would like the public to believe the CCAA process is coming to an end, but it is not.
Laurentian’s administrators and board of governors are raising unrealistic expectations that Laurentian will bounce back to financial health, restore programs, and live up to its tricultural mandate, once they emerge from the CCAA. This is an illusion. Laurentian 2.0 will not resurrect the range of programs, proper staffing, and community connections it once had.
So far the Laurentian board hasn’t uttered a peep about the travesty of their treatment of the federated universities and their students, faculty and staff — or their colonialist contempt for consultation in the closing of the Indigenous Studies program, the second oldest in Canada.
The CCAA was also destructive for Anglophone programs, students, and faculty. It devastated arts and basic sciences programs, cultural and sports activities.
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