Kinder Morgan donation scholarships refused by Kwantlen students - Action News
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Kinder Morgan donation scholarships refused by Kwantlen students

Students at Kwantlen Polytechnic University are vowing to refuse scholarships to be funded by a $300,000 donation agreement between the university and Kinder Morgan.

University says it will receive $300K in donations from pipeline company over 20 years

Salvador Ferreras, Academic Vice-President and Provost of Kwantlen Polytechnic University, announces the donation agreement with Kinder Morgan. (KPU Media/Flickr)

Students at Kwantlen Polytechnic University are vowing to refuse scholarships to be funded by a $300,000 donation agreement between the university and Kinder Morgan if theTrans Mountain expansion project is approved.

Under the agreement, Kwantlen would receive $15,000 a year, over 20 years, from the pipeline company to fund scholarships for apprenticeships and trades programs, as well as a new environmental protection technical lab.

"Quite frankly those scholarshipsaren'tmassive," said Allison Gonzales, president of theKwantlenStudent Association, who saysthe pipeline expansion contradicts Kwantlen's mandate for sustainability.

"Although its going towards theenvironmentalprotection program, I've already had students tell me that there's absolutely no way they will take that money."

Kinder Morgan is seeking approval from the National Energy Boardto nearly triple the bitumen-carrying capacity of its existing pipelinethat runs from Alberta to Burnaby, B.C.

But the $5.4 billion project has come under fire from environmental activists and First Nations groups, who sayit would increase the possibility of oil spills, risking threats to the environmentand wildlife.

No political stance

Lizette Parsons Bell with the Trans Mountain expansion project announces a deal with KPU Vice-President to donate $300,000 to the university over 20 years. (KPU Media/Flickr)
"I have no real qualms about it," said Salvador Ferreras, Provost and Academic Vice President of the university.

"The optics sometimes will be uncomfortable... these are...difficult decisionsthat we have to make on behalf of the success of all the students."

The student association, which represents over 18,000 students enrolled at the university's four campuses,said in a statement that acceptance of the money amounts to a "tacit endorsement" of the Trans Mountain pipeline.

ButFerrerassays the university does not have a political stance on the project.

"It's a sensitive issue...we do not have a position on the pipeline itself, butwe do have a position on our students' success," he said.

"That's where we focus our energy."

This is the second large commitment Kinder Morgan has made contingent on the approval of its pipeline expansion.

In April, it pledged half a million dollars to Thompson Rivers University in Kamloops.