Concordia, McGill students stage walkout over alleged sexual misconduct, demand more action
Students from both universities gathered at Community Square on McGill's downtown campus
Following widespread allegations of sexual misconduct at both major English universities in Montreal, students at McGill and Concordiaare takingsteps to try to change things literally.
A few hundred walked out of their classrooms today in an effort to force their administrations to acknowledge the extent of the problem, and take wider stepsto change things.
The walkoutstarted at 2 p.m. and was organized by theConcordiaStudent Union andStudents' Society ofMcGillUniversity(SSMU).
I spoke to frm. @Concordia student Sophia Sahrane of @aveqnous & McGill student/floor fellow Nike Fashola on @cbcHomerun at the student walkout calling on @mcgillu & @Concordia to take sexual misconduct/assault allegations seriously. Both say universities have let students down pic.twitter.com/3T3ZbqeJtN
—@MFundira
Protesters brandished signs that read, "Who are you protecting?" and "Do you care about survivors?" in an effort to catch the university's attention.
"We deserve to be safe in our classes, we deserve to be safe [during] office hours to talk to profs," said MaeveBotham, aMcGillpolitical science student who didn't go to her class today so that she could take part in the walkout.
The protestcomes following an open letter from student leaders at McGill, which alleges the school has not done enough to address complaints against at least five professors in the Faculty of Arts over allegations of "abusive" behaviour and sexual violence.
For Connor Spencer, vice-president of external affairs for the Students' Society of McGill University (SSMU), it was important to organize alongside Concordia to show the scope of the issue.
"I think McGill is trying to work within its own bubble," Spencer told CBC Daybreak's Mike Finnerty Wednesday morning.
"That's why it's important we bring Concordia, and what happened on their campus, to our campus."
Same cause, different requests
Though the students are mobilizing for the same cause, their requests differ.
McGill student organizers are calling for an external investigation into the university's handling of complaints made against professors, and a stand-alone sexual violence policy.
On the Concordia side, students want to include student voices in the reformative investigation that is already underway.
Maeve Botham- McGill University Student walking out of class to denounce sexual misconduct on campus pic.twitter.com/QmwLjf9EFD
—@SudhaCBC
They also want recommendations from the Our Turn Report, a student-led action plan to end sexual violence spearheaded by SSMU, to be incorporated into ConcordiaUniversity'ssexual violence policy.
"We all demand an acknowledgment of the extent of the problem. And we demand change," reads the Facebook event description.
Universities respond
Both universities say they have been taking steps to acknowledge the allegations.
In response to the SSMU's open letter, McGill's administration said in a statement that the university doesn't tolerate sexual misconduct in any form.
"It is not the case that McGill's leadership ignores reports of sexual misconduct by members of our community," the statement reads.
It adds that many resources are available to students, and that a committee to implement a policy against sexual violence, with student-faculty representation, has a mandate to report to the provost by fall 2018.
A few hundred here at McGill and more on the way from Concordia pic.twitter.com/nwH45OuRbo
—@Steverukavina
Concordia responded to the walk-out by saying its task force on sexual misconduct and sexual violence is consulting with the Concordia communityand that the university encourages students to participate "through any avenues open to them," read astatement sent toCBC.
"Their input is vital to the work we are doing."
Representatives from Concordias English department criticize universitys handling of complaints in creative writing department pic.twitter.com/FzSKT9aVjt
—@Steverukavina
With files from CBC Montreal Daybreak and CBC reporters Sudha Krishnan, Steve Rukavina