Statement on Faculty Association Voting Breach

16 October 2024

 

 

Dear President Johnson,


We are writing as concerned SFU faculty and members of the Faculty Association (SFUFA) regarding the university’s failure to deal with the grievous interference with our democratic process that took place during our AGM votes over solidarity with Palestine and divestment from weapons manufacturers. This issue, which has long preoccupied our union membership, has also become a matter of public concern for  SFU communities and university workers in BC more broadly, in the wake of the publication of an article in The Maple about the incident (Emma Paling, ‘Prof’s Palestine Motions Target Of Alleged Hack And Legal Challenge,’ 3 October 2024). 

 

We believe that the university’s response to this matter has been wholly inadequate, leading to a crisis of confidence among many of our members in SFU’s willingness to treat the faculty association in the spirit of openness, accountability and communication laid out in our collective agreement. We would like to call your attention to Art. 7.1 ‘The Parties agree to the regular exchange of information required for effective bargaining and administration of the Collective Agreement’ as well as the commitment in Art. 14.1 ‘to ensure compliance with BC’s Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act regarding access to general information.’ 

 

While the university has communicated to SFUFA exec that it has concluded its investigation, it has not communicated to the exec or to the wider membership: 

 

(a) whether the investigation identified the person(s) responsible for the interference with the motions; 

 

(b) whether that individual(s) is a SFUFA member or SFU employee; 

 

(c) what disciplinary action if any has been taken; 

 

(d) whether the university deemed this fraudulent interference with a university-owned system to potentially amount to a criminal act, and whether it has contacted the RCMP. 

While the university may plausibly claim confidentiality with regard to HR issues, it is perfectly possible to answer the abovementioned questions while not divulging the identity of the individual(s) involved.

 

Moreover, while the alleged fraud took place on a university system, this is a matter internal to SFUFA democracy and procedures, which the university has a responsibility to support and facilitate. Unless there’s a compelling legal reason to retain confidentiality, SFUFA has a right to know if one of its members engaged in a gross breach of the responsibilities attached to union membership, and to act on that knowledge.

 

It is therefore entirely insufficient to argue, as the SFU spokesperson contacted by The Maple did, that the matter is closed because no personal information was compromised and the voting system has now been changed. To downplay the harm to mutual trust and internal democracy in the FA that this breach of the voting system represents is deeply disrespectful to our membership; it neglects that this was above all an infraction against SFUFA and not against the university, and the university bears a responsibility of collaboration, transparency and accountability to the FA.

 

We look forward to your reply.

 

Juan Pablo Alperin, Associate Professor, Publishing Program

Ronda Arab, Professor, Department of English

Yildiz Atasoy, Professor, Department of Sociology and Anthropology

Clifford Atleo, Associate Professor, Resource & Environmental Management

Sabine Bitter, Professor, School for the Contemporary Arts

Nick Blomley, Professor, Geography

Sumercan Bozkurt, Term Lecturer, School for International Studies

Enda Brophy, Associate Professor, School of Communication

Clint Burnham, Professor, English

Mark Christensen, Librarian

Rosemary Collard, Associate Professor, Geography

Stephen Collis, Professor and Chair, Department of English

Heather De Forest, Librarian

Bran Eveland Cron, Archivist

Megan Crouch, Librarian

Sheila Delany, Emerita, English

Stephanie Dick, Assistant Professor, School of Communication

Zoe Druick, Professor, School of Communication

Eiman Elnoshokaty, Librarian

Sarah Christina Ganzon, Assistant Professor, School of Communication

Bruno Guindon, Senior Lecturer, Philosophy

Shane Gunster, Professor, School of Communication

Adair Harper, Librarian

Michael Hart, Professor, Biological Sciences

Leah Hopton, Librarian

Adel Iskandar, Associate Professor, School of Communication

Mohsen Javdani, Associate Professor, School of Public Policy

Genevieve Fuji Johnson, Professor, Political Science

Sharalyn Jordan, Associate Professor, Counselling, Faculty of Education

Julia Lane, Writing Services Coordinator, Library

Claudette Lauzon, Associate Professor, School for the Contemporary Arts

Carolyn Lesjak, Professor, Department of English

Sharon Luk, Associate Professor and Tier 2 Canada Research Chair, Geography

Stefan Maier, Assistant Professor, School of Contemporary Arts

Geoff Mann, Distinguished Professor, Geography

Miwa Matreyek, Assistant Professor, School for the Contemporary Arts

Kirsten Emiko McAllister, Professor, School of Communication

Eugene McCann, Professor, Geography

Cait McKinney, Associate Professor, School of Communication

Elliot Montpellier, Term Lecturer, Sociology and Anthropology

Tamir Moustafa, Professor, School for International Studies

Urooj Nizami, Librarian, Public Knowledge Project (PKP), VPRI

Gerardo Otero, Professor, School of International Studies

Roxanne Panchasi, Associate Professor, Department of History

Stacy L Pigg, Professor, Department of Sociology and Anthropology

Hazel Plante, Librarian

Simone Rapisarda, Associate Professor, School for the Contemporary Arts

Nicholas Reo, Associate Professor, Indigenous Studies

Bernhard Riecke, Professor, School of Interactive Arts and Technology

Chloe Riley, Librarian

Amyn Sajoo, Lecturer and Scholar-in-Residence, Political Science

Barbara Sanders, Associate Professor, Statistics and Actuarial Science

Michael T. Schmitt, Professor, Psychology

Paul Sedra, Associate Professor, History

Nadia Shihab, Assistant Professor, School for the Contemporary Arts

Tammara Soma, Associate Professor, Resource and Environmental Management

Kendra Strauss, Director, The Labour Studies Program

Andréa Tarnawsky, Archivist

Zoe Todd, Associate Professor, Indigenous Studies

Alberto Toscano, Term Research Associate Professor, School of Communication

Cecile Vigouroux, Professor, Department of French

Cathy Walker, Adjunct Professor, Labour Studies Program

Baharak Yousefi, Librarian

Kirsten Zickfeld, Distinguished Professor, Geography

Zoreen, Student Transition Educator, International Services for Students

 

 

Endorsements current as of October 16, 2024. For an updated list of endorsements, please see: 

https://bit.ly/3XZDjPk