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Laurentian faculty are on strike for a stronger university
Summary
Laurentian University faculty have begun a strike after years of concessions during the university's insolvency, and union leaders say the school is now financially stable and the Board of Governors should act.
Content
Laurentian University faculty are on strike, the union says, seeking a stronger institution. The action follows years of cuts and concessions that occurred during the university's insolvency process. LUFA President Fabrice Colin said members made large sacrifices to keep the university operating. He said Laurentian is now financially stable and called on the Board of Governors to respond.
What is reported:
- Faculty at Laurentian University are on strike, according to the Laurentian University Faculty Association (LUFA).
- LUFA President Fabrice Colin said members made large sacrifices during the insolvency process.
- Colin listed job losses, the dismantling of the pension plan, wage rollbacks and dramatically increased workloads as examples of those sacrifices.
- The union said the university is now financially stable and urged the Board of Governors to step up.
Summary:
The strike reflects the union's account that faculty made sacrifices during Laurentian's insolvency and now expect governance to address those impacts. Officials reported the university is financially stable while faculty remain on strike. Undetermined at this time.
