Memorial University of Newfoundland Students' Union

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Established1961
Members~11,500
Memorial University of Newfoundland Students' Union
InstitutionMemorial University of Newfoundland
LocationSt. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador
Established1961
Members~11,500
AffiliationsCanadian Federation of Students
Websitewww.munsu.ca

Memorial University of Newfoundland Students' Union, (popularly known as "MUNSU") is an undergraduate students' union located in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. It is the official student government representing the students of Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's Campus. Membership in the union is automatic and totals around 11,500 undergraduate students.[1] MUNSU is local 35 of the Canadian Federation of Students,[2] one of the national organizations of student unions in Canada. MUNSU is one of very few students' unions in Canada to be directly recognized in provincial legislation as the official representatives of the student body (see: The Memorial University Act).

The Students' Union Board of Directors is composed of thirty eight elected representatives including five Executive members, and faculty and constituency representatives. Elections for these positions are held annually in March. A by-election to fill vacant positions is normally held in the fall semester.[3]

Executive Positions

  • Director of External Affairs, Communications, and Research
  • Director of Student Life
  • Director of Finance & Services
  • Director of Campaigns
  • Director of Advocacy

In 2017-2018, a vote was taken to eliminate the five directors at large, in favour of five new constituency representatives. The 2017-2018 MUNSU board of directors was to last to feature five directors at large. The March 2018 MUNSU general election was the first not to have directors at large in recent MUNSU history.

Committees

The board is broken down bi-weekly into several different working committees, chaired by at least one executive director.[3] Committees include:

  • Advocacy Committee - chaired by the Director of Advocacy
  • Campaigns and Actions Committee - chaired by the Director of Campaigns
  • Student Life and Funding Committee - chaired by the Director of Student Life
  • Finance and Services Committee - chaired by the Director of Finance and Services
  • Membership Engagement Committee - chaired by the Director of External Affairs, Communications, and Research
  • Hiring Committee - chaired by the Director of Finance and Services
  • Women and Marginalized Genders Committee - chaired by the Women and Marginalized Genders Representative and a non-male member of the executive
  • Elections Committee - chaired by the CRO (Chief Returning Officer) or a designate
  • Breezeway Working Group - chaired by the Director of Finance and Services
  • Policy Review Committee - chaired by the Director of External Affairs, Communications, and Research

Services

The MUN Students' Union operates a number of services to meet the needs of members and to offer alternatives to university-provided options at affordable cost to students.[4] Some services include:

  • The Breezeway - Student Bar
  • CHMR-FM 93.5 - Student radio station
  • The Attic - copy shop, post office, general goods
  • Health & Dental Insurance
  • ISIC (International Student Identity Card) - Student discount card
  • SafeDrive - Safe escort service for those travelling off-campus
  • Grocery Shuttle - weekly shuttle to and from the grocery store

Resource Centres

The Students' Union currently sponsors seven resource centres:[5]

  • The Circle: First Nations, Inuit, & Métis Resource Centre
  • Disability Information and Support Centre (DISC)
  • International Student Centre (ISC)
  • MUN Sexual and Gender Advocacy (MUN SAGA)
  • Students Older Than Average (SOTA)
  • Student Parents' Assistance and Resource Centre (SPARC)
  • Intersections: A Resource Centre for Marginalized Genders

Activities

The union plans several activities for students during the school year, as well as assisting coordinate several community events. These include but are not limited to:

  • Fall Welcome Weeks & Orientation Concert
  • Winter Welcome & Winter Carnival
  • MUN Pride on Campus
  • Black History Month at MUN

Campaigns

MUNSU is engaged in several campaigns for change at both the student level and national level.[6]

  • Education is a Right
  • Fairness for International Students
  • Work is Work
  • Reconcili-Action
  • End Gender-Based Violence
  • Trans Healthcare
  • Equity and Accessibility
  • Free Palestine

Under its bylaws, passed in November 2013, MUNSU is also required to "promote all CFS and CFS-NL related campaigns".

Achievements

MUNSU has been successful in winning and maintaining a tuition freeze at the university, giving Memorial the lowest tuition fees of any Canadian university.[7] The freeze lasted from 1999 until 2022, becoming a significant factor in attracting students to study in Newfoundland and Labrador for over twenty years.

In 2001, MUNSU was successful in winning a 25% reduction in tuition for domestic students that took place over the next three years, and was subsequently frozen in place until 2022.

In 2002, MUNSU won a campaign to have the MUN bookstore stop selling clothing produced in sweatshops.

In 2007, MUNSU held province-wide actions that resulted in the provincial grants program being partially reinstated and, historically, Newfoundland and Labrador becoming the only province to include international students in provincial public health coverage.

In 2009, MUNSU won a campaign to have the interest on Newfoundland and Labrador provincial student loans eliminated.[8]

During Orientation 2009 the union joined with the university administration to ban bottled water from the university campus.[9][10]

During Budget 2014 (March/April 2014), the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador announced an end to the provincial student loan program, to be replaced with non-repayable up-front needs-based grants.

In early 2023, after Memorial's Faculty Association (MUNFA) went on strike for two weeks, MUNSU won a 10% tuition refund for all undergraduate students that semester despite reluctance from the administration. They did this by using a mass e-mail campaign.

In spring 2023, MUNSU pressured the government into spending $10 million to remove the Campus Renewal Fee, which was a $50 per course mandatory fee for all students at Memorial University and Marine Institute.[11]

Also in 2023, following a petition signed by over two-thirds of engineering students, MUN administration increased stipend work term pay from $2500 to $3500, which was still several thousand dollars below the current minimum wage.[12]

Later in 2023, MUNSU and CFS-NL saved the Student Wellness and Counselling Centre from losing accreditation by convincing MUN administration to re-hire positions they were at the time refusing to fill.

Controversy and criticism

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI