Central Student Association

Central Student Association
Institution University of Guelph
Location Guelph, Ontario, Canada
Established 1979
Website Official Central Student Association website

The Central Student Association (also known as the CSA) is the student union for all undergraduate students at the University of Guelph.

History

The current CSA is the third iteration of a central student union on the Guelph campus. It was founded in 1973. The first cross-College student government was Union Council which lasted from the end of World War Two until 1970 when—because of a major disagreement over the University Centre—the University drove it into bankruptcy and dissolution.

In 1966 students agreed to fund a "Student Union Building" with no university operations in it at all. In 1968 they agreed—again by referendum—to fund an expanded building which was to be called the University Community Centre which would house university run services that students needed to directly access such as counselling services, registration and financial aid.

By 1970 the University decided that the building would be all that and also house all administration functions as well. Union Council claimed that such a building would violate the terms of the referendum and therefore they should build what the students said they wanted or return the money collected. The University countered by saying that the newly incorporated Union Council (which changed its name to the University of Guelph Student Union) had no say in how the fees collected would be spent, that they didn't "recognize" this new entity as the legitimate student government. At the same time, the University decided that fees paid to the Union Council (which they had collected up to this point and gave over to the new "Student Union" that they claimed had no standing) should be voluntary. They stopped collecting the fee and that soon drove the organization into bankruptcy. With no money to operate or to fight the University Centre battle with, the organization dissolved itself.

The second student "government" was the Committee of College Presidents (OAC, OVC, Mac, and Arts). It was a loose association whose main function was to make sure that social events and some services (such as the Ontarion) would survive. It lasted only three years—long enough for the University to take the student money and build the building they'd decided on. The Committee didn't do much except to create a real student government called the University of Guelph Central Student (note the singular "student") Association. It was first known as UGCSA, but it lost the UG a couple of years later and by 1977 it was known by all as the CSA. Unlike the Committee, it was a directly elected body, and soon an incorporated one.

One of its first actions was to sue the University for breach of trust over the University Centre. The CSA worked to regain student control of the UC from the University in the 1970s and finally settled out of court on the matter, establishing a University Centre Board with a majority of student representatives. Students continue to pay a fee for the building.

From 1973 until 1993 the CSA had a structure with a President and Vice Presidents (varying in number) and a voting council made up of reps from the Colleges (one appointed by the College Student Government and two voted in "at large"). After 1993 the structure has been flattened, with various kinds of Commissioners and Spokespeople representing the various (and changing) efforts of the Association. In addition there are now voting places for other student organizations and groups as well as the Colleges.

The CSA was a member local of the Canadian Federation of Students (CFS) from 1987 until a referendum by the students in the spring of 2010 where more than 40 percent of eligible voters turned out and by a margin of more than 3 to 1 voted in favour of termination their membership with the federation.

About

The CSA is a democratically organized, dues paying student union representing over 16,000 full and part-time undergrad students at the University of Guelph.

The purpose of the CSA is to bring together the elected representatives of all the college governments on campus. The CSA also has appointed members of campus organizations into a single body. The CSA provides services such as a health plan, the universal bus pass, and the Student Help and Advocacy Centre. The CSA also owns and operates the Bullring campus pub, and also has a controlling stake on the Board of Directors for the University Centre. Many Campus Organizations and Clubs are recognized under the CSA, and together with the different club offices, occupy over half of the second floor of the University Centre.

Administration

The student government is administered by five full-time undergraduate executives in a non-hierarchical manner. These executives are:

There are also other full-time staff members overseeing operations. The part-time staff are mostly made up of undergrad students.

On multiple levels, the CSA is controlled by student volunteers and paid employees. The day-to-day operations are overseen by the elected Executive, who also run the various campaigns and provide advocacy for all undergrads and are assisted by the full-time long-term staff.

The elected and appointed Board of Directors holds open meetings every two weeks throughout the school year and over the summer semester, though emergency meetings are also called when needed. Twice a year, the general membership meets to review the auditor's report, ratify changes made to the CSA's by-laws by the Board of Directors, and provide ground level participation to the operation of the CSA.[1]

For a list of employees, check the Staff Listing Page.

Elections

Elections are held every March to select the next years Executive and Board. Along with this, all the part-time positions are re-staffed. Volunteers also assist the CSA with campaigns and referendums on issues like the rising cost of tuition, the environment and globalization.

Board of Directors

CSA Board of Directors meet four times per semester. Board meetings are scheduled in advance, and are held on Wednesdays. In the summer months, the board meetings are held in the CSA Boardroom, and in the Fall and Winter semesters, they usually meet in a larger room in the University Centre. All the Board meetings are open to the public, and are traditionally begun with a motion to extend speaking rights to all present, so that visitors may contribute to the process. Only members of the Board of Directors hold voting rights.[2]

Votes on the CSA Board of Directors are held by the 5 Executives, 14 At-Large individuals (elected, 2 per college), 7 College Governments (appointed), and 9 student organizations (appointed).[3]

Executive Commissioners

Year Communications and Corporate Affairs Finance & Operations Local Affairs Academic & University Affairs External Affairs
2016-2017 Zoey Ross Ryan Shoot Jay

Rojas (elected October 2016 in by-election)

Meghan Wing Miriam Kearney (resigned August 2016)

Emily Vance (elected October 2016 in by-election)

2015-2016 Sonia Chwalek Matthew Campbell Scarlett Raczyski Peter Miller Asia Barclay
2014-2015 Sonia Chwalek Colin Morris Brittany Skelton Peter Miller Sonali Menezes
2013-2014 Chris Archibald N. Charles Hamilton Tyler Valiquette Julia Forster Dominica McPherson
2012-2013 Drew Garvie Joshua Ofori-Darko Matthew Pecore Deaglan (MC) McManus Dominica McPherson
2011-2012 Lauren Ramsay (resigned August 2011)

Drew Garvie (elected October 2011 in by-election)

Joshua Ofori-Darko Derek Alton Jessica Carter Demetria Jackson
2010-2011 Demetria Jackson Nick Stepanov Anastasia Zavarella Kevin Bowman Denise Martins
2009-2010 Gavin Armstrong Joshua Gaber Galen Fick Nathan Lachowsky Momina Mir
2008-2009 Jeff Rotman Joel Harnest Arden Hagedorn Christi Garneau-Scott Cailey Campbell
2007-2008 Meaghan Hourigan Jakki Doyle Evan Dalzell Derek Pieper Cailey Campbell
2006-2007 Jonathan Odumeru Chris Killer Bre Walt Becky Wallace John Coombs
2005-2006 Hannah Draper Andrew Munroe Erika Gates Kim Neale Scott Gilbert
2004-2005 J-me Allen Sean Field Erika Gates Jenn Watt Ryan White
2003-2004 Derek Husser Quentin Sinclair Andrew Langille David Hornsby Luke Weiler
2002-2003 Dave Hauch Sanjay Chakraburtty Tahira Dosani Erinn White David Sone

Services

The CSA provides a number of services to its constituency. These include:

See also

References

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