On Deatu’s Door: PLAGUE OF THE ZOMBIE SYNDROME..:.6 Studio 58 grad Andy Thompson creates an interactive play that will leave you shaking in your boots Faculty want more say in budget talks Langara College forecasts a total deficit of $6 million over the next three years By CHARLOTTE DREWETT tioning whether their jobs are in jeopardy after receiving an email announcing a budget deficit in the mil- lions though smaller than expected. Langara Faculty Association (LFA) president Lynn Carter said fac- ulty are asking “What's next?” and are con- cerned about how much input they have re- [icin College faculty are ques- garding budget ROY DAYKIN decisions. Vice president of Langara administration President Lane and finance at Trotter circulat- Langara ed the email to Langara faculty and staff announcing that the three-year projected budget deficit has been reduced to $6 million, from the previously calculated $8 mil- lion. The document outlined steps tak- en to reduce the gap as well as a strat- egy to develop new ways to approach the budget. Roy Daykin, vice president, adminis- tration and finance, is heading up a Budget Principles Task Force that will make recommendations to senior lead- ership about the “things that are im- portant to the institution and things that we have to adhere to,” he said. According to Daykin, the task force will meet over the next five weeks and have significant representation from faculty and faculty leadership. “This is about figuring out how we do business differently and developing the principles that drive those deci- sions,” he said. | See FACULTY, page 2 By JAMES GOLDIE eaders of the Non-Partisan Associ- ation (NPA) and Vision Vancouver are each hearing something differ- lent from young Vancouverites about the issues most important to them this election season. Civic election front-runners Kirk LaPointe, NPA, and Gregor Robertson, Vision, will both be participating in next week’s mayoral debate hosted by Langa- ra. “Affordable housing and transit are two top concerns I hear from young peo- ple,” Robertson said. LaPointe, however, has been hearing something different. “I think economic opportunity is the big one,” he said. “They see it as the pathway to having at- tainable housing.” LaPointe said Vancouver needs to be more affordable in general, not only in terms of housing. He said while the NPA encourages rental housing options, the construction of rental-specific apart- ment buildings would not be done by the city under his administration. LaPointe thinks there is already “plenty of development” being done on rental housing. Vision Vancouver will increase sup- ply so there is less pressure on the rent- al market. Robertson said that Vision will approve the creation of 1000 rental units per year over the next four years. More options are important to stu- dents, as long as they are affordable. When asked if any of these rental units would cost less than $1000 per month, Robertson was less certain. “T hope there are some,” he said. SUBMITTED photo (left), JAMES GOLDIE photo “They’re brand new buildings so they’ll be more expensive than the aging sup- ply.” Many students also complain about overcrowded buses that skip stops be- cause they are full. “We need more bus service in Van- couver and throughout the region on the busy routes,” Robertson said. He stressed the urgent need for a Broad- way corridor subway. LaPointe disputed the necessity of this proposed rail system. “We need to stop assuming that there is just one ma- jor artery east-west.” According to LaPointe, congestion on the busiest routes is related to the time of the day students are going to and from school. He said the NPA will de- velop a plan to target those specific times when traffic is at its worst. (centre), SUBMITTED photo (right) Mayor Gregor Robertson (left), Kirk LaPointe (centre), Meena Wong (right), will be participating in the upcoming mayoral debate. Mayoral candidates come to Langara Submitted student questions included in upcoming debate on Oct. 22 66 Affordable housing and transit are two top concerns I hear from young people. GREGOR ROBERTSON MAYOR OF VANCOUVER Welfare challenge brings food for thought Annual event invites all participants to survive on average B.C. welfare rate By SANDY POWLIK For many students and other B.C. residents on welfare, living off of $21 a week for food is a reality. Today is World Food Day and the start of the Welfare Food Challenge, where Raise the Rates, a coalition con- cerned with poverty and homelessness in B.C., invites everyone to only eat | magine living on $21 a week for food. i) what they can buy with $21 for the week. Ashley Belding, a Langara nursing student, said she spent at least $21 a week on campus alone. “I don’t know how people survive on that little,” she said. B.C. has consistently held the highest poverty rate in Canada, based on a re- port by the B.C. Child and Youth Advo- cacy Coalition. According to Raise the Rates orga- nizer Bill Hopwood, the current rate of welfare is not enough. “Nobody now tries to claim you can live on welfare. The whole argument is, you make it miserable so they get off.” On Jan. 1, 2012, Surrey-Fleetwood MLA Jagrup Brar spent a month living on the single person welfare rate of $610. At the end of the month he had lost 26 pounds. According to Hopwood, most people who are poor or on welfare do not live in the Downtown Eastside, but in every community in British Columbia. “The main thing is generating that conversation, information, awareness, and then hopefully that generates politi- cal pressure,” Hopwood said. The 38rd annual Welfare Food Chal- lenge runs from Oct. 16 to Oct. 22. Visit raisetherates.org or welfarefoodchal- lenge.org for more information to get involved. WELFARE FOOD CHALLENGE submitted Protesters are seeking an increase in welfare rates.