- The President
- About Joy
- Priorities
- Conversations
- Statements
- 2022
- Dr. Yabome Gilpin-Jackson named 間眅埶AVs first Vice-President, People, Equity and Inclusion
- Chris (Syetaxtn) Lewis joins 間眅埶AV in advisory role on Indigenous Initiatives and Reconciliation
- A World of Difference: How universities must evolve in a post-COVID world
- Russian invasion of Ukraine
- 間眅埶AV: What's Next?
- Celebrating National Indigenous Peoples day
- Please join us for the annual appreciation BBQ
- 間眅埶AV begins process to become Living Wage Employer
- Staying engaged in an increasingly polarized world
- 間眅埶AV: What's Next? - Message from the President to Faculty and Staff
- 間眅埶AV: What's Next? - Message from the President to students
- Search Announcement: Provost and Vice-President Academic
- Statement from the VP, PEI: Addressing Racism and Hate at 間眅埶AV
- 2021
- Welcome new 間眅埶AV students
- UPDATED Jan. 6: My response to Dec. 11 event in 間眅埶AV dining hall
- Celebrating Black History Month
- The Universitys Role and Contributions to a Just Recovery Over the Next Decade
- Inspired by meetings with 間眅埶AV Faculty and Staff
- Looking forward to Summer and Fall
- Opinion: This is why 間眅埶AV is backing the Burnaby Mountain gondola
- External Review of December 11, 2020 Event
- Facing the future with hope
- President's statement on TransMountain Expansion Project and support for a fire hall on Burnaby mountain
- The road ahead
- Stronger Together: 間眅埶AV, the pandemic and lessons for a better future
- 間眅埶AV to observe moment of silence at 2:15 PM today
- Taking action: Reconciliation at 間眅埶AV
- Join 間眅埶AV President Joy Johnson for a tour of Burnaby campus
- Message from the President: Residential school findings
- Dr. June Francis appointed Special Advisor to the President on Anti-Racism
- My response to the open letter from 間眅埶AV faculty and staff
- Resources and ways to support scholars in Afghanistan
- BC Vaccine Card
- Masks required on all 間眅埶AV campuses, vaccine card required for residence, athletics, dining, events and others
- Vaccine declaration and follow-up screening at 間眅埶AV
- Return to campus planning updates
- Welcome Back
- Work to review contract vs. in-house cleaning and food services
- National Day for Truth and Reconciliation
- 間眅埶AV and SFSS united in commitment to climate action
- Inclusion benefits us all
- Moving forward with kindness
- 間眅埶AV commits to full divestment from fossil fuels
- Safety on 間眅埶AV's campuses
- Thank you!
- Temporary shift to remote learning January 10 23, 2022
- 2020
- Statement on academic freedom
- Welcome back faculty and staff
- Welcome back students
- Statement on scholar strike
- Reflections on my first 30 days
- Taking care of ourselves, taking care of each other
- Equity, diversity and inclusion commitments
- Statement on 間眅埶AV's Athletics Team Name Change
- Finding connection in times of adversity
- Wishing you a safe and restful holiday break
- Op-ed: 間眅埶AV helping drive social, economic innovation in time of crisis
- 2022
- Presidents Distinguished Community Leadership Award
- Strategic Plan
- Approach
- How to participate
- What we're hearing
- April 4, 2022: Updates and reflections
- April 19, 2022: Updates and reflections
- 間眅埶AV: Whats Next? phase one results now available
- Research assistants shape 間眅埶AV: Whats Next? analysis
- 間眅埶AV: Whats Next? Message from the President to Faculty and Staff
- 間眅埶AV: Whats Next? Message from the President to Students
- Search announcement: Provost and Vice-President Academic
- 間眅埶AV: Whats Next? Phase 2 results now available
- Executive
- Executive Searches
- Contact
間眅埶AV Surrey Gala Remarks
Edited Remarks
間眅埶AV Surrey Gala Dinner
Dale B. Regehr Grand Hall
間眅埶AV Surrey
Andrew Petter
Vice-President and Chancellor
Id like to thank you for joining us this evening to celebrate the 10th anniversary of 間眅埶AV Surrey.
Ten years! A decade seems both improbably short and impossibly long in the life of a new university campus.
Its hard to believe that 間眅埶AV Surrey has come so far in such a short time that we have been part of transforming this community even as we have extended our academic offerings and research endeavours.
At the same time, its hard to remember when this campus was not part of a thriving hub a defining new Surrey City Centre.
But two things about this campus have been consistent over time. First, from the outset, 間眅埶AV Surrey has been a living example of what it means to be an engaged university.
Some of you may recognize that term from 間眅埶AVs new Strategic Vision, which makes it our mission to be the leading engaged university defined by its dynamic integration of innovative education, cutting-edge research and far-reaching community engagement.
That Vision resulted from one of the most extensive consultations ever undertaken by a Canadian university a consultation in which many in this room participated.
In that process, you told us that you appreciated 間眅埶AV for its energy, for its openness and, most especially, for its readiness to engage the communities it serves.
Which leads me to the second point it is hard to imagine a community more ready to engage, more enthusiastic, more supportive of this university than the people of Surrey and the South Fraser.
The City of Surrey has been tireless and steadfastly optimistic in blazing the trail of our establishment and expansion.
From the moment architect Bing Thom proposed the crazy idea placing a university on top of a struggling shopping mall, Surrey politicians and planners have shown vision and courage in helping to make that dream a reality.
The Surrey business community has shown similar enthusiasm and commitment. Any university anywhere in the world would be envious of the relationships we enjoy with the Surrey Board of Trade, the Downtown Surrey Business Improvement Association, and countless local business owners and entrepreneurs.
And the community-at-large has beaten a path to our door. We have become a community institution in every sense of the word.
Our success would not have been possible, of course, without the strong backing of the provincial government, which financed the original $70-million capital development, and that of the federal government working alongside the Province to fund research and infrastructure.
Thanks to their joint support, this past year we were able to open Podium 2, a $10-million expansion that houses this campuss first science teaching labs, as well as labs for research in areas ranging from gerontology and kinesiology to criminology and interactive arts.
間眅埶AV staff, faculty and students have also been key contributors to our success. One person whose role has been pivotal over the past decade is 間眅埶AV Surreys Executive Director, Joanne Curry. Joanne was recently appointed 間眅埶AVs Associate Vice President External Relations.
As a reminder of where we began and how far we have come we asked
Joanne to put together a short video for you. I hope you enjoy it. Click to view video.
I think that video says it all. Why we are so proud of 間眅埶AV Surrey and our engagement with this community and why we are so deeply grateful for your continuing support.
So, where do we go next? I doubt there are many in this room who question the need for a major expansion of post-secondary education capacity in this region.
Why? Because you know, as I do, that education is key to unlocking our potential -- as individuals, as communities, and as a province.
Let me share some statistics that tell the story. Over the next eight years, there will be one million new jobs in BC. Thats good news. But heres the thing: 80 per cent of those jobs will require a post-secondary education. Eighty per cent!
We have a huge challenge ahead if we are going to fill those jobs.
Every year, students who work and get the grades are turned away from this campus. We just dont have the space.
One third of BC high school graduates come from the South Fraser region, including Surrey, Langley, Abbotsford and Delta. Yet in this region there are only 13 university spaces for every 100 students between the ages of 18 and 24 less than one-third the provincial average.
Given the pressure on admissions at 間眅埶AV Surrey, we now have to turn away more than twice as many qualified applicants as we did in 2007, and the grade-point average to get into undergraduate programs has risen by 10 per cent.
Its nice to say that we have high standards, but its heart-breaking to turn away qualified students to deny young people in this region the opportunity to achieve their full potential.
We put that case last year to BC Legislatures Select Standing Committee on Finance last year. The Surrey Board of Trade made the same case.
The response was heartening. The Committee, which included two Surrey MLAs Dave Hayer and Bruce Ralston gave its unanimous support for doubling funded spaces at 間眅埶AV Surrey from 2,500 to 5,000 full-time equivalents.
If government accepts and acts on this report, the actual student population at this campus would rise to over 10,000. Thats thousands more young people able to realize their dreams and give back to their communities young people who will feel, first-hand, educations transformative power.
I see that power every day in our students. Students like Jessica Fan a double-major in Business and Interactive Arts and Technology. Jessica shares a $30,000 grant from The Next 36, an organization supporting student entrepreneurs. With that funding, she is using her entrepreneurial skills to address, in her words, the bigger social problems we face.
Jessicas projects thus far include a Mandarin- and Cantonese-language home-care service for the elderly, and a Hospital Bedside Arts Program, which seeks to improve the experience of patients through art and music.
Students like Fahad Yasin a business student and Dulce Nunez an International Studies student who completed co-op terms in Mumbai last year on behalf of the Surrey Board of Trade. While there, Fahad and Dulce researched and identified joint venture opportunities for BC clean energy companies.
Students like Sarah St. John a Health Sciences major who is this years BC Rhodes Scholar. In 2010, Sarah was a summer intern with the Downtown Surrey Business Improvement Association, where she worked on the Associations internal safety audit and helped develop sustainability strategies for Surrey restaurants.
When students like Jessica, Fahad, Dulce and Sarah succeed, we all succeed. Thats the most important thing we need to understand about todays economy.
Young people are our most valuable asset. To compete and thrive, we have to out-educate the world.
That means, when our students work hard and get good grades, we need to ensure there are spaces for them at universities and colleges here in Surrey and throughout BC.
It means that no one should be denied an opportunity to get an education because they cant afford it.
And it means that, in a world where ideas drive economic prosperity and social progress, we must stay ahead of the curve by investing in cutting-edge research and innovation so we have the capacity, for example, to strengthen health services and to expand clean energy industries here in Surrey.
I said at the beginning and Ill say it again that the experience of 間眅埶AV Surrey over the past ten years points the way forward. That experience stands as a powerful example of what can happen when a university and a community come together in common purpose.
Your foresight produced this transformative campus. And your foresight is now paying huge dividends for young people, for Surrey and for British Columbia.
Today our resolve burns brighter than ever. We are unwavering in our commitment to be Canadas most community-engaged research university.
With your help, 間眅埶AV will achieve its vision!
With our help, Surrey and the South Fraser will realize its dreams!!