Recent News
- Pre-Election Letter to CUFA BC Members - May 10, 2013
- Professors Support NDP Proposal on Needs-Based Student Grants, but Say More Still Can Be Done - April 23, 2013
- CUFA BC Releases E-Book on Academic Governance - April 10, 2013
- UBC-O, UNBC and SFU Professors to be Honoured for Using Their Research in Service of the Community - April 3, 2013
Articles
University Profs Call for Suspension of Lansbridge University - October 18, 2006
- Details
- Published on Wednesday, 18 October 2006 15:21
- Written by Robert Clift
in Response to Owner's Illegal Activities
CUFA/BC News Release
October 18, 2006
October 18, 2006
In response to today's report that Michael Lo and Kingston College had
"repeatedly and flagrantly" mislead students and government officials, the
organization representing BC's public university professors demanded that the
provincial government suspend operations of Mr. Lo's other post-secondary
institution, Lansbridge University.
"There is now incontrovertible evidence that Michael Lo has misled students
and government officials for more than six years about degree-granting
activities at Kingston College," said Robert Clift, Executive Director of the
Confederation of University Faculty Associations of BC (CUFA/BC). "If this
information had been known when he applied to operate Lansbridge University in
British Columbia, he would never have received approval. Clearly Lansbridge
University's BC operations must be shut down."
The investigation by Jim Wright, registrar of the Private Career Training
Institutions Agency (PCTIA), found that Michael Lo and Kingston College had
contravened the Private Post-Secondary Education Act, the Private Career
Training Institutions Act, the University Act, and the Degree Authorization Act
over a six-year period.
"The PCTIA has ordered Kingston College shut down," Clift said. "In light
of these revelations, Advanced Education Minister Murray Coell has to protect
students from Michael Lo potentially defrauding students at Lansbridge
University or one of his high schools."
The university professors said this case highlights the gross inadequacies
in provincial legislation to protect students from unscrupulous and illegal
operators.
"The students who initiated this investigation are left out in the cold
because there are no provisions to protect them from this type of illegal
activity," Clift said. "We are demanding that Minister Coell bring forward
legislation this spring to establish an independent office with the power to
hear student complaints, shut down questionable institutions, and order
restitution for students who are victims of this type of fraud."
Representing 4,200 university professors, instructors, academic librarians
and other academic staff at SFU (Burnaby, Vancouver and Surrey campuses), UBC
(Vancouver and Kelowna campuses), UNBC, UVic and Royal Roads University, CUFA/BC
monitors BC's post-secondary education policy, conducts research, and provides
advice to government on how they can improve post-secondary learning and
research.


