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which this article appears: Smoking
BMJ 2003;326:519 ( 8 March )
News
University is criticised for accepting tobacco money
David Spurgeon, Quebec
The University of St Michael's College at the University of Toronto has been
severely criticised for having accepted a $C150000(£64000; $101000;
93000) grant from Imperial Tobacco in
2001.The grant was to help fund the college's corporate social
responsibilityprogramme in its continuing education
department.
Atul Kapur, president of Physicians for a Smoke-Free Canada, issued a
statement saying: "We fail to understand why a universitywould agree
to partner with `big tobacco.' We have no alternativebut to ask the
university to make a choice between embracing theinterests of public
health or legitimising an industry whose behaviourhas led to the
deaths of hundreds of thousands ofCanadians."
Students at the university were also up in arms. Rocco Kusi-Achampong,
president of the Student Administrative Council, saidthat at a board
meeting members unanimously voted to send a letterto University of
Toronto officials deploring the grant and askingthat the money bereturned.
Richard Alway, the president of St Michael's College, said that the donation
was made with no strings attached, that no specialrecognition was
given to the tobacco company for the donation,and that the company
had no impact on the programme's design,content, or
presentation.
However, when the issue was raised by Physicians for a Smoke-Free Canada and
the Non-Smokers' Rights Association at a pressconference that the
two groups organised last November, Alwaytook the matter to the
college's board of governors and recommendedthat the board authorise
a review of existing University of Torontopolicy, under which the
grant had beenaccepted.
That policy says simply that donations may be accepted from any legitimate,
taxpaying company doing business in Canada. Alwayasked whether the
policy was adequate or whether it should includemore restrictive
conditions. A review committee was set up latelast year and will
report, possibly, byJune.
"There are 20 other universities that accepted tobacco money in 2001 in
Canada," Alway says. "I think the questions raisedare legitimate,
and we're trying to deal withthem."
Physicians for a Smoke-Free Canada and the Non-Smokers' Rights Association
paid for a four page advertisement (below) in theUniversity of
Toronto students' newspaper, the Varsity, urgingall
universities to break ties with tobacco companies.
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