Ontario Undergraduate Student Alliance | |
Abbreviation: | OUSA |
Formation: | Formed 1992, Incorporated 1995 |
Location: | Toronto, Ontario, Canada. |
Leader Title: | President |
Leader Name: | Michelle Wodchis-Johnson (USC) |
Leader Title2: | VP Finance |
Leader Name2: | Arya Razmjoo (WUSA) |
Leader Title3: | VP Admin & HR |
Leader Name3: | Maya Hobbs (MSU) |
Leader Title4: | Steering Committee |
Leader Name4: | See Steering Committee |
Affiliations: | CSA, CASA, UCRU, Student Mental Health Canada |
The Ontario Undergraduate Student Alliance (OUSA) is an alliance of students' unions in Ontario, Canada. Their common objective is to protect the interests of over 160,000 professional and undergraduate, full-time and part-time university students, and to provide research and recommendations to the government on how to improve accessibility, affordability, accountability, and quality of post-secondary education in Ontario.
The initial catalyst for the creation of OUSA was disagreement over the position of the provincial and national student association in Ontario on the first Gulf War.[1] In 1992, The student associations of Brock University, Queen's University, the University of Waterloo and Wilfrid Laurier University, and the Association of Part-Time Undergraduate Students at the University of Toronto approached the Ontario Federation of Students(OFS) to host a roundtable discussing the prospect of pushing for an increase in tuition fees. When this idea was rejected, the roundtable occurred informally and resulted in the formal incorporation and creation of OUSA.
Part-time students at the University of Toronto withdrew from the Alliance, as did Queen's Alma Mater Society, citing concerns over the organization's management in the mid-1990s. Queen's then rejoined the Alliance as an associate member in 2001 and then as a full member in 2004. In May 2011, OUSA welcomed two new members, the Trent in Oshawa Student Association (later the Trent Durham Student Association) as associate members, and the McMaster Association of Part-Time Students as full members, who had rejoined after a 7-year absence.[2] In May 2013, the University of Windsor Students' Alliance voted, through a referendum, to leave the Alliance. On April 29, 2014, the McMaster Association of Part-Time Students also withdrew from membership in OUSA.[3]
The Students' General Association (SGA-AGÉ) of Laurentian University was admitted into OUSA in April 2016, with membership taking effect May 2016.[4] Most recently, the Ontario Tech Student Union (OTSU) joined OUSA as a full member in April 2023.[5]
As of 2023,[6] OUSA's membership consists of:
OUSA's Steering Committee is the body responsible for setting and monitoring the organization's priorities and strategic initiatives. It is also the non-profit organization's board of directors. One executive member of each constituent student union sits on the board as a voting member. According to the organization's Bylaws, each association is entitled to appoint one additional non-voting resource member to OUSA's Steering Committee.[7] Alma Mater Society of Queen's University is the only OUSA member in recent years that regularly uses this provision to appoint an additional member.
As of May 2024,[8] the membership of the committee is:
Title | Name | Student Union | |
---|---|---|---|
President | Michelle Wodchis-Johnson | USC | |
VP Finance | Arya Razmjoo | WUSA | |
VP Administration & Human Resources | Maya Hobbs | MSU | |
Additional voting members | Mark Chrabalowski | BUSU | |
Dreyden George | AMS | ||
Brodie Norwich | WLUSU | ||
Staysha Kasunich | SGA-AGÉ | ||
Jodi Ambrose | TDSA | ||
Rai Muhammad Ali | OTSU | ||
Non-voting members | Ruth Osunde | AMS |
Due to its moderate leanings when compared with other student advocacy groups and close working relationship with many decision makers, OUSA has faced criticism that they are too cooperative with the government. OUSA has also received criticism for a mid 1990s proposal that asked for increased government spending towards universities along with increased tuition fees, however this recommendation was reversed a few years later, and OUSA has called for tuition freezes and decreases since at least 1999.[9]
Presidents
Executive Directors
Information taken from OUSA's website unless otherwise stated. Presidents and Executive Directors updated annually.