Skip to content
Capilano Courier
Menu
  • Home
  • Sections
    • News
    • Features & The Profile
    • Arts & Culture
    • Letters
    • Humour
    • Video Production
  • About
    • Advertise
    • Contribute
  • Meet the Crew
  • Online Issues
  • Events
Menu

Major Win for CapU Student Workers   

Posted on January 1, 2026January 3, 2026 by Mayumi Izumi

New Student Employee Union Gets Wage Increase 

Mayumi Izumi (she/her) // Contributor
Rachel Lu (She/Her) // Illustrator

Organizers at Capilano University have scored a major win for student employees after a long process of unionization. Previously, all students employed at CapU were earning BC’s minimum wage of $17.85. However, as of October 2025, MoveUp and the University have reached an agreement to increase their wages to $22.21. This agreement also means that student employees are now included under MoveUp’s Collective Agreement. 

Former CSU Women Students Liaison and CapU Student Life employee, Niko Williamson first had the idea of forming a union towards the end of her student leadership term. At the time,  Niko was inspired by labour organizing taking place at SFU, and this motivated her to get the ball rolling.  Unknowingly, Williamson and former CapU student Theodore Abbott were separately working on the same goal of trying to unionize student employees. Courier Editor in Chief, Laura Morales introduced them and the three students banded together to begin the almost year long journey to form a union.  

Career Development Centre employee Keshav Makker was one of the students who supported unionization. He was working for CapU Student Life for one year before the wage increase, and Makker says he struggled to pay for groceries and monthly expenses while trying to balance his studies, “I felt that the student employee wage didn’t reflect the amount of responsibility we carry or the value we bring to the campus community. It was difficult to manage rising living costs on a minimum-wage rate, and it often felt discouraging and unsustainable.” However, since the wage increase, Makker told the Courier that his quality of life has improved, and that he is less stressed about monthly expenses. 

All but one group of student workers have been included in the newly formed union, with research assistants being left out. Teresa Aguirre is an RA for a new program called Writing Lives, who was initially excited to hear about the student wage increase, but is disappointed that they were not included, “We’re just trying to make a living as well and this makes it seem as if RA positions aren’t as important as other positions offered to students on campus.” But she adds, “I really do enjoy my position as an RA even if the pay isn’t as much as other positions on campus.”

Although student organizers wanted to have all student workers included in the collective agreement, Williamson explained that because research assistants work for faculty, there was a chance that the university would remove RAs from the list of employees covered. Union cards expire after six months and, according to Williamson, they could not risk losing all the hard work that went into their card signing drive.

Williamson, who is now the student representative for the bargaining committee emphasized that, “Every single card made a difference.”, referring to the narrow margins upon which their union drive rested.

At a time when higher-education in BC is defined by austerity budgets and belt-tightening, CapU’s student workers union is a bright spot in an otherwise bleak state of affairs. And, in the face of looming tuition hikes for both international and domestic students, it’s likely that the fight for better pay is far from over. 

 

Category: News

Post navigation

← Corporate Jargon
Smoking the spice of life →

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Upcoming Tabling Hours: Thursdays, 12:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m., at either the Learning Commons entrance (LB 126) or Birch Cafeteria.

Latest News

  • The Collateral Damage of Cutting Courses
    As CapU faces financial woes, students are being forced to take required courses elsewhere  Ben Taylor (he/him) // Crew Writer   Jasmine […]
  • Deficit Mitigation Proposals Meet Outdated Policies
    The key policy grey areas impacting Senate’s role in high-stakes decisions Laura Morales Padilla (she/her) // Co-EIC & Ilustrator  The […]
  • CapU Introduces Protest Guidelines
    Capilano University quietly introduces guidelines for protests on campus, emphasizes campus grounds are ‘private property’  Jolee Wen […]
  • CapU Announces the Closure of Sunshine Coast Kálax̱-ay Campus and the ‘not closure’ of CapU Lonsdale
    Administration consolidates two key satellite campuses as financial woes continue  Ren Zhang (they/they)  // Contributor & […]
  • Major Win for CapU Student Workers   
    New Student Employee Union Gets Wage Increase  Mayumi Izumi (she/her) // Contributor Rachel Lu (She/Her) // Illustrator Organizers at […]
  • Orange Pilled
    Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim’s Bitcoin Obsession   Ben Taylor (He/Him) // Crew Writer   Alex Baidanuta (She/Her) // Illustrator    […]
Video Production
On Monday, January 19th, BC student leaders held a press conference outside the Constituency Office of Jessie Sunner—Minister of Post-Secondary Education & Future Skills and MLA for Surrey-Newton. 

Kevin Root—Chairperson of the Alliance of BC Students, Solomon Yi-Kieran—Vice-President External of the UBC Alma Mater Society, and Jessica Lamb—VP External & Community Affairs of the Simon Fraser Student Society commented on the government's review of the post-secondary education sector and their experience during the "incredibly short" consultation period.

00:00 - Intro
00:18 - What happened on January 19th?
00:52 - Opening remarks by the Chairperson of the ABCS
01:02 - Why the federal cap on international students heavily impacted colleges and universities across the province.
01:47 - The government needs to pay their fair share of the operating costs to keep the system afloat
02:49 - Any changes to the tuition limit policy would be a direct attack on students
03:23 - Demands from students
03:48 - Why is the review dangerous?
04:35 - Is the review a performative act?
05:11 - How would a tuition increase impact students and the province?
07:02 - Key takeaways
PROTECT STUDENTS | BC Students stand together against tuition increases, mergers and dangerous cuts
Subscribe
What even is a Zine? Mia shows us a behind the scene of how this little publication comes together, the vision behind it, and how to become a paid contributor of the C.C. Crumb!
Indigenous power means something different to every student, but it always begins with voice, community, and truth. Hear what CapU students had to say.
What does campus clean-up day look like?
© 2026 Capilano Courier | Powered by Minimalist Blog WordPress Theme