3 | O akville B eaver | T hursday,M ay 9,2019 insidehalton.com CONCEPT LIGHTING GROUP SALE WWW.CONCEPTLIGHTING.CA BURLINGTON 1515 North Service Rd. Burlington OAKVILLE 243 Speers Rd. Oakville MISSISSAUGA 5980 McLaughlin Rd. Mavis and McLaughlin (near Loblaws) ENTIRE STORE ON SALE PLUS AN EXTRA 25% OFF ONALL IN STOCK LIGHTING PLUS PAY NOTHING FOR 6 MONTHS WITH NO INTEREST AND NO DOWN PAYMENT* See store for details* AIRE ONE MADNEss sAlEAIRE ONE MADNEss sAlE $700 OFF HI-EFFICIENCY CENTRAL AIR *Call for Details $1990$1990 *Starting1990Starting1990199019901990Starting199019901990from 10 Year Factory Warranty $29 /MTH OAC* FURNACE OR CENTRAL AIR DIAGNOSTIC SPECIAL FaSt & Reliable SeRviCe $49$49 * *Call for details*Call for details HIgH EFFICIENCY FURNACE & CENTRAL AIR PACKAGE INCLUDES: • 95.5% High Efficiency Gas Furnace • High Efficiency Central Air R410A Refrigerant • 10 Year Factory Warranty $3990$3990 *StartingFrom Heating & Cooling Over 120,000 satisfied custOmers 9 Locations to serve you better www.aireone.com OAKVILLE 905-849-4998 1-888-827-2665 95.5%EFF. ONLY OR /mth$59OAC* RECEIvE UP tO $2,765 IN mANUFACtURER & GAS COmPANY REbAtES* *Call for Details 17, 2019. Oakville Progressive Conservative (PC) MPP Stephen Crawford and PC Oakville North-Burlington MPP Effie Triantafilopou- los said the initiative treats students like adults and al- lows them to choose which non-tuition fees they sup- port or need. "Our government knows that students and their families make great sacrifices to pursue post- secondary education. For them every dollar counts," said the MPPs in a press re- lease. "Ontario's government for the people is lowering tuition fees and giving stu- dents the power to choose the services they support on their campuses." Ponce said a lot of work went into organizing the referendum and making students aware of it so they could make an informed choice. He said even more effort went into working with the various municipal transit authorities to reach a U- Pass agreement. The situation is made worse by the fact that after five years in operation Sheridan is discontinuing its shuttle bus service, which moves students be- tween their various cam- puses, due to budgetary constraints effective Sept. 1, 2019. Ponce said with the province's Student Choice Initiative in place the stu- dent union is prohibited from charging students mandatory fees to keep the shuttle going. "We're reaching a point where come fall our stu- dents are not going to have anything. We feel the tim- ing was just really awful because we didn't really have a lot of time to prep for this," said Ponce. "I don't know if the stu- dents fully get the ramifi- cations of this. We have tried our best to communi- cate this broadly to our stu- dents, but the communica- tion came out near the end of the semester when stu- dents were winding down, stressed out and focused on the end of that semester." Ponce fears many may not realize what has hap- pened until classes start in the fall. The outgoing student union president said a sig- nificant number of Sheri- dan students do commute via transit, noting there are times during the year when more people try to make use of the Sheridan shuttle buses than the bus- es have capacity for. He said the lack of af- fordable transit will be es- pecially problematic for Sheridan students attend- ing classes in Mississauga, which has no residence. "I just don't know what options are left for them," said Ponce. "It is probably going to be a longer commute and more costs to our students now, which is really unfor- tunate." Crawford and Triantafi- lopoulos said they have reached out to Sheridan College, requesting a meet- ing at the earliest possible opportunity, to develop a solution together that al- lows students to get to cam- pus and attend their clas- ses. The pair said they have heard from families across Burlington and Oakville who are concerned about how the discontinuation of NEWS Continued from page 1 MAJORITY OF VOTERS SUPPORTED U-PASS IMPLEMENTATION See VOTES, page 5 THE ISSUE: THE PROVINCE'S STUDENT CHOICE INITIATIVE MEANS NO DISCOUNTED TRANSIT PASS FOR SHERIDAN COLLEGE STUDENTS LOCAL IMPACT: NO ACCESS TO AFFORDABLE TRANSIT COULD MEAN MORE STUDENTS WILL USE THEIR VEHICLES TO GET TO CLASS, WHICH COULD ADD TO LOCAL TRAFFIC CONGESTION The province's scrapping of the U-Pass has left many Sheridan College students upset. Torstar file photo