OPINION Thursday, January 25, 1990 TeMcia al Page 4 The Michigan Daily ยข- ., Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. ArnnArbor, MI 48109 Vol. C, No. 79 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of tne Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Mpasses the buck T OUGH NINE LSA representatives to the Michigan Student Assembly have taken their seats, the problems created by MSA's election committee have not been solved. The point of holding any election is to ensure that constituents select their representatives to government; in the case of December's MSA elections, the voice of the students was disregarded because LSA students were not given the opportunity to select their own representatives. The bungling of the elections by MSA officials has been well docu- mented --- names were omitted from ballots, some students were not permit- ted to vote, counting was mishandled, and the ballots were thrown out before a recount could, be held. Because of these and other mishaps, ISA's high- est court, the Central Student Judiciary, declared the elections invalid. Then, in keeping with MSA's constitution, the LSA Student Government was charged with appointing nine people to fill the vacant seats. LSA-SG has been attacked for its decision to appoint new representatives to the as .embly. This criticism - fu- eled by the perception that the election, however discredited, should still be taken into account -- misses the mark. The blame lies with MSA for creating the problem and then dumping it off on someone else. There is no way to go back and clean up MSA's mistakes. But the assembly should hold another election as soon as possible to ensure that people represen- tative of the student body are the ones serving on MSA. Thus, the nine ap- pointees should only serve until the March MSA election. MSA has worked hard to force its way into a corner. While assembly of- ficials continue to make excuses, the University's Board of Regents and President James Duderstadt have initi- ated an informal investigation into MSA's handling of the election. Ad- ministrative control over MSA is a frightening thought, but what makes it worse are reports that MSA President Aaron Williams and Conservative Coalition chair Jeff Johnson solicited help from the administration after the elections were invalidated. Students on this campus need strong leaders in order to combat tuition in- creases and protect the rights of stu- dents. When MSA bungles elections and invites the administration to over- turn unpopular student decisions, stu- dents' power is diminished. MSA.is the student government; selling out to the administration won't help students. MSA needs to clean it- self up and start acting responsibly. If the assembly can't even hold elections without a plethora of errors, there is little chance that MSA will be able to fight effectively for student causes. Housing by the Homeless Action Committee Incredible injustices are perpetrated against homeless people and the poor every single day in Ann Arbor. For the homeless these injustices include being forced to live in Ann Arbor's streets, being treated with callousness by the city's overworked social service employees, and being harassed and arrested by police officers for the "crime"of seeking a warm place to rest. For the poor who are lucky enough to find a place to live, these injustices mean a lifetime of shuttling from unit to unit trying to stay one step ahead of the inevitable evictions forced by their inability to pay Ann Arbor's skyrocketing rents. To be poor in Ann Arbor is to be nearly homeless. Being poor in Ann Arbor means living doubled and tripled-up in over-priced apartments, with the threat of eviction always hanging over your head. These injustices are examples of economic violence that rob people of their humanity. It is violence that poor and homeless people suffer everyday in Ann Arbor, violence that will not go away. This violence has not only been ignored, but perpetuated and condoned by the Ann Arbor City Council. Every time we have demanded that the Council act to serve the needs of the people, they have told us that they are concerned about low income housing and about homelessness, but that the city does not have the resources to do anything. Meanwhile the city has budgeted over $30 million for the construction of parking structures. City Council does not lack the resources to act on the housing crisis; it lacks the will. Last Friday, the Homeless Action Committee (HAC) met with City Council to demand that they take action. We presented them with a single demand: the City Council must make the housing crisis its first priority and commit to building 1500 units of low-income housing. To prove that the city is making low- income housing the first priority, we demanded that the council take the following steps: (1) Immediately rescind approval of the construction of the $9 million Kline's parking structure. The funds of the Downtown Development Authority, which until now have been spent almost exclusively on parking structures, must be used to build the 1500 units of low-income housing that the city desperately needs. (2) Take care of the emergency needs of people on the streets by immediately opening up additional emergency shelter. People are homeless because of the city's policy of putting the desires of the business community before the needs of the people. There is an immediate need for more emergency shelter; people are currently being turned away from the shelter because it is full. A shelter for women and additional transitional housing are also desperately needed. The City Council had no response to HAC's demands or to the testimony of any of the people present. Of the 150 people 'After testimony from Bob person, Terry Martin (R-2nd this town is not very hosp Why do you stay here?' demands unmet Ward) said, "Sounds like this town is not very hospitable to you Mr. Harris... Why do you stay here? It's time you learned what a caring city this really is." Mr. Harris' response was that the problem is nation-wide and that he had been told the same thing in Detroit, Brighton, and Howell before moving to Ann Arbor. Other councilmembers asserted that many homeless people were recent arrivals to Ann Arbor and therefore didn't have any rights. However most of the homeless people attending the meeting had been in town for longer then many members of the council. Council repeatedly showed both an incredible ignorance of the problems facing the poor and homeless in Ann Arbor, and a complete lack of intent to do anything to address these problems. Council's message to the community was clear Friday night: if you don't like our unjust policies then you should leave "our" city. Homeless people, low-income people, and the Homeless Action Committee will not stand by and allow the city to continue' its policies of violence against citizens of' Ann Arbor. People who have lived here all'f of their lives are not simply going to walk away from their community, family, and Harris, a former homeless I Ward) said, itable to you "Sounds like," Mr. Harris... a I I I who were at the meeting not a single person spoke against the need for low income housing. Speaker after speaker demanded that the Council take action to address the housing crisis. In response, Council members insulted, harassed, and ignored those who offered testimony about what it is like to be poor or homeless in Ann Arbor. After testimony from Bob Harris, a former homeless person, Terry Martin (R-2nd friends. The homeless people who do the city's most menial labor are not going to be invisible or tolerate being told to leave the town that they work in. HAC has called for a march thisA afternoon at 3:00 to protest the", Council's refusal to act on the housing* crisis. The march will start at 337 S.* Ashley (corner of W. William & S. Ashley), go through the downtown area, and commence at City Hall. City Council ignores Ann Arbor's homeless: Demand fa OVER ONE year ago, the Homeless Action Committee (HAC) demanded a meeting with the Ann Arbor City Council in an effort to get the Council to address the city's affordable housing crisis in a public forum. Last Friday when this meeting finally took place, thd Council members revealed their bi- paitisan commitment to take no mean- ingxful action in the face of the city's desperate lack of low-income housing. At the meeting, HAC condemned the Cotncil's spending of millions of tax dollars on parking structures when 1,500 Ann Arborites are homeless. HAC members demanded that the Council make homelessness and the housing crisis its number one priority, an4 rescind their approval of the $9 million Ashley-William parking struc- ture scheduled for construction this Spring. They also demanded that the Council commit to building 1,500 units of low-income housing, and take im- mediate measures to open additional emergency shelter. Over one hundred people attended themeting to support HAC's demands even though Mayor Jernigan scheduled the meeting at a time that made it very difficult for homeless people be in at- tendance. People who are homeless had to choose between getting in a line fortheir evening meal or attending the meeting. Those who elected to forfeit their dinner were met by Council with a beyrocratic non-response. Councilmembers Terry Martin (R- 2ni ward) and Jerry Schleicher (R-4th watd) verbally harassed Bob Harris, a fortnerly homeless person, who gave a preentation at the meeting. Other Re- publicans including Mayor Gerald Jernigan defended the Council's policy of ,financing parking structures. This policy is rapidly using up the city's bonding capacity and represents the most regressive tax possible. City tax dollars are used for what HAC mem- bcL.s rightfully term "welfare for dowvntown merchants." Dcmocratic Council members were more outwardly sympathetic, and thanked participants for attending the meeting. However, the Democrats are as guilty in deed as their Republican ii r housing counterparts. Every single City Council member, with the exception of Larry Hunter (D-2nd, ward) who abstained, voted to spend $9 million in city funds to build the Ashley-William parking structure. And none of the Democrats have agreed to put forth proposals to rescind that funding, to open additional emergency shelter, a women's shelter or additional transitional housing, or to address the housing crisis in any way whatsoever. Mayor Jernigan told the meeting's at- tendants that if they didn't like the Council's policies that they should get involved in the electoral process. This statement is an underhanded attempt to quell dissent and reduce the public pressure that HAC and other housing activists have been exerting on Coun- cil. Elections are only meaningful if different candidates offer a choice. Nei- ther the Democratic nor the Republican party have shown any willingness to take action to address the city's lack of low-income housing. City Council did not create home- lessness, but its policies have exacer- bated the housing crisis and Council members are complicit in the economic violence that oppresses the city's lower income residents. The need for low-in- come housing has been ignored for years. Forming a new committee, as Jernigan has suggested, would only further delay facing the problem. The last such committee spent two years compiling a report which in 1985 informed Council that the city needed an additional 1,500 units of low-in- come housing. No action was taken. Five years later, the Council has finally responded by suggesting the formation of yet another committee. Ann Arbor's housing crisis demands action from the city's officials. At Fri- day's meeting, City Council members revealed that they intend to continue to ignore the issue. The Homeless Action Committee deserves credit and contin- ued support for its efforts to jar City Council out of its intransigence. Partic- ipate in HAC's march this afternoon to protest Council's indifference and inac- tion. The march begins at 337 South Ashley at 3:00 p.m. Reverse --by Barbara Ranshy _ This article is partly in response to two letters which appeared in the Daily recently criticizing the United Coalition Against Racism's "Twenty Years Past Due" campaign to hold the University accountable for past promises to increase student of color enrollment. Both critics ignore the specific history and mechanics of racism in ur s( piety and imply that any aggressive effort Lo reverse racism in fact represents so-called "reverse racism" against whites. The first writer, Leo McNamara, challenges UCAR's demand and the University's promise of 12 percent Black enrollment as an unfair "quota" that discriminates against whites. First of all, the 12 percent figure was not arbitrarily pulled out of the air, but rather reflects the proportion of African Americans in the larger society. To identify this as a minimum goal is perfectly consistent with the University's espoused commitment to create the kind of institution which is genuinely reflective of the increasingly multi-cultural American society. Duderstadt has repeatedly reminded us that as we enter the 21 st century this society will be made up largely of people of color. Needless to say, colleges, universities and other centers of middle class privilege are in no way reflective of that composition. UCAR's position is simply that schools and universities, especially public ones, should at a minimum be representative of the larger society. This is one small step toward reversing more than two centuries of racist exclusion and marginalization of people of color by educational and other major institutions of the society. Yes, affirmative action is special treatment, however, it is not African Americans, Native American, Latinos and Asian Americans who have requested special treatment. We have historically received unsolicited "special treatment" from those who hold power in this society. Slavery was "special treatment" reserved for Africans and African Americans; forced migrations and the denial of property rights was "special treatment" reserved for Native Americans; concentration camps during World War II were a form of "special treatment" for Japanese Americans; and unfair labor practices which exploit and impoverish Chicano racism is a myth 1 pursued in this country from thei beginning. It will take conscious andt aggressive policies to undo it.1 An analogy which makes this point isr one of a car speeding down a hill. To simply remove one's foot from the gasE does not stop the car, aggressiveI intervention is required - you must apply the brake. Similarly, we can view peoplea of color and whites as two groups of competitors in a race. If one group begins the race 10 yards behind the starting line with one foot tied behind each runner,l obviously to stop the race midway1 through, untie the disadvantaged runners and say, "Now, lets play fair," does not1 rectify the situation. To deny the validity of aggressive affirmative action programs is to do just that. We cannot escape the historical realities that shape the nature of racism today. 'Yes, affirmative action iss ever, it is not African Ame Latinos and Asian America special treatment. We have solicited "special treatmen power in this society.' Racism is not some generic set of "attitudes" that can come in all flavors and colors. Racism is a historically specific phenomenon, and while hypothetically any group can exploit, disenfranchise, and subjugate another on the basis of race, and therefore be considered racist, that has not been the case in modern times. Racist notions of genetic inferiority were refined in the 19th century to justify the continuation of slavery and Western imperialism, under the banners of "the white man's burden" to civilize and uplift. Racism in practice and ideology has been synonymous with white supremacy, and conversely with notions of Black, Asian, Native American and Latino inferiority. It has been very specific and consistent in this regard. These notions. have justified racist laws and practices that rendered African Americans second-class, citizens for 'an entire century after emancipation. It was only with the,'w9 passage of Civil Rights legislation in thee, mid 1960s that Blacks were finally regarded as equals before the law in the., United States.,f In education in particular, it was as recent as 1954 that the Supreme Court, prohibited the enforcement of segregated public schools, and it took more than., 10,000 members of the National Guard to j protect nine Black school children who. sought to desegregate the Arkansas school,!! some three years later. The reality, of course, continues to be{ one of disparity and inequality. Aggressive, policies are needed to reverse this., - -' special treatment, how- ricans, Native American,. ins who have requested a historically received un t" from those who hold Centuries of injustice and inequality are not wiped away in a few short decades. To suggest this is to ignore history. Therefore, when groups such as UCAR demand that the University of Michigan , take special steps to combat institutional racism, we do so with an understanding of:# how deeply rooted racism is, and how far we have to go to defeat it. For the9 University to simply say "we will try" is not good enough. We have to look at the ways, subtly and structurally, that people of color have been excluded in the past in order to really map out clear and effective policies for change in the future. Barbara Ransby is a member of the United Coalition Against Racism. DOT MY IN IRS SUN Too L~o N~G , ON ' e - . o ' O T - kLONPQV ~ Opinion Page Letter Policy t