4A -The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 30, 2002 OP/ED ale Ib'rgt iauthIl 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 letters@michigandaily.com EDITED AND MANAGED BY STJDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 JON SCHWARTZ Editor in Chief JOHANNA HANINK Editorial Page Editor Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. NOTABLE QUOTABLE There is really a feeling of despair among the rescuers ... There's simply not much hope left." - Momadou Diop Thioune, of a French funded marine center, as quoted by the Associated Press yesterday describing the rescue effort of the sunken Senegalese ferry the Joola. Only 62 of the 796 people on board are known to have survived. "-a ;. " 1 1 ..d v ; , 6 . ....--- /'' ., ' ;, t a -.; . , \ 1 t .? V t- , ' ; ,J _1 fl V i , YJ 1 ; ; -_ , , - 'l * J 1 C 4 _7'I,,. : *1 , I )J' .0 r m SAM BUTLER THE SoAP ox ,, t- ,, r fi }4 , c . ' , f, 4!6 }-- L' ersity Pre leman, th dressed the last Thu nail that staff mer nt leaders. >een fals il accoun rs to spea tional Stu stine Soli be held. 12-14 and >ever sent n the fram able anti- r e-m ail t form the was mos at had be usea mass message mail wrong to raise divestment issue esident Mary Sue investigation so as not to further impli- irough an e-mail, cate the student and student group of e entire University the hoax. No steps were taken on the by ursday regarding the administrations to contact the stu- had been sent to dent nor the student group accused mbers and later to regarding the hoax e-mail. Coleman should have gathered all the facts ely sent from a regarding the issue at hand before t, and invited fac- addressing the entire University in such k at the upcoming an obscure manner. .dent Conference In addition, Coleman used her e- darity Movement, mail in response to this terrible incident at the University as a soapbox to express the University's I is sponsored by views on one of the main topics of the the e-mail, how- October conference, divestment from rework of extreme Israel. While the president is indeed -Semitism. Cole- entitled to her own opinion, it was not o the University, appropriate to mention her viewpoint in community that the email. The offensive hoax that was it certainly not a committed against University students en sanctioned by should not be used as a platform in ership. which to put forth ones views on an Wo, t dar~ hav~e a week"fl- I'm *GmkiOeOCTo. Taking back direct democracy PETER CUNNIFFE ONE FOr THE ROAD ike many states, elec- tion seasons in ry||g Michigan brings street corners littered with yard signs bearing not just the names of politicians, but also carrying exhortations to vote "Yes" or "No" on vari- ous ballot initiatives. Those simple expressions of endorsement or opposition to ballot proposals, many of which carry no indication of the proposal's subject, belie the importance they have assumed. In many ways the ballot proposals we vote on have become as important as the politicians we elect. They have grown in popularity and potency as interest groups frustrated with the legislative process have increasingly turned to referendums to accomplish their goals. Allowing state codes and even constitutions to be amended through the use ballot of initia- tives is a relatively common practice, justified as giving citizens a direct role in governing their states. Unfortunately, like all elections in a sys- tem where money and slick ads decide more elec- tions than policy, the referendum process has become another way for special interests to buy the governance they want. A good illustration is this year's Proposal 02-4, which would amend the state constitution to require 90 percent of Michigan's tobacco settlement money (about $300 million per year) to be directed to various nonprofit health care providers and foun- dations and anti-smoking programs. While funding such things is a reasonable enough goal, the pro- posal would take the money from a $100 million college scholarship program funded by the settle- ment as well as blow a large hole in the state bud- get currently being plugged by the tobacco money. Let's not forget the settlement was meant to com- pensate us for health care expenditures we were forced to make. Why should we be forced to spend the reimbursement on the same thing? And are we really comfortable with a system whereby the con- stitution can be amended by a simple majority of largely disinterested voters? Referendums are great in theory because they provide a way to bypass legislatures - our own being a prime example - that act irresponsibly, put political interests ahead of public interests and con- tinually fail to consider worthy legislation. Howev- er, referendums may cause even larger disconnects between the public interest and the laws enacted than bad legislators ever do. The flaw of direct democracy is the public's lack of interest in it. Even among the shrinking number of us who bother to vote at all, few have any idea what initiatives we will be presented with before we enter the voting booth. And to ask peo- ple to consider even the simplest legislation as they're standing there reading a summary of a pro- posed statute, the implications of which they may have never thought about before this moment, is a ridiculous way to gauge what they actually think about it. Many don't bother voting on the referen- dums or just pick their vote randomly. A few referendums, of course, are hot topics and people will have heard of them and thought about how they will vote. But often their decisions are based on advertisements that, like all campaign ads, have less to do with substance than with saying anything necessary to further the interests of whomever is paying for them. There are also structural problems with many proposals. Consider Proposal 02-1, which would end straight ticket voting, require expedited vote counting in close presidential elections, permit vot- ers in a polling place to correct errors they make on the ballot and create penalties for stealing campaign signs, among other things. This proposal makes eight different changes to existing election law with one vote. Asking voters, largely on the spur of the moment, to weigh these eight changes against each other and decide if, on balance, this proposal deserves support is asking for a sloppy decision making process. The referendum process doesn't always produce bad law, but it produces a lot of law neither the peo- ple nor the state government have any real interest in. Legislators, influenced by special interests though they may be, at least understand the impact, especially the fiscal impact, of their policies. Referendums should not be done away with because they are often- the only thing providing a check on some truly horrendous policies. For exam- ple, the war on drugs, because of the overwhelm- ingly powerful interests it sustains, has become unchallengeable by legislators at the state and feder- al level. Only state ballot initiatives have provided modest softening of our unjust drug laws and they seem to be the only hope for spurring further change. Unfortunately, referendums are too often nothing but cons for the benefit of a few. Changes such as restricting ballot initiatives to making only one alteration in the law or general campaign finance reform would help fix the referendum process. However, the only way referendums will ever fulfill their purpose of serving the public inter- est is if people pay attention to them. Voters, such as those students whose scholarships are on the bal- lot this fall, need to realize how important referen- dums have become to issues with direct and important effects on them. Goveming is an impor- tant responsibility and one we neglect at our peril. er, SAFE, and one particular f the group had already been ly accused of actually send- ate-filled e-mail. In response, s methodology and strategy sing the entire University was as a result presented the com- th an ambiguous, unclear and cription of the incident. me when an investigation is rway to verify that the e-mail out to numerous faculty and eaders was indeed a spoof, 's address to the University ve addressed the details of the unrelated issue. The University president's ability to send emails to the entire University should be used moderately to address issues that affect the entire student body and not to expound upon tangential subjects. If there comes a time such that the University feels compelled to address the issue of divestment, it should not be done through a simple e- mail in the framework of an abhorrent incident. Furthermore, the President should have awaited the results of the investigation or clarified the incidents details to the general public rather than Peter Cunniffe can be reached atpcunnfJ@umich.edu. > Greek with caution death indicative of dangerous atitudes VIEWPOINT Daily clearly clueless about processes of MSAs BPC * Xnthony Langas died earlier this month after overdosing on cocaine. His passing was a ter- ble tragedy. Langas had been a broth- r in the Sigma Phi fraternity, a place vhere brothers have said that drug sage was frequently joked about. aced with yet another calamity, and as he fall rush period continues, it may e time for the Inter Fraternity Council nd the Panhellenic Association to nce again soberly re-examine the cul- wre of Greek life at the University. Substance abuse problems have erially haunted the Greek system. VTen attention has been paid to these orts of issues - often accompanied y appropriate opprobrium - typical esponses from people like Joel Win- ton, the President of the IFC, have een to characterize the unfortunate ccurrences as episodic, not epidemic. additionally, Greek-life supporters ave often seemed exasperated in these efenses, flabbergasted that anyone vould actually criticize a system vhose sole intentions, they often laim, are to promote community ser- ice and camaraderie. However, now hose voices are silent, perhaps too shamed to make another laughable ssertion that it is not the character of ae University's Greek system that ngenders such behavior. Surely the IFC and Panhell have rade some efforts to increase aware- ess about substance and sexual abuse, et these attempts at reform have fallen woefully short. Last October, both of hese Greek umbrella organizations vere sponsors of a program meant to aise awareness about date rape. The FC and Panhell required all pledges and 60 percent of a chapter's member- ship to attend. No less than sixty per- cent of the fraternity brothers had been present at the program, but the lessons and ideas clearly did not proliferate as hoped. College culture allows for irrespon- sibility and in no way should fraterni- ties be seen as the only places where substance abuse is a problem. That would be unfair and ignorant. Fraterni- ties are, however, the most prominent social venues on campus and they make no attempt to mask that their social functions revolve around drink- ing. Any notion otherwise can be quickly erased by walking past a frat house yard littered with empty cups and bottles from the previous evening. Such a cavalier attitude about drinking creates a mindset in which the danger- ous consequences of alcohol and other substances seem remote and unlikely. While there is a clear division between alcohol use and drug use, the general premise that binge drinking is a worthwhile social pastime since it can be slept off or overcome - an atti- tude tacitly, if not explicitly, condoned by Greek life - must lend itself to similar attitudes about other "harm- less" activities like smoking a joint or snorting a line. Hopefully, IFC and Panhell will take more substantial steps in curtail- ing this behavior - promoting dry houses, limiting who can have a party when, etc. - so that the Greek culture does not cost someone else their life, as it did Langas earlier this month and Courtney Cantor in 1998. Those now rushing will perhaps consider them- selves advised. BY KENNETH STEWART It is apparent to me, and anyone else present at last Tuesday's Michigan Student Assembly's meeting, that The Daily has not conferred with its own reporter about the transparency issues regarding student group funding (Transparent funding: MSA, BPC, should better inform groups, 9/26/02). As a voting member of MSA's Budget Priorities Committee and a rather ardent supporter of funding reforms for the same, I have to say the Daily is dead wrong on several points. The chair of BPC, Ruben Duran, already publicly addressed the same issues during the same meet- ing. However, for the benefit of the rest of the student body I will attempt to readdress your slanderous accusations. As an ex-officio member of both the commit- tee, the chair only votes in a tie with regard to ini- tial requests and only votes on appeals if for some reason a member of the committee must recuse himself or doesn't show up. In the case of the request of Young Americans for Freedom's application, Ruben Duran recused himself. While I myself am not a supporter of YAF or the view- points of its members, it is my belief that his decision was the right and a most ethical one., unlike The Daily's decision to imply members of BPC were somehow involved in nepotism. Under no circumstances did anyone on BPC or MSA determine any allocations of funding based upon any group's political background; by law this is not allowed. All groups that were zero funded were informed directly, had ample time to respond or appeal, and were given a very specific reason as to why such action was taken. In many cases, funds were tentatively allocated in hopes that the group in question would be able to clarify its application and do so expeditiously. Moreover, groups were also informed that there are two funding cycles remaining in the semester in which they are welcome to reapply. There are several guidelines to be interpret- ed and applied by BPC in considering funding applications. BPC is made up by an equal amount of MSA members who are accountable for funding and students at large who pay into the funding pool. In almost all cases the BPC ruled unanimously with only two votes going to a tiebreaker, none of which applied to the groups you mention in your editorial. As an aside, juxtaposed political groups' funding in aggregate are funded nearly equal. In many instances groups specifically asked for funding which BPC does not pay, for reasons including: Holding events off campus, requesting absorbent amounts relative to event impact on campus, creating groups that violat- ed code with regard to name, filling out the wrong application, and not listing dates of when events are held. All of these examples create a problem for MSA's code (e.g. Fall Assembly cannot be financially encumbered by Spring events). In most circumstances, these rules are clear and written out on the forms that students must submit. Cuts in funding may have been recognition of a group's past underutilization of previously allocated funds, or BPC's community wisdom of what had previously impacted campus life and was deemed relevant to students. Many groups intended to give away proceeds or expected proceeds in excess of their costs from the production of said events. Groups who pos- sessed more than adequate and unencumbered capital for events were denied funding with an understanding that such a denial would not completely deplete their reserves. As a representative of MSA for nearly two years and an advocate for better representative- ness on BPC, this was for me the best group of people working for the benefit of student groups one could hope for on this campus. Graduates and undergraduates, ethnic and cultural minori- ties, multiple genders and sexual orientations, etc. were all represented with very few recusions due to the diversity of both the members and appli- cants. The Daily's statements were needless and insulting as to the hard work and commitment of the members of BPC. Because of just such com- mitment and volunteerism, we were able to fund more groups with higher allocation averages this cycle in record time. Moreover, we will be able to continue to do so because of the trust of the student body and the Board of Regents who elected last year to allow us to handle even more of their monies. There were no misappropriations and all of what I have stated is part of the public record. If the editors of The Daily were really interested in the truth they could have parlayed any suspicions with a simple phone call instead of spewing forth such slanderous rhetoric. Per- haps if The Daily's editorial board was commit- ted to doing a better job by checking the record they themselves could in fact reform what many have called a second-rate student paper that prac- tices yellow journalism into a truly world-class demonstration of student journalism. - Stewart is an ex-officio member of the BPC. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Rainbow flag on Diag would represent 'a safe space' TO THE DAILY: I am very pleased with the Michigan Stu- dent Assembly's approval of the resolution to fly a rainbow flag below the U.S. Flag on the Diag flagpole during National Coming Out Week. I only hope that the University and it's facilities will stand behind their motto of diver- sity and raise it on Oct. 7. This action has nothing to do with promo- tion or advertising as Mike Saltsman (Letters to the Editor, 9/26/02) seems to believe. The Rain- bow Flag is a universal symbol of pride to the is a welcome sign. JENNIFR GALLINAT Students are apathetic about LSA fift hyear Iraq, should realize 'how Daily's pro-choice statement interconnected we really are' proves opinion page's 'bias' TO THE DAILY: Although I agree with your paper in oppos- ing the death penalty, it seems to me quite con- tradictory that your paper is anti-death penalty and pro-abortion. Likewise, to state in an anniversary article (The Michigan Daily: Turning 112 years old ... 9/27/02) that these are the posi- tions that the paper will automatically-take is To THE DAILY: I cannot agree more with John Honkala's column regarding college apathy toward a war in Iraq (The unknown pleasures of activism, 9/27/02). Though our generation has views on this issue, our voices have been rea- sonably quiet. But the motive behind this is more than just run of the mill teenage lethar- gy; unlike our protesting predecessors during, say, Vietnam, most of us don't feel any affin- i ' f G. .. N '-N, AW