-W AU -W w w 0 I Voice Your Vote is supposed to give students a voice in elections. It does a great job at turning out voters for national elections but not where they're need ed most - in local elections. What the University and the city should do to help By Donn M. Fresard Daily News Editor ast June, when LSA senior Eugene Kang announced he was run- ning for City Council in the Ward 2 Democratic primary against former Republican mayoral can- didate Stephen Rapunda- lo and held an afternoon deck party as one of his first campaign events, I stopped by to meet Kang and evaluate his chances. If elected, he would have been the first University student on City council in more than 30 years, providing stu- dents with a voice on a Council that appears to become more disconnected from, and even hostile to, Ann Arbor's student popula- tion with each passing year. I liked what I saw. Kang seemed to be a near-perfect candidate; he was bright, per- sonable, enthusiastic and reasonable, with exciting ideas about development and about engaging students in city government, and with none of the inane fringe ideas that have characterized many other student candidates for office in recent memory. More importantly, for a student candidate, Kang seemed to be in a particularly good position to win the Democratic primary. He was a progressive candidate running against a former Republican; he was a lifelong Ann Arbor resident; and, comfortably sporting an open-collared blue Oxford shirt with a navy blazer, he looked respectable and professional enough to make a good impression with hom- eowners in his ward, many of whom associ- ate University students with noise violations and other Animal House-style antics. He also had strong ties with the local Korean com- munity, which provided a small but dedicated base of support and helped him raise several times more money than his opponent. And he had a smart group of campaign advisers who were passionate about student representation in city government, including Law School student Alex Donn, who was introduced to Kang after writing an academic paper about the obstacles to student voting in Ann Arbor. Kang's campaign also came at a time when student interest in city politics, long dormant, appeared to be starting to spread. With a City Council that was threatening to ban couches from house porches and pre- paring to pass an anti-student parking mea- sure during the summer, undergraduate and graduate students - many of them urban planning majors - began to coalesce around weblogs such as arborupdate.com, annar- borisoverrated.com and goodspeedupdate. com, where they conversed about anti-student City Council actions, New Urbanism and the Greenway proposal. Urban planning gradu- ate student Dale Winling was just launching the New West Side Association, a neighbor- hood association intended to counteract the traditional homeowner-run, and politically powerful, Ann Arbor neighborhood associa- tions by representing the political interests of students and renters. Even The Ann Arbor News took notice of the sudden resurgence of Council seat, had recruited Rapundalo from the Republican Party and had no interest in a contested primary. Despite his unusual appeal to residents and a well-run campaign, Kang lost the primary by about 10 percent, or 95 votes. There can be no doubt that, had the elec- tion been held while regular classes were in session, Kang would have won the primary handily. Under the current system, though, the only way Hill dorm residents could have voted for him was through absentee ballots. In the absence of any effort by Voice Your Vote to educate the ward's student voters on how to vote absentee, it simply didn't happen. Ward 2's second precinct, which comprises Mary Markley Residence Hall and only a few nearby houses, cast zero ballots. During the months leading up to the Ward 2's second precinct, which compris- es Mary Markley Residence Hall and only a few nearby houses, cast zero ballots. dedicated and last year's iteral tainly impressi ship, it pioneer as the "Dorm volunteers inva halls to knock c istration form. the University' ties, volunteers place more tha starting with a tered to vote, t- lines in the resi( all the number with a 734 are to find their po could vote. All in more than ' - a record n equal to about University. The networ effort possible As The Michi ingly at the tim Vote's membe cious degree w pus groups, i and Student V of Voice Your the Review pi College Demc to the College bers to "wear hours" and vol register voters It is undenia ership came la liberal partisa complaints the evidence that 1 abused the grc were a couple : apparently by ; showing up ak rials; then-MS appearing at a mote Voice ' when a Power students to "g< student interest in local politics: In an article headlined "Students want their say," News reporter Tom Gantert, while allowing that "few would argue that college students have a say in the Ann Arbor political arena," cited Kang, the New West Side and the local blogs as signs that "this mostly transient popula- tion may be seeking a stronger voice in local politics." Unfortunately, student candidates in Ann Arbor City Council primaries face one near- ly insurmountable challenge: The primaries take place in early August, when most Uni- versity students are out of town. The second ward, where Kang resides, is home to a large student population in the Hill residence halls - from September to April. The Hill resi- dence halls are abandoned during the spring and summer semesters and, as a result, the voters in Kang's ward during his primary were almost exclusively local residents. Kang also received no support from the local Democratic Party establishment, which, hop- ing to secure the formerly Republican-held November 2004 presidential election, while he took classes at the University as a full-time student, Pete Woiwode estimates he spent 60 to 80 hours a week running Voice Your Vote, the Michigan Student Assembly commission responsible for turnout of student voters. "I got in a fair amount of academic trouble," he says, laughing. Woiwode's enthusiasm seems to have been contagious. Commission leaders estimate Voice Your Vote had a core group of about 20 people who worked at least three nights a week and 70 who put in one night a week. Those who counted themselves among the core group, the truly dedicated, talk about those few months the way an aging mountain climber recalls his conquest of Kiliman- jaro; they beam with pride recounting their unlikely triumphs over adversity, their stag- gering numbers, their mentions in several national media outlets. Talking with them, you get a sense that they truly believed, and still believe, in registering students to vote as a noble calling and a grand achievement. As an example of the brute power of a