OP/ED The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 12, 2005 - 5 Hot Topics The Daily evaluated progress toward fulfilling the five most prominent campaign promises made by representatives from Students 4 Michigan - the assembly's ruling party - during their campaigns for office. City Council Students continue to suffer for MSA's failure to secure a permanent, institutional pres- ence at City Hall. During the 1. summer while most students were out of town, the Ann Arbor City Council passed anti-student parking ordinances in Oxbridge and North Burns Park. The combination of the council's failure to acknowledge potential student concerns and a general lack of student representation during the proceedings allowed the ordinances to pass with little trouble. Student housing concerns are receiving similar neglect. MSA President Jesse Levine and former Rep. Stuart Wag- ner were active this summer in their efforts to encourage City Council to craft an ordinance to push back lease-sign- ing dates, an issue students have voiced a great deal of con- cern over. How their lobbying translated into actual policy, however, remains uncertain. For one reason or another, City Council has failed to tackle the lease-date problem with the urgency and attention it deserves, leaving the prospect of a new ordinance before the next academic unpromising. As a response, MSA - after about a week of infight- ing - created a formal City Council liaison position. The new envoy, however, will operate under the auspices of the assembly's External Relations Committee - a body with a sub-par history when student/city corre- spondence is concerned. Entree Plus Representatives made three key promises dur- ing their last campaign: Increasing the number of Entr6e Plus-accessible vend- ing machines, creating a yearly meal credit rollover plan and extending Entree Plus points to off-campus eateries. Unfortunately, there has been little to no dialogue between MSA and Entree Plus officials on these matters. Entree Plus adminis- trator Michael McGray and business manager Larry Durst both said they have yet to be contacted by MSA representatives about these goals, though Durst said he has had conversation, with Levine. MSA Transparency MSA has made strides in this area. Important content has been added to the assembly's website, including up-to-date resolutions passed by the Assembly and meet- ing minutes. There is, however, some room for improvement. Posting meeting schedules and agendas would be one way to increase student participation at meetings. If topics of potential interest were posted in advance, students would be more likely to schedule in time for attendance. The web- site can be found at: www.msa.umich.edu. M SA INCONSISTENCY AND STUDENT APATHY Skipping out? TI On meeting nights, some assem- bly members are nowhere to be seen, yet others manage to show As I si up each time. 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As fun as ingers has been over the last cou- ars, I would like to end the game T'S EVERYONE! to admit that I wasn't always this n fact, just two years ago I lived nt bliss. As a freshman who hadn't ed the dismal state of housing, need to find street parking for my ad no need to ride the Airbus to Metro Airport, I couldn't see why take time out of my busy sched- te in campus elections. But after month as a rent-paying, car-own- omore, I realized I should have o the candidates who knocked on room door. Later that year, at the a friend, I joined The Michigan torial board. Within a month I mastered MSA lingo - divest- RGIM, student-group funding w it all. Only the blank looks my uric elicited from roommates and minded me of the world outside ly crossfire. ffort to streamline the informa- g thrown at students during MSA time, the editorial board con- orsement interviews, where the members of each party explain form, as well as why they feel he best candidates for the job. After hours of listening and deliberating last winter, the editorial board reluctant- ly acknowledged Students 4 Michigan candidates Jesse Levine and Alicia Bena- vides as the pair best equipped to handle the myriad issues dealt with by MSA on a daily basis. The editorial board's res- ervations surrounded the influence the party's supermajority might have on accountability; well-warranted concerns, it turns out, but for reasons much bigger than any one party. Although a viable opposition party would increase Students 4 Michigan's accountability, demands for accountability should source from the student body. The reality about elected representatives is that they are slightly accountable to the popula- tion at large, generally accountable to those who vote and only directly accountable to the select few voters who take the time to track MSA progress on campaign issues. Considering only about 9 percent of stu- dents took the time to vote last spring, it is safe to say the number of voters to who representatives are truly accountable is low enough to endanger accountability. For example, several representatives promised to expand Entree Plus to some off-campus businesses. While this would be conve- nient, it would also tread on the legal grey areas of Michigan's banking laws. Ten years ago the University's General Counsel advised University officials about just that - and no discussion has taken place since. The frequency with which these lapses in accountability go unpunished can only be explained by the student body's languid and apathetic attitude toward the assembly. In what I believe is an effort to motivate students to vote, representatives' campaign platforms are littered with politically popu- lar fluff. It's the college level equivalent of high school student council representa- By Amanda Burns ( Daily editorial board member tives promising more vending machines in the cafeteria and off-campus lunch. Yes it would be great to have more concerts on campus, but with houses burning down as result of indolent landlords, textbook prices rising at rates nuch higher than inflation, the discriminatory Michigan Civil Rights Initiative making its way onto the ballot and the fall housing race just around the corner, students can travel to Lansing to see Kanye West. A change in the current trend of sensa- tional campaign promises - encouraged by students who don't realize whether they are ever fulfilled - would take a re-struc- turing of priorities by both representatives and voters. It is amazing students can sit in houses with furnaces that barely work, pay exorbitant book prices all the while voting for representatives based on soft promises of concerts and off-campus Entree Plus. If the civic duty argument doesn't persuade voters, perhaps an economic one will. Con- sider this: If MSA was able to achieve the one goal of increasing information about the books required for classes, it would widen the possibility of on-line book buy- ing, save students money and in the end, provide students with extra cash - money for even more concerts. Change starts with taking the power of MSA seriously. Now that it has been established that everyone is responsible for the state of MSA today, .everyone can take responsibility for repairing it. Representatives need to break down the stereotype of MSA as a resume builder by refusing to campaign on unneces- sary, bandwagon issues. MSA polls are open for two full days during elections, so take the five minutes you would spend confirming someone as your friend on The Facebook and use it give MSA a true mandate from the student body. Bus System Voter turnout as a percentage of the student body MSA doesn't have a trans- portation committee that directly deals with on and off-campus transportation issues, though the Campus p Safety Committee has done work with SafeRide and other nighttime transportation services that cater to students. A number of candidates expressed their intentions to have bus schedules posted at all stops and to set up digital clocks that would display arrival times. Others complained about the infrequency of routes to North Campus. Here again, a failure to communicate with proper authorities will make most of these changes unlikely. James Williams, the bus operations manager for the University, said he had not spoken with anyone on the MSA. - ----------17.3% WINTER 2001 16.7% WINTER 2002 18.3% WINTER 2003 11.6% 9.4% WINTER 2005 WINTER 2004 I Concerts ' After a protracted nego- tiation process, it seems the long-anticipated Ludacris concert might become a real- ity. Given the number of can- didates who pledged to bring more big-name performances to campus, this may be the assembly's one unqualified success of the year. Considering that the University was host to zero big-name performances last year - Michael Moore does not count - it was nice to see reps meet their goal. None of this is to say the Ludacris concert won't have its costs. One problem with the concert planning has been the large amount of time and resources representatives were forced to pour into it. For many assembly members, the concert proved more important than addressing theshoddy relations with City Council, organizing against the dis- criminatory Michigan Civil Rights Initiative and working for cheaper textbook prices. Dream On I'm held accountable every Thursday at the bar. That's where I face the hardballs: "Why isn't the entree plus working in Angell Hall!?" "Is Ludacris coming?" "Why isn't the football team winning? Fix that." An inebriated friend of mine almost got a minor-in-posession citation when a hospital staffer told him to leave or expect a ticket. He left, unknowing the staffer had broken federal law. So, I met with the Director of Operations of the hospital, and urged that the staff be retrained to comply with federal privacy laws. And change happened. The Michigan Student Assembly - your student government - makes change happen at the University, and not just when it meets on Tuesday nights. It happens when teams of students collabo- rate and work behind the scenes, getting kicked out of the Michigan Union at 2 a.m. Change happened when former Rep. By Jesse Levine I MSA President Stuart Wagner presented the Ann Arbor City Council with ear plugs last sum- mer, to remind them that students matter. Change happened when Rep. Milton Lee spent his summer working to bring Lud- acris to campus. Change happened when Arielle Linsky sifted through hundreds of applications for MSA and University committees. MSA is a dynamic group that changes every semester. The body is made up of strong leaders from across campus, each with distinct ideologies, all motivated to make this place better. I drank the Kool- Aid. I enjoy my job, and have seen the body at its best. The most effective mem- bers of the assembly are those that take the initiative to make their own vision a reality, work cooperatively and have the patience to keep fighting for what they believe in. Making change takes time, but when students put in the work, change happens. You have to have the patience to strat- egize, communicate your ideas through various advisory boards and navigate through internal and external commit- tees. But, when students put in the work, change happens. Historically, MSA has achieved much for the student body. We successfully lob- bied for fall break and significant improve- ments to the William Monroe Trotter House. We registered more than 10,000 voters in 2004. MSA is now working to change the culture of campus so that hous- ing is safe and affordable, and landlords are responsive to students. Students' rights matter, and that's why we're working on education campaigns to prevent MIPs and noise violations before they are doled out. There are two types of people that get involved in politics: those driven by ambition and those driven by passion for policy change. MSA is looking for the latter. Tuesday night meetings are for pas- sionate students to present proposals and dreams to the assembly to make this cam- pus better; the meetings are necessary for true collaboration to engage the campus community. If representatives do not hold up their end of the bargain, and do not show up to any meetings, our Rules and Elections committee will be looking for someone else to fill the seat. Join MSA! Run or apply. Get a few friends, register at www.msa.umich.edu, and the assembly will give you some money for posters. Find a gimmick, pass out flyers on the Diag and have fun doing it. Once on board, work cooperatively, dream big and your vision will become a reality. MSA party turn- over has been extensive over the past five years, with old parties retooling and renaming and new ones often arriving dead in the water. 2001 2002 MICHIGAN 2003 2004 2005 CHMAN e _ .nom nz £ =' ;: I