The Michigan Daily - New Student Edition 2006 - 7F Holiday break brings string of robberies for 'U' students By Ian Herbert and Christina Hildreth Daily Staff Reporters When LSA sophomore Alex Sutton came home after Thanksgiving Break to find thieves had bro- ken into his house on the 800 block of East Ann Street, he realized it would be a long night. Thieves had kicked in his locked bedroom door and stolen his desktop computer. To finish his homework for Monday, Sutton worked on a computer in the Shapiro Undergradu- ate Library until the early hours of the morning. He said the Ann Arbor Police Department told him and his housemates, who lost thousands of dollars in electronics, that it was unlikely they'd ever see their belongings again. The theft at Sutton's house was part of a string of robberies and break-ins during the Thanks- giving weekend, when thieves stole televisions, DVD players, computers, a microwave and other valuables. The Ann Arbor News reported that the holiday robbers nabbed more than $20,000 in electronics and jewelry from 10 residences in the city. Ann Arbor police officers said they made one arrest related to the break-ins. According to the AAPD, there was no signifi- cant spike in the number of burglaries compared to past Thanksgiving weekends. LSA senior Andy Zaspwa, who lives on the 400 block of East Kingsley Street, has a roommate who lost a computer monitor, an iPod, a speaker and a digital camera. He blamed the break-ins on a lack of police patrols. "(The problem is the) police presence," he said. "There's none of it. It's horrible." Sutton's housemate, Kinesiology sophomore David Woodside, said he felt there was nothing he could do to prevent the larceny and that the house- mates had locked all their doors before leaving for break. "This house has a history of (robberies)' Sut- ton added. "The people before us said it was bro- ken into three times." His housemate, LSA sophomore Kenny Alten- burg, said that while they are gone during Christ- mas break, they will probably ask their neighbor to keep an eye on the house. The AAPD told the housemates that the thieves probably entered through an unlocked window. The residents said they locked all but two windows, both of which did not have locks. LSA senior Dan Moranville and LSA senior Greg Lavigne said there were at least six people in the Phi Beta Alpha fraternity house on the 1400 block of Washtenaw Avenue when it was robbed. Some of the residents of the house were awake until 3 am. But when Lavigne came downstairs at 10 a.m., the house's microwave, a PlayStation and the living-room television were gone. There was no evidence of forced entry, and members of the fraternity plan to change all of the locks, Lavigne said, adding that the crime appeared to be well-planned and that he thinks the perpetrator was someone who had been to the house before. While the victims said they do not feel threat- ened or less safe than before the break-ins, they advised other students to lock all windows and doors before leaving. - This article originally ran Nov.29, 2005. Cl. . a Cluing in City Council When it comes to tack- sure the Council debates ordi- ling all the popular nances that affect students on student issues of the campus, and it must help current day - housing, and future Michigan parking, the right to Student Assembly adorn our porches generations work with unattractive with city govern- upholstered fur- ment. niture - the Ann Both Council Arbor City Council members and stu- should not be left dents agree that to its own devices. communication There are individual between the two exceptions, but as a bodies is lacking. body, the Council Students could has demonstrated EMILY show up to Council that without student BEAM meetings, but they'd input, it will generally quickly realize that misconstrue and ignore students' making their voices heard in City perspectives. Council requires a commitment Take Ann Arbor Mayor John of far more than a few hours a Hieftje's proposed lease-sign- month. Council members could ing ordinance. His plan would meet with students, but mem- prevent landlords from showing bers' and students' schedules are apartments and houses less than tight, and turnouts to town-hall one-quarter into the lease term. style meetings tend to be disap- It would seem that by now, City pointing. These obstacles and the Council would be at least some- effective disenfranchisement of what familiar with this plan - roughly 39,000 potential student both The Michigan Daily and The votes via gerrymandered wards Ann Arbor News covered the pro- suggest that holding out for the posal, and Hieftje has discussed it student body to get involved informally at Council meetings. might take a while. But City Council member Marcia The committee will certainly Higgins (D-Ward 4) had only address the lack of communication heard of Hieftje's plan once - last between MSA and City Council, year during an interview with The but it will have to prove whether it Michigan Daily. Council member can also tackle the more troubling Jean Carlberg (D-Ward 3) said disconnectbetween the entire stu- she had only vaguely heard of the dentbody and the Council. In an proposal. "I'm not sure what the ideal world with consistent 90-per- student side is," she said. cent voter turnout, one stone could This is where the new joint easily take outboth birds. But student-City Council committee the studentbody's apathy toward could shine. At its last meet- MSA is almost as problematic as ing, City Council unanimously its indifference towardcity govern- approved the committee, com- ment. These five (hopefully) dedi- posed of five students and two cated students and two (hopefully) Council members. By filling interested Councilmembers may in the Council on Ann Arbor's be the start we need to get things unique student-housing market moving. But when all City Council dynamic that pressure students to hears from students is resounding sign leases 10 months in advance, silence, they have to use their own the committee can ensure that judgment. And for students,that all Council members understand can be a scary thing. what perpetuates these annual mid-October housing rushes. - This column originally Beyond lease dates, it must make ran Oct. 26, 2005. PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY EUGENE ROBERTSON/E A University student looks over a lease agreement. City Council recently approved an ordinance that would prohibit the signing of a rental agreement until the current lease has been in effect for at least 90 days. Without the extended timeframe, students would have less time to make off-campus housing decisions for the following school year. LEASING Sig Cnngdaes push By Andrew Grossman Daily Staff Reporter In the culmination of what has been an unprecedented level of col- laboration between the Michigan Student Assembly and Ann Arbor City Council, the Council unani- mously approved an ordinance pushing back lease-signing dates. The ordinance, first proposed by Mayor John Hieftje in an inter- view with The Michigan Daily last year, prohibits the signing of rental agreements until the cur- rent lease has been in effect for 90 days. It also prevents landlords from showing property to poten- tial tenants for the same period. For September-to-September leases, that means contracts for the following 'fall could not be signed until Dec. 1. One version of the ordinance staggered the earliest date a prop- erty can be shown and when a lease can be signed, creating a one-month "shopping period." The Council unanimously voted to remove that provision last night after landlords pressured them to do so. Without staggering, students will have less time than they wanted to appraise the true quality of the property they are renting. Students showed strong support for the ordinance throughout its development. Landlords generally opposed it. "We're jumping out of our seats for this one," MSA President Jesse Levine said. Levine was so eager to lend his support to the proposal that he rushed to the microphone at the first opportunity for public com- ment. The mayor informed Levine that the first public comment period at the meeting was on the rezoning of a lot on South Division Street, not the lease-signing ordinance. Landlords were not nearly as enthusiastic about the proposal. Landlord Mike Davalos sprinted from his South Forest Street home when he saw the proceedings underway on television. Although he arrived just after Hieftje closed the comment period, Davalos was allowed to speak. Davalos placed the blame for the housing rush on the shoulders of students, not landlords. He argued that student government should educate students to help them make informed choices about housing, not push for legislation. Landlord Lelahni Wessinger presented an inch-thick pile of listings printed from University Housing's website to underscore her point that there are still many housing units available for this fall. "There are right now over 1,100 postings at the University of Michigan website," she said. - This article originally ran Mar. 21, 2006 )UNCiI 4S Dem victory marked by low voter turnout By Jeremy Davidson Daily StaffReporter Ann Arbor City Council elections ended in a sweep for the Democratic Party and a disappointing voter turn- out this year. Democrat Stephen Rapundalo beat Republican Thomas Bourque by a count of 1,574 to 1,436, claiming the seat in Ward 2 for the Democratic Party for the first time in an off-year in more than 18 years. Incumbents Leigh Greden (D-Ward 3) and Mar- cia Higgins (D-Ward 4) reclaimed their seats, making the City Council composed entirely of Democrats.- Greden won in a decisive victory, but Higgins only managed to beat Republican challenger Jim Hood by 51 votes in what proved to be the closest race for any seat. While Hig- gins has already served as a Council member for the past six years, this will be the first term she serves as a Democrat. "We have 11 Democrats with 11 different opinions. I'm here to repre- sent the opinions of the people of the .second ward;" Rapundalo said. Greden echoed Rapundalo's sen- timents, and said the results were telling of the political atmosphere in Ann Arbor. "I think this election is a show of support for the direction this city is moving;' Greden said. Voter turnout was down from 21,000 in November 2003 to 12,000, with several student precincts show- ing disappointing numbers. Voter turnout at Mary Markley Residence Hall, one of the most concentrated student-polling locations, fell from 25 in 2003 to 15 this year. Markley falls in the second ward, where Rapundalo canvassed heavily to reach out to students. "Of the 200 students I met in Mar- kley, only about a dozen or so were even registered to vote;' Rapundalo said. The Michigan Union,which count- ed votes for precincts one and two of the first ward, counted 49 ballots, up from 26 in 2003. Sarah Packard and Steve Lyons, co-chairs of precincts one and two for the first ward, said they were impressed by the turnout. They estimated that students cast about 60 percent of the ballots at their polling station. Voter turnout in East Quadrangle Residence Hall jumped from 52 to 125. South Quadrangle Residence Hall and Bursley Residence Hall remained close to their numbers from 2003, the former jumping from 20 to 22, the latter falling from 32 to 26. The College Democrats were out in much greater force than the Michi- gan Student Assembly's Voice Your Vote Commission, registering 210 students to vote. "We set up tables in the Diag and did informal voter registration in Markley" said Libby Benton, presi- dent of College Democrats. "We tried to encourage residentsin Markley to get registered and to encourage oth- ers to get registered." The Emerald Ash Borer Millage failed by a vote of 6,748 to5,173. The emerald-ash borer is a wood-boring beetle that destroys ash trees. The millage would have amended the city charter to authorize a0.5 millage tax to fund the removal of dead and dying ash trees lost to the beetle. - This article originally ran Nov. 9, 2005. Stephen Rapundalo (left) and Leigh Greden (right) celebrate in an Ann Arbor home at the conclusion of City Council elections. 4