i0 4 - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com L74C 1wlcht,4"pan 43at*lm Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI48109 tothedaily@umich.edu ROBERT SOAVE COURTNEY RATEOWIAK EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR MANAGING EDITOR GARY GRACA EDITOR INCHIEF Unsigned editorials reflect the official position oftthe Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views oftheir authors. Assembly required MSA should pass policy to save time and focus on students It is unfortunate that the president's star power has outshined tireless advocates who have made real achievements working towards peace." - RNC Chairman Michael Steele commenting on President Barack Obama being awarded the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize, as reported yesterday by CNN. CHRIS KOSLOWSKI | E-MAIL CHRIS AT CSKOSLOW@UMICH.EDU That makes him the ferst "And do't w ryfl . "All of us at W HO Radio President to win a NobeL a We'll be playing Obama ns coegacausePreidet Tny t Congressiona Granney wineningnumber Obama for winning the No Medal of I-Ino, and first on hit single as noun an he bel Peace Prize" prize in Mrs. farmer's Annua records it Mose Ove Elvis, --ft - - - Going green, the slow way S 0 0 ome students may recall' the mockery that the Michigan Student Assembly made of itself last winter when it spent several meetings debating the passage of a resolution on the conflict in Gaza. In light of the derailment of MSA that result- ed from discussing these issues at length, MSA is now consider- ing a resolution that would focus debate by changing the policies for hearing community concerns. MSA should approve the pro- posal because it needs to focus on its true purpose - improving life for students, not grandstanding on issues better left to world governing bodies. Tonight, MSA is scheduled to vote on a resolution that would make changes to a controversial portion of its meetings called "community concerns." This portion of the agenda currently allows any member of the community, regardless of University affili- ation, to voice opinions on any issue. The proposed resolution would reduce the time limit on each speaker from five minutes to three minutes. It would also require any- one without a valid Mcard who wants to speak to apply two days prior to the meet- ing. MSA executives would then deter- mine whether or not the concern would be heard. MSA representatives noted that this policy is not designed to limit or even stop community members from speaking out about community concerns but rather to cut down on wasted time. While it may be unfortunate that MSA needs to limit the community concerns por- tionofits meetings,this change isclearlynec- essary. Inthe past, community concerns time has been monopolized by certain residents who speak at length on numerous issues that MSA has no business debating. No matter how important conflicts in the Middle East may be - and no matter how many students may feel passionately about them - MSA's resolutions on these issues don't accomplish anything. Spending time on the inevitable debate that ensues when these concerns are voiced is a waste of MSA's time, and it justifi- ably annoys the student population. It is important for community concerns to be heard. There needs to be a beneficial and progressive relationship between the students, community members and student government in public meetings. But ask- ing non-student community members to apply beforehand is reasonable to prevent the meetings from being monopolized by unproductive debate. MSA leaders should proceed carefully and ensure that valid, pressing community issues are cleared for discussion at meetings. Students and residents have a right to address the assembly, but they shouldn't abuse this right to hijack the meetings of a governing body that should be tackling issues like campus lighting, rising tuition costs and landlord-tenant agreements. MSA can only play a more productive role within the University if it concentrates on these issues and stays away from foreign policy. Passing this resolution is a good way to ensure that MSA is able to get to work fulfilling its true role. With responsible leadership, this policy change can only improve dialogue at MSA. The assembly should vote to approve it at its meeting tonight. hile I wasn't exactly expect- ing great things from the State of the University address Mary Sue Coleman gave last week to explain University initia- tives and plans for the coming year, I was perplexed by Coleman's vision , of campus sustain- ability. With the creation of a special BEN counsel to advise CALECA on sustainabil-_ ity issues, it sounds like the University may simply be paying lip service to the issue more than actually producing real change. That view is furthered by the fact that Coleman also declined to sign the American College and Univer- sity Presidents' Climate Commitment. I cannot help but feel the University believes the sustainability movement does not require any cooperation. The ACUPCC itself is an idealistic but fairly reasonable document. Its mission is to get colleges to inventory their carbon footprint and implement a long-term plan to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. Additionally, it asks signers to make at least two concrete goals such as makingnew construction projects LEED silver or greater or get- ting at least 15 percent of energy from renewable sources. Coleman has said that experts have deemed the whole of the document as "unreasonable." I'd be more likely to buy that argument if I had an idea of what her rubric for "unreasonable" was. How can the University address the sustainability issue on its own, if not by collaborating with other uni- versities and making specific goals that may be too ambitious to reach for? Some of the answers do lie in sim- ple changes in policy and administra- tion, such as the special counsel and collaborations between University groups that Coleman proposed in her speech. But collaboration is only the first step, and signs that concrete are steps being implemented from the top of the University down better show a true commitment to sustainability goals. The first thing the University can look at comes to mind when I think of my friends sweating profusely in dorms - regulate the damn heat bet- ter. Pumping heat into dorms to make them warmer than most people need is both inefficient and costly. Most stu- dents will end up opening windows in the fall to keep temperatures bearable. At the very least, ensuring thermostats are adequatelyregulatingtemperatures in buildings or implementing better air conditioning systems could help with this and make accommodations more comfortable for students. Speaking of dorms, every once in a blue moon, the University offers "sus- tainable" meals made from locally grown products so they don't have as high a carbon footprint from transpor- tation costs. Schools such as UNC Cha- pel P4ill have even used local sources for as much as 20 percent of their food in an effort to be sustainable. If the University really wishes to get serious, they should expand this program. Then there are new construction projects and LEED.. While North Quad, currently under construction, has some green features, Univer- sity officials deliberately chose not to make it a LEED-certified building. And the much-touted Ross School of Business' silver LEED rating lags behind many other schools' shiny new gold- and even platinum-rated facili- ties. The reason we didn't go for more systems? Adding nifty features like a geothermal heating system would cost extra money in the initial price tag, even though such a system would save money in the long run. It's a bit disap- pointing to see us fall short on some causes due to purely financial reasons even if the payoff would be greater in time. For projects such as installing geothermal heating units instead of conventional systems for buildings, costs can be recovered over time with the energy saved, as I addressed in a column last winter (The heat beneath your feet, 01/19/2009). This is true for a lot of other innovative, green build- ing materials such as high-efficiency windows and insulation that decrease energy required for climate control, which further lowers lowering energy bills for heating. As these building practices have grown more common, studies such as one carried out by the Urban Green Council have shown that LEED buildings, if designed well, cost the same per square foot as con- ventional buildings but use far less energy. 'U' has a long way to go on sustainability. If the University wants to prove its sustainability, it needs to start working on green design from the foundation up. Cement manufacturing accounts for five toeight percent of global car- bon emissions, and new materials such as geopolymers can offer equal or better structural performance with one-tenth the carbon generation of cements. While this material comes at a slight premium, if the University implemented this kind of material for use in new construction, it would send a clear message that we are serious about sustainability. It's difficult to weigh all the options that must be considered when imple- menting new initiatives. To an extent, I can understand skepticism regarding how groups should deal with sustain- ability. But the University can't be a leader on sustainability unless its will- ing to make the leap to toward lofty goals, even if some deem those goals unreasonable at first. In the end, a Uni- versity counsel, no matter how spe-, cial; means nothing unless it can both develop tangible plans and implement them. - Ben Caleca can be reached at calecab@umich.edu. 0' 0 0 EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: Nina Amilineni, Emad Ansari, Emily Barton, Harun Buljina, Ben Caleca, Brian Flaherty, Emma Jeszke, Raghu Kainkaryam, Sutha K Kanagasingam, Erika Mayer, Edward McPhee, Harsha Panduranaga, Asa Smith, Brittany Smith, Radhika Upadhyaya, Rachel Van Gilder, Laura Veith SEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@UMICH.EDU Columnist shouldn't blame whitesfor black homophobia TO THE DAILY: I am tiring of Matthew Hunter's consistently incoherent and racist columns, but the article he wrote about the black community and homopho- bia was just too much. There is an apparent prob- lem with homophobia in society in general, but this view especially permeates the black com- munity as evidenced by the result of the vote on Proposal 8 in California. He partially sees that it is a problem, but then lays the blame on "whites" when he says, "This issue is related to whites to the extent at which all injustices in the black com- munity - from crime to poverty to the education gap - have their roots in the historical relation- ship between blacks and whites." There is no other ethnic group that gets to blame its behavior on oppression. I don't see many Jewish Americans being homophobic or racist and blaming it on the Nazis' terrible treat- ment of their people or claiming that the Nazis taught the to hate gay people. And that, by the way, was a far more recent period of oppression than the time of slavery in the American South. Why, Mr. Hunter, would you allow the black community to be a victim of their history? Like it or not, the history of every nation is filled with oppressors and victims, but the victims in those societies don't typically blame their behavior on bad experiences. Every individual is responsible for their views and their actions. We do not live in a country where irresponsible actions have no consequences. Just as the southern white com- munity had to take responsibility for slavery, the black community should take responsibility for its homophobia and other problems they see within their community. Sarah Doukakos LSA junior Daily was right to support gender-neutral housing TO THE DAILY: A recent Daily editorial offered welcome sup- port for a gender-neutral housing option at the University (Opposites attract,10/12/2009). More than 35 years ago, the Intercooperative Council offered to provide a "gay co-op" for les- bian and gay male student occupancy. Fearing that residents in a designated "gay co-op" might be harassed, the Ann Arbor Gay Liberation Front suggested that all co-ops welcome lesbian and gay male residents. Today, some co-ops may house one or several LBGTQ students. I am not aware that such stu- dents have experienced stigma or assault in their residential settings. Were a co-op to be desig- nated as "queer," "LGBTQ" or "gay," I hope its residents would be safe from harassment. The University must continue to provide education on concerns of gender identity, genderexpression and sexual orientation in support of the diversity that enhances our environment.. Jim Toy The letter-writer is the co-founder of the Spectrum Center. "Survival of the fittest" attitude in Fishbowl is wrong TO THE DAILY: If you watch HBO's "Curb Your Enthusiasm," you may have found a few laughs in my Larry David-esque momenttoday as I franticallyssought out a computer on the Mac side of the Fishbowl. Every time one computer appeared to be free, or someone seemed to be packing up their belong- ings, I ran over in that direction. Yet time and time again, some sly, scheming, Fishbowl lurker swooped in before I could claim hegemony on the workspace. This carnage ensued for something like 10 minutes, until I eventuallygot lucky. Unfor- tunately, Ins certain that this scenario sounds all too familiar to many of my fellow students. So, 1 feel inclined to propose a VERY SIM- PLE solution to this insanely frustrating pro- cess of finding a computer during Fishbowl rush hours: a fully integrated queuing system. ICTS needs to set up two computers at the front of the Fishbowl, one for Macs and one for PCs. if all computers are full, you sign in your name and as a computer frees up, voila, your name appears on a screen, along with a Pavlov Dog- style "ding" sound indicating that a workspace has opened. This will ensure greater efficiency and, more importantly, fairness, on a first- come, first-served basis. Delicatessens all over the world have figured this one out already. Pick a number and wait your turn. Eitan Ingall LSA senior KATE STENVIG | Don't censor community concerns * Our University's long-standing commitment to free speech and diversity of ideas is now facing a new attack, this time from some of our elected student leaders. This Tuesday, the Michigan Student Assembly is considering a resolution to impose arbitrary political censorship and drastic limits on the portion of its meetings that is devot- ed to community concerns. The resolution purports to "modernize" MSA meetings, and the rationale presented for this draconian proposal is that some members of the University community have used their allotted time to yell at the assembly. Yelling? Really? My, how sensitive! While manners are often an indicator of social class, neither poor manners nor low class should exclude anyone from participating in the democratic process, nor should elected represen- tatives be spared their criticisms. This should be obvi- ous to anyone remotely acquainted with the principles of democracy. The proposed resolution is a blatant attempt to silence any difference of opinion and demonstrates that the authors of the resolution deserve to face more yelling, not less. Especially disturbing is that the resolution would give the executive board power of censorship in determin- ing which items are a "topic of interest" for the assembly and which are not. But on quite a few occasions, whole groups of minority students, including black and Arab students, have approached the assembly only to be told that their concerns are not relevant to students - mean- ing not relevant to white students. The real message in each of those cases was that the minority students them- selves were irrelevant. No such abuse of power should be permitted from any member of any democratic body. Minority students, in particular, have been the targets of these abuses. Then there is the rule of arbitrary censorship against all non-student members of the community. Having to apply two business days in advance and hope that the czars of the assembly grant you an audience is ridiculous. Dozens of student organizations work with people from our community and from around the world. The quality of life of every student is directly affected by the actions of professors, administrators, local officials and world- P.h renowned politicians. There is indeed life outside the bubble of this campus. If the assembly has any intention of combating the rising costs of higher education, defend- ing and expanding financial aid programs, reversing the drop in underrepresented minority student enrollment and ending the military's drain on precious potential funds for education, does anyone really think that we can accomplish any of these things without working along- side people from outside our student body? And if there is no intention of accomplishing such things, then what on earth are these anti-free speech tyrants doing in our student government in the first place? Far from modernizing the assembly, the proposed resolution would transform our student government into somethingmore like an ancient despotism. Unfortunately, that would be painfully consistent with the recent actions of the MSA leadership, in recent years, which include giving the Steering Committee (which is not elected by the student body) the veto power to prevent any resolu- tion from being discussed by the assembly; maneuvering behind closed doors to remove opponents from elections; creating an Internet group to degrade and insult a dis- abled representative; engaging in shady financial transac- tions; and attempting to disenfranchise the entire School of Public Policy by not permitting it to have even a single representative. We can't afford to leave organized student democracy ii the hands of those who are trying to destroy it by transforming it into a bureaucratic playpen of snob- bery and impotence. It has been much better - it can be much better. We must turn to the future. Our membership in this student body grants us unique opportunities to change our world for better or worse. The current economic crisis is taking its strongest toll on the poorest and most disadvantaged students, many of whom are struggling to stay enrolled and many of whom are still in grade school and struggling to attain any higher education at all. We must not allow the construction of an ivory tower to seclude our student government from those who most need it. Kate Stenvig is an MSA representative from Rackham. 0