The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, April 5, 2010 - 5A i EMU student dead after State Street fire From Page 1A condition, Brown said. In an interview with The Michi- gan Daily Saturday night, Brown refused to comment on the spe- cific cause of the fire, but said that "upholstered couches on porches present an incredible life safety risk for apartment residents." Ann Arbor Fire Marshall Kath- leen Chamberlain said in an inter- view with the Daily Saturday afternoon that the cause of the fire is still under investigation. "There's damage to the whole house," Chamberlain said. According to the release, a wit- ness driving down State Street at about 5:15 a.m. noticed a fire on the porch of the house. The press release stated that the witness pulled over to notify the occupants of the house, but the fire quickly spread to the interior of the building. According to the release, five peo- ple were inside the house at the time the fire began, three of whom were taken to the University Hospital. Of the four residents who were not transported to the hospital, at LECTURERS From Page 1A decision to reappoint or not reap- point the lecturer is made. But LEO officials say Herold's follow-up evaluation was met with additional concerns that were not brought up in her initial remedia- tion plan. As such, LEO President Bonnie Halloran said Herold was not given the appropriate time to address the English Department's concerns. University spokeswoman Kelly Cunningham said she could not comment on the matter because it involved a specific employee. However, Cunningham did say that, as in any reappointment proceeding, University officials would have followed the proper steps as outlined in the Univer- sity's contract with the lecturers' union. Associate Vice Provost Jeff Frumkin is the senior director of Academic Human Resources and the University's chief nego- tiator in the bargaining of labor least three are University students. Bryan Vessels, a University senior who lives on the house's main floor, said in an interview with the Daily that he was able to escape the house without injury. "I was in my room in the back of the house," Vessels said. "I got out the back door." Al Girard, a University senior who lives across the street from the house, said he woke up at about 5 a.m. and witnessed the blaze as firefighters came. "The whole front of the house was on fire," Girard said. Girard said that about a min- ute after the fire trucks arrived, he saw a woman on fire run out of the house. According to Girard, the woman ran across the street before a firefighter intervened and sprayed her with a fire extinguisher. According to an annarbor.com article, one person jumped from a second story window, while two others were rescued from the roof. Captain Jim Budd, an Ann Arbor firefighter, said in an interview with the Daily that he arrived on the scene at about 6 a.m. By that time, Budd said the three contracts with the various unions at the University. In an interview Friday, Frumkin said the Univer- sity typically makes decisions to reappoint or not reappoint Univer- sity lecturers at this time each year, with decisions made by April 1. Frumkin said he could not discuss the specific incident sur- rounding Herold, but said he had not been informed of any improp- er handling of a reappointment case and that as of Friday morning no grievances had been filed. Frumkin said to his knowledge the established process for reap- pointment had been followed. "It hasn't been brought to my attention that there have been any procedural irregularities," he said. However, Frumkin said the evaluation process is open to interpretation as it can be difficult to definitively quantify many per- formance areas. "All of these decisions involve a certain amount of judgment," Frumkin said. "People can dis- agree as to whether someone has met the criteria or not.", injured residents had been trans- ferred to the hospital, but the house "was still smoking." At about 2:20 p.m. on Saturday firefighters removed the caution tape surrounding the house and cleared the way for three employ- ees of the' Belfor Property Resto- ration group, who subsequently began boarding up the house. In another incident early Sat- urday morning, students living in The Abbey apartment building were forced to evacuate after a fire charred three cars parked below the building, causing smoke dam- age to some of the units above the smoldering cars. Though the crime alert refer- enced several fires outside resi- dences near campus, Brown said on Saturday evening that she couldn't confirm a connection between the State Street fire and the fire below The Abbey. Officials are still investigating the cause of the fire at The Abbey. Investigators first arrived on the' scene at about 3:15 a.m. Saturday morning, according to Ann Arbor Fire Department Battalion Chief Kevin Cook. LEO President Bonnie Halloran said in an interview Friday that the University handled Herold's reap- pointment procedure improperly. "She made the kind of changes that were outlined in the reme- diation plan and then at the end of this process they came up with additional problems that they had identified in her teaching that they had never ever talked to her about before and terminated her at the end of this year," Halloran said. Halloran added that this is not the first case in which the Univer- sity has used its own interpreta- tion of evaluation criteria to get rid of a lecturer. "(The criteria) are vague. They can be used however people want to," Halloran said. "If you have good scores, they think you're a bad teacher because you give good grades, if you have low scores you're a bad teacher." Halloran continued, "Things are very aloof and departments can use (criteria) however they want and they're not held account- able." Most students were allowed back in to the building, located at 909 Church St., early Satur- day morning. But at about 3:15 a.m. those students whose apart- ments are located directly above where the parked cars caught fire were still waiting to find out when they would be able to move back in. Cook said firefighters had to knock down the doors of the most affected apartments - which face the alley behind the front entrance of the building - and students would not be let back in until the doors could be properly locked or replaced. "I don't know if it will be done tonight," Cook said in an interview early Saturday morning. As of Sunday evening AAFD offi- cials said they couldn't comment on whether the displaced residents were allowed to move back into the building. Students at the scene said they first became aware of the fire some- time between 1:45 a.m. and 1:55 a.m. on Saturday. Rackham student Robbie Brant, who lives ina house near the build- And while LEO bargainers are advocating for a change in the evaluation criteria and process in an effort to make it more trans- parent and hold departments more accountable, some LEO representatives believe the deci- sion to terminate Herold's future employment is a form of "union retaliation," since Herold is on the bargaining team and was serving as the team's grievance officer. "We have reason to believe that there is union retaliation going on here in the English Department and we're very concerned that this happened while we're in the pro- cess of bargaining," Halloran said. Adjunct Prof. Joe Walls, who serves on LEO's bargaining team and acts as a spokesman for the group, said there are details sur- rounding Herold's non-reappoint- ment and the decision process more generally, which he can't make public, that have made some LEO officials even angrier. "We know more details about the decision process, and what was involved in the process but we really aren't in a position to ing, said he first called 911 at about 1:45 a.m., adding that he doesn't think he was the first to call 911 to report the fire. "We could hear the popping," he said. "I heard people screaming, what I thought was fighting, and I saw the car was on fire." Engineering junior Saahil Karpe, who lives in The Abbey, said he first saw the fire from outside his window. "I came home from the bars and was hanging out by myself and saw some lights from my living room," Karpe said. Karpe added that he was told to evacuate the building by firefight- ers on the scene and called his friends who live in the building to tell them to evacuate. Michigan State University soph- omore Austin Brooks said he was on his way back to a friend's house nearby when he first became aware of the fire. "I was walking outside and I heard a huge pop," Brooks said. He added that he saw the middle of the three cars catch on fire first and then the fire spread to cars to the right and left. reveal any of that information," Walls said. "There's some things we know that we can't reveal that make us even more angry than we might be otherwise." Walls said he finds the timing of the incident a little strange, given that contract negotiations are cur- rently underway. "We think the timing is rather interesting that this is happening in the midst of our bargaining and she is on our bargaining team," Walls said. "On the other hand, this is the time when these things are supposed to be announced." Contract negotiations are con- tinuing as planned, but Walls said he expects that negotiations - originally planned to end next week - will continue beyond Fri- day's deadline. "Theoretically next Friday is our last day of bargaining, but the contract doesn't expire until the middle of May so we could con- tinue to bargain past next Friday and we think we probably will," Walls said. Walls said he also expects that Herold's non-reappointment will LSA sophomore Vishal Shah said when he got home from a party he found that his car had caught on fire. Shah said his car was the far- thest right of the three. "The middle car blew up and mine just got caught up in the mess," Shah said. He added that he hadn't fully comprehended the effects of the fire. "This will probably hit me tomorrow," Shah said. LSA sophomore David Baum- stein said he didn't find out about the fire until he was woken up by Karpe, adding that if Karpe hadn't called him he probably would have never known about it. "I was sleeping and then (Karpe) called me and I just ignored the phone call," he said. "Then I woke up to the fire truck and I called him back and he said 'you need to get out of the building."' Baumstein said he didn't hear fire alarms going off in his apart- ment or in the building's hallways. "I didn't hear anything," he said. - Daily Staff Reporter Devon Thorsby contributed to this report. change the overall mood of nego- tiations. "Certainly the bargaining team's mood has changed," Walls said. "We don't know how the rest of the membership will react, but we anticipate that quite a few members will be very unhappy with this." LEO is set to e-mail members about this week's bargaining efforts, at which time they will inform members about Herold's situation. At negotiations Friday, LEO bargainers left Herold's seat at the table empty. Doing so was a pur- poseful decision, according to Jim Anderson, an English lecturer at the University's Flint campus. "We left her seat open today symbolically and expressed our anger with what has happened," Anderson said. "It's pretty rare, I would say, for management to fire a member of the union's bar- gaining team during the middle of negotiations." - Daily News Editor Stephanie Steinberg contributed to this report. H PV Fact: tis estimated thateach m nt nthe US, there is a new case of enital 'warts. HPV Fact Guys gt screend for HV So there's no way to kno if a guy has the or is passing it on. Visit your carpus health center. MERCK Copyright0 2010Merck & Co., Inc All rights reserved. Printed in USA 21050004(39)-01/10-GRD