4A - Tuesday, September 7, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 ' '' tothedaily@umich.edu I0 JACOB SMILOVITZ EDITOR IN CHIEF RACHEL VAN GILDER EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR MATT AARONSON MANAGING EDITOR The economy is moving in a positive direction. Jobs are being created. They're just not being created as fast as they need to. - President Barack Obama, discussing monthly unemployment numbers in the United States, as reported last week by Time magazine. JOSH BUOY AND STEPHANIE HAMEL| Couch ban overlooks real problems Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. Stop the vote A2 City Council should delay vote on couch ban tudents often ignore city politics. But the City Council's first September meeting tonight shouldn't fly under students' radar. After discussion during the summer, a vote on a pro- posed ordinance to ban couches on porches has been scheduled for tonight. Because students haven't been around en masse to raise their objections, all sides of the issue haven't been given equal atten- tion. City Council simply hasn't made any effort to give students a chance to express their opinion on an ordinance that will primarily affect them. City Council should delay voting on the ordinance until students have a chance to voice their opinions. The proposed ordinance to ban uphol- stered furniture on porches was first intro- duced to City Council in 2004 by the Ann Arbor Fire Department. AAFD held that porch couches were a fire hazard. Over the years, City Council has reintroduced the proposal several times, but it has always been tabled indefinitely before it could make it to a vote. In April, there were sev- eral suspicious fires around the campus area - one of which may have been started with a porch couch and led to the death of an' Eastern Michigan University student, reinforcing the fire department's original claims. The fires prompted City Council to revisit the proposal. The Daily reported in August that the vote wouldn't take place until the Council's sec- ond September meeting later in the month. But according to Councilman Christopher Taylor (D-Ward 3), the vote will actually take place tonight - just a few days after' most students arrived in Ann Arbor. And students have been so busy settling in and preparing for the beginning of the semes- ter that they likely haven't been able to get caught up on the City Council's recent activ- ity. Because there isn't any student represen- tation on City Council, students' opinions haven't gotten any exposure. The timing of the vote makes it seem that City Council is trying to pass the ordinance before students can express their views. Many city residents support the ban - when it was first introduced, many thought porch couches were an eyesore, according to Daily editorials from 2004 and 2005. But absent students haven't been able to raise their concerns about a ban that doesn't address the core problem. The real con- cern should be unsafe student houses that aren't up to code and don't have proper fire escapes and tenants who haven't been edu- cated on fire safety. A blanket couch ban won't solve that problem. Since this ordinance will almost exclu- sively affect students, it's unacceptable that City Council hasn't given students a chance to lobby for their interests. City Council should wait until students are established and have a chance to voice objections before it holds a vote on such a contentious proposal. The relationships between the city, resi- dents, students and the University have always been tense. But there's no reason for City Council to strong-arm an ordi- nance into existence without consulting the students that it will primarily affect. City Council should delay the vote on the ordi- nance until council members can hear both sides of the debate. As many remember from last year, disaster struck 928 State Street in April when an off-campus house caught fire, leading to the unfortunate passing of one of its residents - Renden LeMasters, a 22-year-old Eastern Michigan Univer- sity student. Months after this tragic event, our thoughts and condolences are still with the LeMasters family during what certainly remains a difficult timein their lives. As both a college campus and a part of the Ann Arbor community, we must now reflect upon how to best prevent a similar trag- edyfrom recurringin the nearfuture. The Ann Arbor City Council has proposed an ordi- nance change to the Ann Arbor City Code, which prohib- its the "storage of furniture not intended or designed for outdoor use on exterior balconies, porches, decks, land- ings, or other areas exposed to the weather." The Coun- cil's reasoning behind this potential ban derives from the fact that furniture intended for indoor use is oftentimes more flammable than its outdoor counterparts, and thus can perpetuate a fire. When discussing a matter as critical as student safety, however, it is essential that focus solely remains on the well-being of the students and not drift to other debates - like the aesthetics of the city - which have often arisen within the non-student community over this issue. With this in mind, we hope to convey to City Council that the proposed'couch ban' - to which the ordinance is regularly referred - is assuredly not the best action to take to improve fire safety. As the chair and vice-chair of the Michigan Student Assembly Campus Safety Commission, it is our role to provide the student body with safety information relating to all areas of University life. In light of last spring's fires, we looked into fire safety regulations for both on- and off- campus housing, and we were startled by the relative void of protocol and procedures within off-campus homes. With such a large and varied network of landlords and homeowners, safety regulations and suggestions are at times erratically maintained in off-campus hous- ing, as home inspections are currently mandated only once every 30 months by the city. Additionally, there is no active, city-regulated community of landlords and ten- ants to encourage and ensure that fire safety and personal security are maintained in student homes, thus bringing about increasingly unsafe residences. Therefore, the best way to combat safety-ignorance at the student level is for the city to collaborate with the University to implement a series of standards and provide resources regarding fire safety to all students. By simply banning sofas on front porches, City Council is, in effect, combating against stu- dents instead of working with them to promote genuine safety awareness. Further, while it can't be denied that keeping indoor furniture outside puts residents at risk in the case of a fire, there are many other risks that are equally - if not more - crucial to ensuring the safety of a home. Setting up a grill, leaving out bags of garbage, owning whicker or wood furniture, and disposing of cigarette butts on front porches are hazardous behaviors that can cause or accel- erate a fire, yet these practices would not be addressed under the new ordinance. Also, smoke detectors in off- campus homes are irregularly monitored and are some- times intentionally tampered with, but these life-saving devices are not included in any increased regulations. Perhaps most notably, some off-campus homes do not include emergency or alternative exits, and - as was the case in last April's fire - the only way out remains the front-porch entrance. Again, at least as of now, nothing looks to be in the works to resolve this matter. While well intentioned, we see the proposed outdoor couch ban as merely a knee-jerk reaction to a much big- ger issue. If this ordinance is passed, it is our fear that the community-at-large will think that great measures have been taken to improve student safety, yet in real- ity, little will have actually been accomplished. On Sept. 21 at 4:30 p.m. in MSA Chambers, we will be hosting a Campus Neighbors meeting to bring together off-and-on- campus residents in order to improve communication and share pertinent safety information, and we hope that City Council will join us in this effort. Instead of requiring by law that students adhere to one specific faction-of safety advice (when so many more exist), City Council should be willing and excited to step up, reach out and create meaningful, widespread change. They should work with the student body, discover its needs and collaborate with the University to make an actual difference - instead of banning couches and calling ita day. Josh Buoy and Stephanie Hamel are the chair and vice-chair of the MSA Campus Safety Commission. JACOB SMILOVITZ Engaging with the Daily LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Readers are encouraged to submit letters to the editor. Letters should be fewer than 300 words and must include the writer's full name and University affiliation. Letters are edited for style, length, clarity and accuracy. All submissions become property of the Daily. We do not print anonymous letters. Send letters to tothedaily@umich.edu. CHRISTOPHER TAYLOR v Couch ban protects students This is the 120th year that The Michigan Daily is publishing an edition on the first day of classes at the University. Over the course of those years, we've learned a lot about this job and it's done everyday in an effort to serve you, the campus community. Part of our job is informing students about campus and city issues that will affect their lives - see our coverage of the proposed couch ban today for an example. Part of it is not as focused on students' lives, like some of our Uni- versity administration coverage that is meant to allow faculty and instructors to be better- informed employees. We spend a lot of time trying to get things right. Some days we do this well. Some days, admittedly, we do not. But the Daily isn't some distant, abstract entity that we keep locked away at the top of an ivory tower. It's an active, adaptive publica- tion that takes input and information from all corners of campus and distills it just enough to produce a new rendering each morning. If you feel like your corner of campus isn't getting its share of that coverage, you have the power to change that. This editor's note is meant to be a short primer on that - a guide to reading the Daily and engaging with it. Can you really print whatever you want? Yes. We are completely separate from the University. The administration does not have any oversight over the editorial content of the newspaper. This is possible because the Daily is entirely financially supported by advertisements. When we send the pages to the printer at the end of each night, just a handful of students are left in an otherwise dark building at 2:30 a.m. There are some professionals in the building during the day who help manage the Daily's finances and advise the Daily's business staff, but they have no say in what appears in the paper. With that independence comes a great deal of responsibility. We do our best to handle that delicately. We work each day to publish stories that inform and entertain and that help you to live smarter, more exciting lives. Like I said, we do this better some days than others. How does a reader get in touch with you? There's this new thing called the Internet and it is really something special. Have a story that needs our attention? Think we're notscov- ering your slice of campus well enough? Let us know about it. We sort through tons of information here at the Daily. Sometimes we miss things, sometimes we mess things up. When we do either of those things, please, please, please let us know. If you have a newstip, e-mail news@michigandaily.com and it will be delivered to the personal inboxes of six news editors and me. If you want to yell at me personally - or just kindly suggest something that we should cover - feel free to shoot me an e-mail at smilovitz@michigandaily.com. Also, make sure to call us out when you see something wrong. If you spot a factual error in a story, e-mail corrections@michigandaily. com and let us know. We won't be offended. We want the information that we're publishing to be correct. How can a studentjoin the paper? Think we're running the paper into the ground? Feel free to come join us and turn it around, or further run it into the ground - whatever your preference is. The Daily always welcomes new writers, reporters, photogra- phers and designers - no matter your level of journalism experience. To let us know about your interest, head to michigandaily.com/ recruits and fill out the webform. We'll get in touch with you soon thereafter. Another option would be to attend one of our mass meetings, which will be occurring this semester at 7 p.m. on the following days: Sunday, Sept. 12 Tuesday, Sept. 14 Thursday, Sept.16 Monday, Sept. 20 Thursday, Sept. 30 How can a reader express their opinions in the paper? On this opinion page, we print content from the campus community everyday. There are three ways to get published: Send a letter to the editor by e-mailing tothedaily@umich.edu. Submit a viewpoint by sending it to our editorial page editor Rachel Van Gilder at van- gilder@michigandaily.com. Viewpoints are usually 500-700 words long and are edited only for grammar and Daily style. Join the Daily's editorial board to debate issues that students face and help determine the paper's official position on these issues. Contact Rachel Van Gilder at vangilder@mich- igandaily.com for more information about the editorial board. I sincerely hope that you take these opportu- nities to engage with the Daily this year. A lot happens on this campus, and the more of it that appears in these pages, the better off the entire community is. Jacob Smilovitz Editor in Chief After a month-long process, the Ann Arbor City Coun- cil will consider whether or not to pass an ordinance to ban porch couches tonight. This vote was originally scheduled for the middle of August, but City Council pur- posefully delayed the vote to ensure that students would have the opportunity to weigh in on and learn about a measure that is important to them. The goal of the porch couch ban ordinance is to reduce the risk of exterior fires and to thereby create a safer environment for residents and our housing stock. The ordinance achieves this goal by prohibiting the outdoor storage of upholstered furniture designed for indoor use. This prohibition furthers our goal of reducing risk to per- sons and property not because couches are inherently dangerous, but because they are a large source of fuel for fires. Storing large flammable objects on porches is inher- ently dangerous. So why is a piece of furniture that is safe indoors haz- ardous when stored out doors? Fire requires fuel, oxygen and heat to burn. These three elements, plus time, allow a fire to grow. Indoors, a couch is benign because the oxygen element is limited and there is greater likelihood of detection - via smoke alarms, fire alarms, occupants and/or fire suppression systems. Outdoors, a couch is a latent hazard because the oxygen element is unlimited and detection depends upon bystander observation. Based on this information from fire safety experts it is irrefutable that a porch couch is at least a theoretical hazard. It is therefore reasonable to ask whether it is a hazard in the real world. It is. According to records provided by Ann Arbor Fire Mar- shal Kathleen Chamberlain, since 2000, there have been three indoor fires in the city of Ann Arbor the origin of which has been attributed to upholstered furniture. Over that same period, there have been 93 outdoor fires in Ann Arbor that are attributable to upholstered furniture. Porch couch fires are not some minor risk that prompts a knee-jerk, nanny-state solution. They are a real-world problem that requires action. Couch porch fires in Ann Arbor have resulted in mil- lions of dollars in damages, many injuries and, tragically, one fatality. As most of you :know, there was a house fire in April on State Street and a man died. He was a student much like you. His name was Renden Lemasters. The exact circumstances of this fire are still under investi- gation, but there are some certainties: The massive fire started on the porch and there was a couch on the porch. I was once a student here at the University. I know that many of a student's best memories and strongest relation- ships are forged with friends, idling away the hours on a porch couch, talking politics, relationships, sports, class- es, etc. I know that these times are an important part of the college experience. This proposed ordinance will not change any of that. What it will do is ensure that tenants, occupants, man- agement companies and property owners all are required to keep upholstered indoor furniture indoors. So pool your resources, hit up your parents, find some outdoor furniture, then sit on your porch and enjoy your- selves. Be a college student and live and learn. We are delighted that you are here and hope that you enjoy your time in Ann Arbor - in fact, we hope you'll decide to stay after graduation. But whether you are here for a semes- ter or, like me, decide to make Ann Arbor your home, it is our obligation on Council to ensure that everyone in the city is safe from reasonably preventable and non-obvious hazards. That's why I hope that Ann Arbor will join cities such as Kalamazoo, Boulder, Madison, West Fayette and, yes, Columbus, in taking this moderate step to prevent unnecessary and tragic loss, injury and death. Christopher Taylor is a City Council member representing the Third Ward. WANT THE DAILY ON THE GO? Now you can access your favorite Daily opinion content on your phone. Keep up with columnists, read Daily editorials and join in the debate. Check out the Daily's mobile website at m.michigandaily.com. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: Aida Ali, Jordan Birnholtz, Adrianna Bojrab, William Butler, Jordan Birnholtz, William Butler, Michelle DeWitt, Jeremy Levy, Erika Mayer, Emily Orley, Harsha Panduranga, Asa Smith, Brittany Smith, Laura Veith