4A - Wednesday, January 12, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4A - Wednesday, January 12, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com STEPHANIE STEINBERG EDITOR IN CHIEF MICHELLE DEWITT and EMILY ORLEY EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS Dave Brandon was sold, and we were too:' - Junior wide receiver Darryl Stonum said about new head football coach Brady Hoke, as reported by The Michigan Daily today. KYLE SWANSON MANAGING EDITOR 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. Don't let our people go Legislators need to bring people back to Michigan t's no secret that Michigan's population has been decreasing over the past several years. With one of the worst economies in the country, cities that were once bustling are simply run- ning out of people. The decline in residents was confirmed by the results of the 2010 United States Census. While it's understand- able that people are leaving the state because they need to support themselves and their families, the aftermath has caused a serious problem for the state: the loss of a seat in the U.S. House of Repre- sentatives. Michigan needs to quickly begin the process of rebuild- ing its population to regain its seat in Congress. Brady Hope According to a Jan. 7.Daily article, Michi- gan will losea seat in the U.S. House of Rep- resentatives in 2012 because of population decreases. The 2010 U.S. Census concluded that in the last decade, Michigan's popula- tion dropped by nearly 1 million people - or 0.6 percent. In this census, Michigan had the largest population decrease of any state in the country. The loss of a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives will leave Michi- gan with 14 seats. The census results also impact the, amount of federal funding the state receives from Washington - a number that will also decrease in light of the drop in population. Losing a seat in the House is a huge loss for the state. The number of representatives determines how many people are in Wash- ington campaigning for Michigan anal its needs. With one less representative at work for us, the state will not have the same ability to impact votes and push issues. Addition- ally, having one less person will undeniably result in decreased federal funding for the state. And those funds are an integral com- ponent in rebuilding Michigan's economy and infrastructure. Michigan needs to work to regain its lost seat in order to ensure that representatives have solidified support in Washington. Equally unfortunate as the decline in rep- resentation is the decrease in federal fund- ing. Population and the number of House representatives are major factors in deter- mining how much money is allotted to a state. The decrease in both will make it dif- ficult for our already cash-strapped state to have money to put toward sectors like public transportation and education. It's likely that students at the University - and public uni- versities throughout the state - will notice this loss of funding. One of the best ways to combat this prob- lem is for Republican Gov. Rick Snyder to help the state develop new, innovative job markets that will draw people back to Michi- gan. Once people are ensured that they can find work in Michigan, they will begin to return to the state. But in order to expand businesses, there needs to be people to work the jobs and purchase the products. This means that people need to be attracted to the state by more than job prospects. Improve- ments to public education and special atten- tion to environmental issues will help to bring people to Michigan and regain lost representation and funding. Between the Great Lakes and once thriv- ing cities - like Detroit - Michigan is an exceptional place to live. But if people can't support themselves here they will under- standably leave. The state government needs to work to create jobs and bring people back to Michigan. We wanted Jim Harbaugh. The man looked per- feet on paper and on the field. A one-loss season at a pres- l tigious academic institution, a Heis- man-contender quarterback with great recruits sur- rounding him and integrity on and off the field. Sure, he had made some ERIC negative remarks SZKARLAT about his alma mater's academic standards, but who could blame him? All it takes is one look at the Demar Dorsey incident to see that we have been attempting to recruit football players below our typical academic level. But Harbaugh said no. The hottest coach available this season, he went to the NFL to coach the San Francis- co 49ers. We kicked and screamed. We asked how a "Michigan Man" could turn his back on this great University. Then we saw Les Miles. He ran a spread offense, so the transition would be easy. He has a National Championship under his belt and, best of all, he had to beat Jim Tressel and the Ohio State Buck- eyes to get it. Miles played under Bo Schembechler, and he has recruiting ties to what is often considered "the best conference in college football" - the Southeastern Conference. Yes, he had over signed some recruits, and he had an odd habit of eating grass. But we knew we would win with him. But Miles said no too. Louisiana State retained their head coach for another season. We were silent. We hung our heads in disappointment and despair. If not Miles, then who? Who could take up the torch of the winningest college football program? Enter Brady Hoke. A dismal overall record at Ball State and only one winning.season at San Diego State. He disapproves of the spread and has even called it "basketball on grass." The transition would be tough. What's more is that he is known to run the despised 3-3-5 defensive scheme that Rich Rod was often criticized for running. He may be a "Michigan Man" and he may, have had some moderate successes, but they've come from lower-end conferences and teams.' But Hoke said yes. Many were dis- appointed that we only got our third choice for coach. I was, like many others, rooting for Harbaugh. Then for Miles. I wanted anybody before I wanted Brady Hoke to be our next coach. I didn't"think he would be successful based off the; numbers. He only seemed to man- age to turn around Ball State's pro- gram and he had moderate success at SDSU. A 9-4 season isn't satisfactory to the Michigan fan base. But he is now our coach. He is the next man to lead our football team, and we need to support him. It's that or bust again, like it was in 2008. We've lived through 3-9 and 5-7. Finally, things seemed like they would improve going into 2010. But they didn't. Not enough to beat Ohio State, Michigan State or Mississippi State, or even play remotely competi- tively in any of those match ups. It seemed like yet another failure of a season, despite the improved record. But look at former football coach Gary Moeller. The man had a terrible record in the Big Ten before we hired" him away from Illinois. He was a coach under Bo for a while and finally - when he got his turn - he led us to three Big Ten Championships in five years. We gave him the benefit of the doubt and he succeeded. We need to do the same for Hoke. Brady Hoke - in spite of his seem- ingly unimpressive successes as a head coach - coached under Lloyd Carr. He coached the same defense which featured Heisman trophy win- ner Charles Woodson. He helped to coach our team to a National Cham- pionship and to two more Big Ten Championships in his previous time at Michigan. So why the lack of faith? Here we have a man who under- stands Michigan football. He knows what it means to us. He might just be able to restore our program to its for- mer glory. Give Hoke the benefit of the doubt and he will suceed. We're at a fork in the road of Mich- igan football history. You may devi- ate and oppose the Hoke hire and say bad things about him as a coach or as a person. Or you may maintain the path that Hoke will now be leading us down. That path may or may not lead to victory. I don't know any bet- ter than anyone else which it will be. I can assure you, though, that no matter where Hoke will lead us, opposing him will not bring Michi- gan to victory. He is our only hope right now. You don't have to believe in Hoke to support him. If you believe 0 in Michigan, and if you bleed Maize and Blue, you will cheer Hoke and his men forward. You will stay. After all, that is the only way to become a champion. -EricSzkarlat can be reached at eszkarlat@umich.edu. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: Aida Ali, Will Butler, Eaghan Davis, Michelle DeWitt, Ashley Griesshammer, Erika Mayer, Harsha Nahata, Emily Orley, Harsha Panduranga, Teddy Papes, Roger Sauerhaft, Seth Soderborg, Andrew Weiner ELIZABETH PARR I Growing a business from dirt Blogging Blue: Will Butler and Seeing Red: Kylie Kagen the debate rhetoric in the wake of p U Goto the Jan. 8 Arizona shooting. m Go to michigandaily.com/blogs/The Podium. SETH SODERBORG I Obama's Christmas miracle For a student from Ann Arbor, driving through Detroit can feel like driving through another world. "Lock your car doors" was the warning I remembered as I gently turned toward exit 51 off of I-75. As I pulled up to the stop sign, I could feel my car tires slow. The rain drummed in heavy time as the wipers stepped in tune. I was alone except for Neil Young on the radio in a city that sprawled for miles, and he was safe and dry in the record- ings of WOMC. I turned onto Jefferson Avenue, a wide, five- lane road that Ishad all to myself. The city made cars, and its streets were made for these cars, but both had long been abandoned with the rise of freeways and suburbs. The day I was there, I was one of two drivers on the road and the other was far on the horizon. I soon found Manistique Road, my destination, where I was expected at the harvest festival. The festival was put on by Feedom-Freedom Growers, a community collaborative that began in 2008 as a way to meet local needs by culti- vating both food and relationships. The proj- ect began as a single garden bed at the home of Wayne Curtis and Myrtle Thompson. The fam- ily was tired of seeing their neighborhood as a place where people were uncomfortable, with their closest neighbors scattered over several. blocks. Plus, vacant houses become a hazard when they're not cared for and attract drug sales, dogfights, arson and vandalism among other things. They wanted to recreate a com- munity that was no longer there by drawing people to their garden, which now spans into the empty lot next to their home. The fam- ily has hopes of expanding the garden to the empty lot across from the current location in order to better meet community needs. All the produce that is grown at the Feedom- Freedom garden is organic and is sold to neigh- bors and visitors of the garden. The produce is alsotaken to the Eastern Marketin Detroit every Saturday morning to be sold alongside other Detroit-grown produce. The growing process was aided by the Greening of Detroit, which initially provided soil for the inner-city garden. Leaves are donated from various parts of the city to put the garden to bed for the winter. Urban farming has become a popular phe- nomenon in Detroit, and it's not hard to see why when the city has more than 66,000 vacant lots. During the automobile boom of World War II, people were unable to foresee the conse- quences of their massive expansion of the city borders once the rush for labor ended. Auto- mation, outsourcing and racial tension quickly emptied the city. Today, the geographical areas of San Francisco, Manhattan and Boston can fit inside the greater Detroit area, which has a population of less than 1 million. Besides needing to do something with its vacant lots, Detroit is also in need of grocery stores that carry fresh fruits and vegetables. Detroit's title used to be the Motor City, but the city is now known as the world's top potato chip consumer. Attributing to this new title could be the fact that Detroit is now considered a food desert. Roughly 550,000 Detroit resi- dents - more than half of the city's total popu- lation - live in areas that are far out-of-balance in terms of day-to-day food availability. This group of people must travel twice as far, or further, to reach a grocery store that carries fresh fruits and vegetables than as they do to reach the closest food location. These "fringe" locations include fast food restaurants, conve- nience or liquor stores and gas stations. Urban farming provides fresh produce that is grown in close proximity to where people live: in their own neighborhoods. While urban farming has been hailed by most, it does have its critics. Rev. Jessie Jack- son is among them. He says the endeavor is "cute, but foolish" and calls on industry to save Detroit. Detroit was a city made from industry and also abandoned by it. Its people are tired of waiting for a savior and have begun to cre- ate their own community, bottom up. Detroit can never go back to its industrial past, and activists such as Wayne Curtis realize this - residents must create their own future. Maybe urban farming won't save Detroit, but maybe Jessie is wrong. Elizabeth Parr is an LSA junior. If you follow national news, you know that we live in an era of hyper-partisanship. You know that President Barack Obama can't corral his own party. You know that if he would just stand up to the Republicans, he would get things done. You know that he isn't getting things done. You know that national politics is, for all intents and pur- poses, irretrievably broken. Depending on where you get your information, you know that our president is either a dangerous communist who exploits the office of the .President to force his radical agenda upon unsuspect- ing patriots, or a wimp with fewer "cojones" than his secretary of state. George W. Bush's recent presidential memoir informs us that having "the cojones" to do tough things is a key test of one's fitness for the presidency. By that slightly scatological standard, Obama has failed. Here's the thing: In the past month, the president sin cojones got a supposedly ineffective, hopelessly polarized and now lame-duck Congress that never does anythingto do exactly what he wanted - just in time for Christmas. What did Obama bring us in his holiday legislation blitz, you ask? Help for the beleaguered, in the form of extended unemployment benefits. Money in everyone's wallet, thanks to tax cuts. Jobs, the result of reduced payroll and social security taxes. A safer world, thanks to a nuclear arms reduction treaty with Russia. Well- deserved rest, in the form of health care compensation for 9/11 first responders. Freedom, in the repeal of that odious law, "don't ask don't tell." How did he do it? The old-fashioned way: through com- promise. The arms reduction treaty passed 71-26. "Don't ask don't tell" was repealed by a vote of 65-31, including eight Republicans. The tax bill - which included those unemploymentbenefits - passed the House 277-148, with 112 of those "no" votes coming from Democrats. And the bill to help 9/11 responders? It passed the Senate unani- mously after almost all senators reprimanded Repub- licans like Rep. Lamar Smith (R Texas), who called the plan an "$8.4 billion slush fund." Compromise, of course, means giving the other side some of the things it wants. Obama's blitz was possible because it started with him swallowing a bitter pill. A few weeks ago, Senate Republicans signed a pledge saying they wouldn't vote on anything until congress approved and the president signed a controversial tax-cut exten- sion package for the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans. Numerous commentators suggested that the tax cuts would do more harm than good. Still, the Republicans got what they wanted in a sense. The tax cuts were extended - and continued to favor the wealthiestAmericans - but the extension was for only two years. Democrats cried foul. Most of them voted against the bill and then raised a stink about the president giving in to Republicans even when his own patty controlled both houses of Congress by a wide margin. In the wake of the tax cuts, the rhet- oric of partisanship was as loud as it ever is these days, and some speculated that the president would soon face a revolt in his party - perhaps even a challenge in the 2012 primary elections. That now seems unlikely. Getting everyone on board with these proposals took quite a bit of money. The tax cut and unemployment bene- fit package will cost $860 billion over two years - several hundred billion dollars were included simply to placate Republicans. In effect, the president bought the support of dozens of Republicans by agreeing to spend billions of dollars on tax cuts for the wealthy and for business. Hyper-partisanship, it seems, means little more than a higher price tag when it comes time to placate politicians with pork. With enough money at stake, even a do-noth- ing Congress can be persuaded to act. Obama's Christmas miracle is, in many ways, a miracle. But like most real miracles, it came at a high cost. Our president proved that he both has cojones and knows how to play politics. But we should be asking ourselves whether the compromise and results we expect of our government are worth the billions of dollars they seem to require. Seth Soderborg is an LSA junior. The Daily is looking for a diverse group of strong, informed, passionate writers to be columnists for the winter semester. Columnists write a 700-800 word column every other week on a topic of their choosing. If you are an opinionated and talented writer, consider applying. E-MAIL MICHELLE DEWITT AT DEWITTM@MICHIGANDAILY.COM FOR MORE INFORMATION. Want to be an opinion cartoonist? The Daily is looking for creative, artistic and opinionated people to draw weekly cartoons. E-MAIL EMILY ORLEY AT EHORLEY@MICHIGANDAILY.COM FOR MORE INFORMATION. 0 A A