4A - Thursday, September 15, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4A - Thursday, September iS, 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 It's like staying in a hotel." - Iran President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said of the prison conditions in which two American hikers accused of espionage have been held, according to a Sept. 14 New York Times article. STEPHANIE STEINBERG EDITOR IN CHIEF MICHELLE DEWITT and EMILY ORLEY EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS NICK SPAR 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. A temporary fix Chrysler's two-tier payment isn't sustainable he American auto industry's recovery has been placed in the hands of its workers. In a move to stimulate the automotive job market, Chrysler recently announced it would imple- ment a two-tier wage system for its employees. The newest workers will earn $14 per hour, and longtime employees will continue to earn nearly double that amount. Union leaders have embraced the change that will increase new hires and ensure job security for cur- rent employees. Though the decision will boost Detroit's economy in the immediate future, a two-tier wage system for employees who do the same work is not a sustainable plan in the long run. The real Ann Arbor 9 In a move to cut labor costs, Chrysler believes paying new hires a flat rate will make the company more competitive. For years, members of the United Automobile Work- ers have remained steadfast in their belief in equal pay regardless of seniority. Due to the slowed economy and high unemployment rate, the U.A.W has made numerous conces- sions to ensure the solvency of automakers and job security for its employees. In a state- ment to The New York Times on Sept. 12, Chrysler states there have been no changes in the quality of cars coming off the line despite the pay disparity. The move is a simple solution to a vast eco- nomic problem. The American auto indus- try has been on the decline since the influx of foreign automakers in the United States. Three years ago, the question of solvency was answered: A government-backed bailout for two of the "Big Three." With the bailout came a slow and steady recoveryandthe proverbial rebirth of the American automaker. Prior to the economic crisis, the U.A.W. was opposed to its members receiving different pay for the same work. Yet, due to the unemployment cri- sis,theunionhasdone whatisbestforitswork- ers and has found new avenues to employment. The U.A.W. understands that any employment is better than no employment. Though Chrysler's decision to hire more employees through its new wage system will help in the short term, it's not sustainable in the future. About 12 percent of Chrysler employees earn the lower wage, but the num- ber of employees hired under the lower-tier wage system is expected to increase dramati- cally in the coming years. The U.A.W. Presi- dent, Bob King, said that an increase in the entry-level wages is a top priority in nego- tiations for a new national contract. Chrys- ler is putting people to work now, but when the economy recovers, it can no longer take advantage of the unemployment rate. The two-tier wage system should not become the norm. Chrysler and the U.A.W. must create a long-term plan for integration of the wage classes. While the new plan is acceptable during a time when the economy is faltering, a two-tier wage system promotes inequality, and inequality cannot be a long- term business practice. Chrysler's two-tier wage system will allow the company to become more competitive and ensure paychecks for thousands of Americans. Once the company is on solid footing, it should reinstate normal pay disbursements and put employee compensation on an even footing. Have you been tempted to make AnnArbor your refuge from the rest of the world? I know Ihave. They say this is 28 square miles sur- rounded by real- ity. The shock attached to the - crimes around , campus this year - shocking as they are - is JOEL itself a measure of the comfort BATTEM we usually keep. Yet you don't have to go far away to get schooled in the tough times we're inhabiting. A 20-minute drive from campus will getyouto the Willow Run plant, a sprawling property just north of 1-94. This factory, which Henry Ford constructed to build bombers for World War II, was once the larg- est single room on our planet. After the war, it served General Motors for more than 50 years. It's been empty since the company went bankrupt. In the adjoining school district, Wil- low Run Community Schools, three- quarters of the students qualify for free and reduced-price lunches. Along the Huron River, about eight miles from The Rock, you can walk through an isolated south- ern section of Ypsilanti's Riverside Park where field lights tower over a meadow that is beginning to sprout small trees. Not too long ago, this was a baseball diamond. However, the city ran out of money to operate its recreation department in 2003. The path along the river is lined with toppled lamp posts. At the edge of Ann Arbor, in a wooded area at the crux of I-94 and M-14,you'll findCampTakeNotice,a homeless community where dozens of people live in tents year-round. The downtown homeless shelter has only enough beds for a fraction of the people who need them, and the camp's residents find value in taking governance into their own hands. The camp isn't as big as those that sprung up around the country dur- ing the Great Depression, but it's a reminder of the difficult conditions swirling around the outskirts of our little oasis of learning. Much of life here can seem removed from the storm and stress of a troubled world. In the blur of libraries, cafes, classrooms and rental units many of us inhabit, "reality" often feels like something alien. Lying on Ingalls Mall, I can stare up into the sky and imagine that the whole universe is a kind of garden, where the grass is always manicured to perfection and the only moral dilemma is whether or not one should feed the squirrels. Yet even here in the city, amid the $12 sandwiches and sparkling new collegiate towers, you can find hints of a less rosy reality. Privileged spac- es don't maintain themselves, after all. I think of the makeshift bed I saw once in the basement of a restaurant a few steps from the Diag and the small army of custodial staff wiping down classrooms where they've never sat. Ann Arbor natives haven't all been equally privileged either, despite the stereotype and the steady work of gentrification. On the corner of Fourth Avenue and Ann Street you'll find a historical marker commemorating the time when the block was home to Ann Arbor's African American business district - back when an unwrit- ten code barred blacks from living south of Miller Road. Now that the tanneries and slaughterhouses are gone, most of the cheap real estate that remains lies at the city's edge, especially toward the east. Despite the two Whole Foods we have, the city isn't an undifferentiated island of affluence, at least not yet. Harsh conditions surround our campus oasis. That brings me back to the old saying. There sure is a lot of money within these 28 square miles, and some distinctive cultural norms. But the truth is there's only one reality out there, and Ann Arbor is part of it. By perceiving this town, and our- selves, as wholly insulated from the whirlwind of the world beyond, we obscure the fact that we're all part of one phenomenon, and that austerity and abundance are arelationship, not independent conditions. As students, we're presumably here to learn something aboutwhat's real, which can be a scary enterprise and one that motivates us to seek refuge from the forces shaping our world in an imagined sort of Swit- zerland. But the first step to the real might be seeing that we're already part of it, whether we like it or not. - Joel Batterman can be reached at jomba@umich.edu. 0 TIM RABB | Too little, too late? EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: Aida Ali, Michelle DeWitt, Ashley Griesshammer, Patrick Maillet, Erika Mayer, Harsha Nahata, Emily Orley, Teddy Papes, Timothy Rabb, Seth Soderborg, Andrew Weiner It was over two centuries ago - at the threshold of the First Industrial Revolution - that demographer Thomas Malthus augured the dire consequences of unchecked population growth. His initial worry was that the number of people in developed countries would even- tually exceed the countries' agricultural means and force a regression to subsistence living. This tipping point, dubbed a "Malthusian catastrophe" by modern demographers, would supplant our cars with horses and our super- markets with backyard farms. Though new technologies have allowed food production to keep up with population growth, Malthus's old model has been adapted to fit new scenarios, most notably the rate of oil production. Even some of the more optimistic estimates warn that global oil production will peak within the next 10 years. Couple this startling time- frame with the fact that the world's population growth rate won't stabilize until 2050 and will later peak at 9 billion people, and it's hard not to wonder whether our beloved tech-craze may be on its last leg. Of course, there are those who claim that technology always trumps the threat of disas- ter, just as it did with Malthus's agricultural model. Some point to the popularity of hybrid cars as an indication of change for the better. But most of the electricity that's used to manu- facture and (in the case of plug-in electric mod- els) power these cars is made by coal power plants. What's the sense of trading one limited, dirty resource for another? Others insist that the efficiency of nuclear power plants will save us, but the upturn of natural disasters predicted by global warming experts has called the whole process into ques- tion. The near meltdown of Japan's Fukushima reactor shows us that no amount of microman- agement can guarantee safe nuclear fission. In fact, Germany has already committed to dis- mantling its 17 nuclear reactors by 2022 in light of overwhelming public concern. What are we to do in light of these circum- stances? It hardly seems fair to refuse India and China pieces of the prosperity pie that the United States has buried its face in for the last century. But if the growing middle classes of these and other developing countries repeat our mistakes and demand their own cars, trucks and SUVs, the amount of oil consumed by their immense populations will make past complaints of American excess look like myo- pic temper tantrums. Even the threat of oil depletion would pale next to the consequences of the increase in carbon dioxide emissions these countries are capable of. Solar, wind and biomass energies are among the safest, most sustainable alternatives to our current system. Critics dismiss these sources as expensive, undeveloped and inefficient. But when you consider that the highest-paying major over the course of a career for today's college student is in petroleum engineering, it's clear that the problem is one of bad priorities rather than feasibility. In a society that wor- ships the god of the bottom line, it shouldn't come as a surprise that the best and brightest are turning down the opportunity to develop alternative energies when the best money is dirty money. My hope is that we abandon nuclear power and foreign oil and follow the precedent set by Germany. As the world's first renewable energy economy, Germany derives 17 percent of its electrical power from solar panel tech- nology. The program welcomes open partici- pation with a "feed-in tariff" plan that gives landowners the right to house subsidized elec- tric generators (wind turbines, solar panels, etc.) on their property. The landowner is paid for anyenergy produced on his or her property, including the energy landowners use for their own purposes. Plus, there's an added bonus if the landowner produces enough electricity to feed extra power into the public grid. Germany's multi-party system allowed politicians with a measure of reason to win office and shape public opinion to ensure the program's success. It's easy to shun our own agency by blaming our federal government for lax energy policies. But let's face it: We can't expect a two-party system to champion our best interests when politicians on both sides of the coin have burgeoning invest- ments in big oil. I'm not suggesting we over- haul a system that's seen Americans through generations of struggle. I'd instead urge everyone who's not completely shortsighted to rise up and demand the system address the problems of the present day, with a collective voice too loud to ignore - louder than cor- porate lobbyists, diesel engines and the ham- mering of pump jacks. Tim Rabb is an assistant editorial page editor. Embrace the changes ahead Coming back to campus to start our senior year, my friends and I are a little stunned. Many of us are returning to Ann Arbor after semes- ters abroad and acclimating to the absence of our gradu- 4 ated friends. - Between hugs and house par- LIBBY ties, we can't ASHTON ignore the epic finality this year represents. When the last class left, we inherited their senior status even though it doesn't quite feel right. Even as a "senior," I don't feel sig- nificantly surer of my dream job than I did three years ago. But because I know I'll have to walk somewhere once I step off the grad- uation stage, I fear I'll stumble into some professional life that I'm not sure I want. As a student of a system that guided me here tightly and a citizen of a country that encourages - if not requires - a salaried, com- mittal lifestyle, I'm having trouble internalizing the "it'll all work out" mantra my parents prescribe. If the last five years of college graduates have taught us anything, it's that we'll be lucky to find a job - let alone one that makes us happy. Shouldn't we know by now what we want to be when we grow up? And shouldn't we have learned how to get there? I can't help but expect myself to build a makeshift trajec- tory to jump on to once the one I've followed for the last 18 years has run its course. And I want a guar- antee that in whatever direction I head, I'll find fulfillment and mean- ing - oh, and a livelihood. So while we're celebrating the culmination of our entire education, we're also terrified that we're standing on the most profound pivot point of our lives. But when I take my deep breath (also part of my parents' prescrip- tion) and stop panicking like I'm about to be driven off a cliff into the abyss of real adulthood, I can see my fears of change, failure and the unknown for what they are. Senioritis, which feels way less fun and more anxiety-ridden than I remember from high school, only enhances feelings that are common to all people at every stage of life. To lean into those feelings by facing the changes and challenges head on is to grow, albeit uncomfortably. To question where you're headed in life and whether or not you'll find success once you get there is not unique to college seniors. I met two 26 year olds this summer who recently quit their high-paying jobs (one at a consulting firm, the other at a record label) to take and cre- ate jobs that made them want to work longer hours for less money. It would have been safer and probably easier for each of them to stay with their previous jobs, but they chose to create the change they wanted in their lives. The complete con- trol we have over our post-graduate steps allows us to pivot whenever we want to. Few of us can make our dream jobs appear from thin air, but then again, some of us can. Nancy Lublin, the CEO of DoSo- mething.org (the non-profit where I worked this summer) began her career as a leader in the non-profit sector when she was 23 years old. She started Dress for Success, a non- profit that provides professional attire to low-income women, with a $5,000 inheritance check and little experience. When her organization grew up and no longer needed her leadership for its survival, she left to take over DoSomething.org, the leading non-profit for youth and social change. Nancy Lublin chose to pivot when her career was climb- ing because she missed the excite- ment of building something. Question where you're headed in life. Rather than fearing the end of college, I think we're feeling overwhelmed by our soon-xr-be sudden gain in freedom and pos- sibility. That freedom requ res decision-making not just leading up to graduation but every day there- after. Rather than feeling pressure to make the right career choice for the next 10 years, we should con- centrate on becoming even clearer about what work engages us the most. The only real threat we face upon graduation is allowing our fears to paralyze us from making the scary decisions that always pre- cede success. - Libby Ashton can be reached at eashtonsciumichedu