The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.cam Tuesday, November 8, 2011-- 7 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, November 8, 2011 - 7 CONTR A C N[ Nurses union, UMHS praise new contract Students continue to work on Open Housing Initiative Seven months in the making, contract passed by2tolmargin By CLAIRE GOSCICKI Daily Staff Reporter University of Michigan Health System nurses praised the ratifi- cation of a new contract between UMHS and the Professional Nurse Council over the weekend and expressed relief as seven months of negotiations and more than 50 meetings between the two parties came to a close. According to Ann Sincox, a spokeswoman for the Michigan Nurses Association, the final meetings to discuss the contract took place on Friday and Satur- day nights. Members of the Pro- fessional Nurse Council and the MNA voted affirmatively on the contract late Saturday evening. Overall, the nurses are collectively pleased with the contract, which extends benefits to more than 4,000 University nurses, Sincox said. "I think the general impression was that this was a pretty decent contract," she said. The contract passed by about a 2 to 1 margin, according to Katie Oppenheim, president of the Pro- fessional Nurse Council. She said University nurses were successful in implementing many proposed contract changes. "As a result of all of our pushing back on the University, we were able to get increased language (in the contract) around nursing practice issues as well as language around shifts, lunch breaks and things like that, as well as wage increases," Oppenheim said. Keri Bokor, a registered nurse in the Surgical Intensive Care Unit at the University Hospital, said though the nurses made some sac- rifices on behalf of UMHS, they were warranted in light of a chal- lenging economy. Bokor spoke before the Uni- versity's Board of Regents in Sep- tember and called attention to UMHS's plans to reduce benefits. She said she is satisfied with the progress both parties made in their negotiations. "I don't think that anybody got everything they wanted, but everyone got a little bit of what they wanted," Bokor said. UMHS released a written state- ment on Sunday expressing its support of the finalized contract, which will expire in June 2014. "We value our nurses highly, as they play a crucial role in the qual- ity and safety of care we provide at UMHS," the statement reads. "UMHS is pleased that we have come to this agreement. We look forward to continuing to recruit and retain the highest caliber nurses in the country." Negotiations began last April following an announcement by the University that six nurses' sched- ules would be altered without the permissionofthenurses' union. In July, the Michigan Nurses Associ- ation filed a grievance against the University, suggesting that UMHS violated state law and the health system's collective bargaining agreement with the nurses' union. Last month, nearly four months after the nurses' former contract with the University expired,-both parties reached a tentative con- tract agreement. Oppenheim said at the time that the nurses were "unanimously recommending" the ratification of the agreement. The tentative agreement came after what Oppenheim called "sig- nificant movement" by UMHS beginning in September. Commentingonthe lengthiness of the negotiations, Oppenheim said she felt the mediator involved in discussions only complicated the resolution of various issues. "Once (the nurses and the Uni- versity) started talking with each other again, which is something you don't do when you have a mediator, things began to move a bit," Oppenheim said. Sincox praised the persistence of the nurses' bargaining team throughout the negotiations. "Anytime you're going through a contract negotiation ... it's a long process," Sincox said. "(The nurses) weren't going to stop until they had gotten patientcare issues settled." Project aims to have more choices on next year's housing form By DANA DEL VECCHIO For the Daily Twenty-five students from across campus contributed strat- egies and solutions for gender- neutral housing at the University during a meeting in the Michi- gan League last night. The Open Housing Initiative, first proposed by the Spectrum Center, the University's chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union and later supported by the Michigan Student Assembly last fall, seeks to give students the right to choose their roommate regardless of their gender iden- tity, gender expression or gender non-conformity. A goal of the initiative is to include a wider range of open housing options on next year's housing application, and members plan to submit another formal proposal to the administration by Dec. 1. As a result of MSA's lobbying last year, the University current- ly allows student requests for gender-neutral housing. Howev- er, the requests are dealt with on a case-by-case basis rather than on the general housing applica- tion, and students must have a roommate in mind. Students at the forum pre- sented aPowerPoint showingthe number of universities across the country that offer gender-neu- tral housing options is steadily rising. The University is the first among the Big Ten schools to add it to its agenda. LSA sophomore Dencio Man- glona attended the student forum and is a member of the Open Housing Initiative. Man- glona has witnessed the trans- formation of the proposal - from its genesis with the ACLU, Spec- trum Center and OHI to the sub- stantive approval from MSA and LSA Student Government. "Seeing this initiative move from theory and proposals to actual boots on the ground, meeting with University officials - seeing that transition really gives me hope for the future of the University ... " Mangloma said. In an interview before the event, Spectrum Center Director Jackie Simpson highlighted the University's history of support- ing topics pertaining to sexual orientation and gender orienta- tion, including the creation ofthe Spectrum Center in 1971. "The University has a lot to be proud for, but it still doesn't mean there isn't progress to be done," she said. Simpson said she would like to see an even more open policy for students. "I know that students would like for anybody to room with anybody," Simpson said. "But at the end of the dayI'm most inter- ested in students who identify as transgender and gender non- conforming to be able to have an equitable experience as all our students and to be able to feel safe in the residence halls." Simpson added that she val- ues the student enthusiasm, but there will still be a long-waiting process before the University passes any measures. "We're talking about not only students, but faculty, staff, alumni, parents. The University institution is made up of a lot of constituents," Simpson said. "These things take time." In an interview last week, MSA Vice President Brendan Camp- bell, a member of the Open Hous- ing Committee, said the assembly will continue to push for further gender-neutral policies. "We're aiming to have chang- es in place for next year's hous- ing application and for the next year of students living in the residence halls," Campbell said. "We're hoping that each year we will be able to increase the options and inclusiveness for all students." He added that he appreciates the administration's support of the initiative. "We recognize the challenges that the administration face, and we're encouraged by their willingness to work with us that we'll be able to continue making changes in the future," Campbell said. Following the presentation portion of the forum, students voiced their ideas for future approaches to the initiative. Many students agreed that the movement's momentum rests on spreading awareness to fresh- men and sophomore students who can set the precedent and follow through with it. LSA junior Noel Gordon said he thinks the initiative has made progress in LSA but needs to reach out to other schools like the Ford School of Public Policy and the Ross School of Business to gain more support. Other students mentioned adding gender-neutral options to the scripts of Campus Day tours and organizing an Education Theater Production. The group emphasized that open discussion on the issue is most important, especially for different student organizations and student gov- ernment representatives. LSA senior Amy Navvab, a founding member of OHI, moni- tored the discussion and said she was pleased with its outcome. "I really appreciated the feed- back that everyone brought to the town hall meetings," Navvab said. "We have a lot of new ideas that we're definitely going to be incorporating into our next steps for this comingyear." Chicago wom an accuses Cain of sexual advances Herman Cain's campaign denies allegations of harassment NEW YORK (AP) - Leav- log little to the imagination, a Chicago-area woman yesterday accused Republican presidential hopeful Herman Cain of mak- ing a crude sexual advance more than a decade ago when she was seeking his help finding a job. "Come clean," Sharon Bialek challenged Cain at a news con- ference in New York at which she described herself as "a face and a voice" to support other accusers who have so far remained anony- mous. Cain's campaign swiftly denied Bialek's account. "All alle- gations of harassment against Mr. Cain are completely false," it said in a written statement. Even so, Bialek's nationally broadcast appearance on cable television marked a new and - for Cain - dangerous turn in a controversy thathe has struggled for more than a week to shed. An upstart in the presidential race, Cain shot to the top of public . opinion polls in recent weeks and emerged, however tempo- rarily, as the main conservative challenger to Mitt Romney. Accompanied by her promi- nent lawyer, Gloria Allred, Bialek accused Cain of making a sexual Many continue without power after storms slam East Coast Attorney Gloria Allred holds up two sworn statements as Sharon Bialek, right, of the Chicago-area, looks on during a news conference at the Friars Club, in New York, yesterday. advance one night in mid-July 1997, when she had travelled to Washington to have dinner with him in hopes he could help her find work. She said the two had finished dinner and were in acar for what she thought was a ride to an office building. "Instead of going into the offices he suddenly reached over and he put his hand on my leg, under my skirt toward my geni- tals," she said. "He also pushed my head toward his crotch," she added. Bialek said she told her boy- friend, an unidentified pediatri- cian, as well as a longtime male friend about the episode. None of Cain's other accusers has provided details as graphic as Bialek's account. But Joel Ben- nett, an attorney who represents one of them, said her details were "similar in nature" to what his client encountered. Allred, a prominent sex dis- crimination attorney with Dem- ocratic ties, moved preemptively to blunt any attacks on Bialek's motives. She described her client as a registered Republican, a sin- gle mother and a woman with a long and successful work history. She also said Bialek "could have attempted to sell her story but chose not to do so," and knew that by stepping forward, she would receive scrutiny. After two weeks, homes, business lack electricity HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) - Businesses big and small have taken a beating from the power outages caused by the record- setting October snowstorm and the losses are only beginning to be tallied, owners and experts said yesterday as tens of thou- sands of Connecticut homes and companies entered a second week without electricity. "I think there's going to be a huge trickle-down effect and we may not know the results for several months," said Andy Markowski, Connecticut direc- tor for the National Federation of Independent Business. "I don't know of any small busi- ness that can afford to lose a week or more of sales. ... We're just literally and figuratively beginning to pick up the piec- es." The Oct. 29-30 storm dumped heavy snow across the Northeast and downed scores of trees and utility wires. Three million homes and businesses lost power at the height of the storm. Connecticut was hit the hardest, racking up more than 830,000 outages, and more than 37,000 utility customers remained in the dark Monday. New Jersey utilities said every- one was back on line, while Massachusetts power compa- nies were working to restore electricity to about 300 custom- ers. The storm also is affecting municipal elections Tuesday in Connecticut, where nine cit- ies and towns were moving and consolidating their polling plac- es. Secretary of the State Denise Merrill said some polling loca- tions do not yet have electricity while others have been dam- aged or are being used as shel- ters and warming centers. Gov. Dannel P. Malloy has called the duration of the out- ages unacceptable and has launched an independent probe of the utilities' response. He said the state is keeping its legal options open in case there are grounds for recourse in the courts once the circumstances are examined. When asked how he planned to holdl the utilities accountable for the slow recovery response, as he has promised, the gover- nor said it will be through the state's regulatory process. "We can bring dockets and ask for things to happen with respect to how they conduct their business and what way they conduct their business and what they recover losses for, for instance," said the governor, who said he presumed that the investigation of Connecticut Light and Power, the state's largest utility, would uncover "some degree of malfeasance" and could lead to legal action by the state. Some homes and businesses weren't expected to get their power back until Wednesday night. Interested in Health in a post-conflict setting? r- The Center for Global Health in partnership with the Center for Education of Women, a the Center for Human Growth & Development (MHIRT Program), the Institute for 03 Research on Women & Gender, and the Office of Global Outreach, School of Nursing, invite you to join us at the 3rd Annual Student Global Health Day 0CL November 11, 2011. Events from 9:30am - 4:30pm More info http://www.globalhealth.umich.edu/studentglobalhealthday2Oll.html . Register - o http://www.cew.umich.edu/progevents/third-annual-student-lobal- health-day-and-symposium/20110926 Watch Student-led presentations and view their posters ed Info Event: Wednesday, Nov. 9th 6:30 pm International Ctr, Rm 9 Like us on Facebook for more info and a full list of campus events: facebook.comUMPeaceCorps 800.424.8580 " peacecorps.gov i