v 6A - Wednesday, March 21, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com JUMP FOR JOY In penultimate meeting, CSG discusses resolutions Potential policies to be terminated if not voted on by next week By GIACOMO BOLOGNA Daily Staff Reporter Eight resolutions were intro- duced at the penultimate Central Student Government assembly meeting of this year's term on topics including CSG operations and preparations for the incom- ing assembly. One resolution would resolve an ongoing debate about how best to balance speed and suffi- cient legislative oversight by the Student Organization Funding Commission when distributing funding. Currently, the assembly approves SOFC's budget ret- roactively, and many fear that resolutions would slow down the organization's ability to award funding. After some members of SOFC expressed concern over the contents of the resolution, the assembly chose to refrain from voting on it until next week. The resolution was first read on Feb. 14, and Business senior Matt Eral, the speaker of the assembly, said he was frustrated because he significantly changed the resolu- tion since its first introduction, only to see it postponed again. While Eral said the delay was a "bit personally annoying," he said support from the SOFC chairs is necessary. Eral added that this resolu- tion, which has been introduced for more than five weeks, will be terminated if it is not passed next week. Assembly protocol states that resolutions that do not pass by the end of the term will be con- cluded. "Either the assembly will pass it next week or it will be killed because the new assembly does not get to ... carry business over," Eral said. Business junior Shreya Singh, CSG treasurer, also gave a pre- sentation to the assembly about CSG's budget and said she would like to ensure the use of all fund- ing awarded to CSG. Singh said $60,000 will roll over to the budget for CSG's next term unless the money is utilized through the actions of commis- sions before the end of the cur- rent term. Singh added that the organiza- tions that receive funding from SOFC have been using more of those funds. Traditionally, orga- nizations have spent about 75 percent of the funding awarded to them, but that number has risen to 85 percent since the introduc- tion of SOFC's new weekly roll- ing funding system - a program in which organizations can apply to receive funding on a weekly basis, instead of receiving allo- cated funds in shifts throughout the semester. The assembly also passed a resolution in support of making the Big House a "zero-waste" sta- dium, meaningthatas much trash as possible will either be recycled or composted instead of sent to landfills. Rackham student Leah Zim- merman, a member of the Erb Institute - an organization focused on using business to bol- ster sustainability efforts around the world - attended the meet- ing to speak on the resolution's behalf. "Overwhelmingly, 100 percent of the people on campus and the alumni we've talked to have been not just supportive, but enthusi- astic," Zimmerman said. Members of the CSG Environ- mental Issues Commission came to the meeting to publicize an event scheduled to occur Monday on the Diag to increase environ- mental awareness in celebration of Earth Day. LSA senior Madeline Caldwell, EIC treasurer, spoke to the assembly about the event and said several University organiza- tions will be participating. . "It's a good event for stu- dents to come raise awareness and learn about cool opportuni- ties to get involved on campus," Caldwell said. "I think (the envi- ronment) is something we're really going to need to think about going into our future." Washtenaw Community College student Ivan Propkopovi of jumps over a wall yesterday. EMERGENCY From Page 1A and staff are sent an e-mail notification when the system activates, it takes a long time to process, Brown said. An addi- tional 32 percent of students, as well as 31 percent of faculty and 41 percent of staff, have another device registered for more fre- quent and detailed messages. The system was active for Thursday's emergency and sent an initial e-mail and text mes- sage notice about the National Weather Service's tornado warning. At 6:30 p.m. another e-mail update was sent when the warning was extended to 7:15 p.m. Finally, at 7:15, an e-mail was sent to alert the University community that the warning had expired, but a flash flood warning and thunder- storm watch were still in effect. According to Perry Samson, professor of atmospheric sci- ence, there is no sure way of sci- entifically predicting a tornado far in advance, especially in the spring. "A tornado this time of year would never be expected," Samson wrote in an e-mail interview. "That said, the atmo- spheric models that day did show great potential for convec- tion. It is easy now in hindsight to see that the potential peaked in the late afternoon at a level higher than (at least I expect- ed." Samson added that determin- ing a storm's exact location is difficult, and said he was sur- prised that it touched down in Dexter. He also wrote that, with the exception of 2011, which saw a series of devastating tornadoes in Alabama, Mississippi and Georgia, deaths due to torna- does have been limited since 1970. Samson credits technological advantages for these improved percentages. "Much of this decrease can be directly attributed to the improved forecasting of storm formation plus improved radar capability, hand-in-hand with more personal and mobile notification systems," Samson wrote. "As we reach the point when all can receive notifica- tion, (our) next challenge is to impress upon the population the value of heedingthese warnings and the need to improve access JOIN DAILY NEWS E-MAIL RAYZA GOLDSMITH AT RAYZAG@MICHIGANDAILY.COM FOR MORE INFORMATION Call: #734-418-4115 Email: dailydisplay@gmail~com RELEASE DATE- Wednesday, March 21, 2012 Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS DOWN 36 Tots' story starter 53 Second-deepest 1 17-time NBA 1 Give up 37 Burden U.S. lake champs 2 Muslim noble 38 Roof application 54 New Zealand- 6 Stern with strings 3 Jeans pioneer 40 Rajah's wife born crime writer 11 Hrs. before noon Strauss 42 Big name in Marsh 14 Filing board 4 October custom couture 58 10-Down drooler 15 Word of praise done in costume 45 University 60 "Bah!" for el nito 5 Dict. entry officers 61 Natural skin tO House plantrs 6 Same PCs 4B 'Perhaps' treatment housing 7I' fine wth oa0oung dolphin 62 'Who's turn is 17 With "The," Bette that" 51 Windmill blades it?!" 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Finail Katherine at khmurkorumich.edu ONE YEAR LEGAL internship posi- tion available atBirmingham M ichigan law firm startingAug. 2012. Perfect for highly motivated graduating senior. Email resume/cover lcttertranscript to h.immigration.swcgmnailcom for consideration. to adequate shelter for those living in homes without base- ments." While DPS primarily uses the emergency alert system to send out weather-related warnings that could potentially affect campus, it has also been used for other threatening incidents, such as a reported gunman on campus, large gas leaks and two separate armed robberies in 2010, according to Univer- sity emergency manager Andy Burchfield. Burchfield added that DPS tests the system routinely twice a year, once in the spring and in the fall. With evolving technology and continued reliance on text messaging as the quickest and most efficient mode of com- munication, the decision to implement the emergency alert system was a crucial move for DPS. "From the University's per- spective, it's to put forward our best foot in trying to help people better prepare themselves for emergencies that could occur," Burchfield said. "The U-M emergency alert system is one more key source that is available to our faculty, staff and students that they can utilize and regis- ter for in order to receive alerts when potential imminent dan- ger may impact them." Brown added that the sys- tem is especially important in the age of texting. "As it grew in popular- ity and acceptance and as ven- dors were able to find ways to advance text messages, then the University looked for ways to explore how we could fit that into our way of commu- nicating with text messages," Brown said. The system is one of a com- bination of resources that DPS wants the community to utilize in case of emergency, along with television, news and the outdoor warning sirens, according to Burch- field. "The more resources you have in your toolbox, the bet- ter prepared you're going to be. That's why we really advo- cate for people to register for this system because this does key in on the University itself," Burchfield said. Social Work student Kelly Pearson said she registered for the alert system when she was a freshman at the University. "I thought that if some- thing was happening on cam- pus, it would be good to know about it," Pearson said. "I have unlimited texting, so I figured it was better to be safe than sorry." The continuous text mes- sage updates confirmed the severity of the storm for Pear- son, who was at Dominick's on Monroe Street when the storm started, and helped her decide to take precaution. "Especially when I got an alert that the tornado was actually close by in Dexter I thought 'OK, let's go down- stairs and take cover,"' Pear- son said. "The alerts gave more details and updates as the storm was progressing, get- ting closer and getting worse." 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