6 -- Friday, November 30, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 6 - Friday, November 30, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Graduate student voters support RSG secession RSG: 69 percent government elections this week. student government. Of the four divisions within "(It) could possibly better of voters support a Rackham Graduate School, meet the needs of our students only students in the Arts and than the current system does," separate graduate Humanities division did not sup- she said. ,nport secession, with 18 students She added that Law students student gov't voting in favor and 52 students are often several years older Due to faulty ballots, RSG elections voided, rescheduled By GIACOMO BOLOGNA Daily StaffReporter After sufferinga defeat in the courtroom Tuesday night, the Central Student Government took a second blow early Friday morning after the referendum it fought to keep off the ballot showed that a majority of stu- dents who voted in Rackham Student Government's election support pursuing secession from CSG. RSG reported that 9.5percent of Rackham students, approxi- mately 800 students, voted in the election, with 719 students voting on the referendum. Of those voters, 69 percent sup- ported pursuing secession. While 9.5 percent of students equates to roughly 1 in 10 Rack- ham students voting, only 6.4 percent of LSA students and 2.5 percent of Engineering students voted in their school's student EXCHANGE From Page 1 ter of intent for federal-state cooperation in the creation of an exchange, according to Kurt Weiss, a spokesman from the Michigan Department of Technology, Management and Budget, which helps the state implement various projects and initiatives. Wednesday's decision by the committee does not change his commitment in the letter to the federal government, Weiss said. "We're going to continue down the path of the partnership exchange," he said. The bill failed in committee voting against the measure. On Tuesday, with RSG's elec- tion already a day underway, RSG defended its ballot question after CSG filed an injunction against RSG on Nov. 21. The suit addressed the ballot question as well as additional issues, and the injunction was separated, meaning a second hearing will take place in the near future to address less-timely issues listed on the injunction. However, portions of the suit arguing that the non-binding question should be kept off the ballot were dismissed by the CSJ after a three-hour hearing. While the ballot question was submitted by RSG and secession has been spearheaded by the graduate student body, others are also in favor of its secession. Law student Liz Och, the president of the Law School Stu- dent Senate, said in an October interview she favored looking into creating an all-graduate than undergraduate students, some have families and very few utilize on-campus housing. "In terms of regular day- to-day issues that are faced by undergrads, we don't experience a lot of those," she said. Och, who is also pursuing a master's degree through the School of Natural Resources and the Environment, said an all- graduate student government could foster more collaboration between the graduate schools. "It's not really about the money;" Och said. "Obviously the money is important, but I think that it's more the sense of community that should come from having a smaller gradu- ate student government that's more focused around what (Law School students) ... actually care about." In addition to gauging student interest in secession, the elec- tion also resulted in the selec- tion of 12 RSG board members. RSG: 69 percent of voters support a separate graduate student gov't By GIACOMO BOLOGNA Daily StaffReporter The Central Student Gov- ernment released unofficial results of its November elec- tions a little more than 12 hours after polls closed Wednesday at 11:59 p.m., but announced it will reschedule the election for the eight Rackham representative seats after a faulty ballot only allowed students to vote for one candidate. LSA senior Lukas Garske, CSG student general counsel, wrote in an e-mail to candi- dates that CSG reopened the ballot midday on Thurday and Rackham students will have an additional 48 hours to vote on Rackham representatives before polls close at 11:59 p.m. on Saturday. Garske also acknowledged an error in the ballot for LSA assembly representative, but said it ultimately had no bear- ing on the election's outcome. "We also received reports of an error in the LSA elec- tions, which allowed students to rank three candidates, while only two seats were vacant on the Assembly," Garske wrote. "After conferring with ITS, it was determined this error did not affect the results." Results from the LSA Student Government and University of Michigan Engineering Council elections were released short- ly after their respective polls closed early Thursday morn- ing, similar to the results of last November's CSG elections. CSG violated its own Compiled Code, releasing its results after the 12 p.m. Thursday deadline, albeit only by six minutes. Even the results of the March elections, which saw unprecedented turnout and election complaints, were released within the 12-hour window their Compiled Code requires. In addition to the now-void Rackham ballots, students voted on 10 other open posi- tions: assembly representative positions from LSA, the College of Engineering, the School of Natural Resources, the College of Architecture, the School of Dentistry, the School of Public Health, the School of Education and a position on the Depart- ment of Public Safety Oversight Commission. Though November CSG elec- tions are meant to fill vacancies in the assembly, not all seats voted upon are vacant - some were temporarily filled after the resignation or dismissal of a member and others never had an attending holder. Newly elected representa- tives include: Daniel Glick- Unterman, a College of Architecture and Urban Plan- ning junior; LSA junior Chris Mays, Division of Public Safety and Security Oversight Com- mittee representative; seniors Sriram Yarlagadda and Gavin Lim and sophomore Michael Hatty, representatives from the College of Engineering; sophomore Robert Dishell and senior Brian Koziara, LSA rep- resentatives; Lior Aljadeff, rep- resentative from the School of Dentistry; Emma Howland- Bolton, representative from the School of Education; and Desiree McLain, representa- tive from the School of Public Health. I I 6 partially because of Republican resistance to the Affordable Care Act and partially because state Republicans used what is called a "tie bar" to link the decision on the exchange to the fate of anti- abortion bills in the state Legis- lature, said state Rep. Kate Segal (D-Battle Creek), the House Democratic floor leader. Even if the committee passed the health care exchange bill, the bill would not be implemented if two anti-abortion bills do not pass state law due to the tie bar, Segal said. "Republicans refuse to acknowledge the Affordable Care Act is here to stay, and they're putting politics in front of what's best for Michigan," Segal said. "They further tied politics to it by trying to make it an anti-abortion bill that has no consideration for the life and the safety of the mother." Some state Republicans met the committee's decision on Wednesday with disappointment over the loss of an opportunity to fully control an institution imposed on them by the federal government. "It was my hope the commit- tee would find that a state-run exchange afforded us more con- trol over the unacceptable over- reach by the federal government regarding the health care of Michigan citizens," state Speak- er of the House Jase Bolger (R- Marshall) said in a statement. He added: "After due dili- gence, however, it is clear that there were too many unan- swered questions for the com- mittee to feel comfortable with a state-run exchange." Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette said in a statement on Wednesday that he was wor- ried about the federal-state part- nership, calling the exchange "an extremely complex issue" in which "many unanswered ques- tions still remain." "I have always had grave con- cerns about establishing a health care exchange," Schuette said in the statement. The bill rejected by the com- mittee passed in the state Sen- ate on Nov. 10. At the meeting of the committee in Lansing on Wednesday morning, it drew praise and criticism from the public over the course of an hour-long open session. One opponent of the exchange, Isabelle Terry, a resident of Rockford, Mich., wrote to the committee to opine that the Affordable Care Act "put us on an horrifying track to financial ruin." Matthew Davis, an associate professor of internal medicine at the University's Medical School, said Medicaid is an example of a successful federal-state part- nership, and indicates a similar partnership on health care could be effective. Davis said a federal-state partnership could help Uni- versity students find their own health insurance, a particularly beneficial criterion for students now as their parents' employers are less likely to offer health care benefits. He expected Snyder and the federal government to work out the details of the exchanges over the next -few months and the deadline to implement them is October 2013. Weiss said Snyder was com- mitted to the partnership exchanges as the best possible option for the state. "I certainly think it's fair to say that Governor Snyder believes that the partnership approach can work," he said. 0 I INTERESTED IN JOINING THE DAILY NEWS SECTION? E-mail Rayza Goldsmith at rayzag@michigandaily.com to get started. 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