qw 4A - Wednesday, February 20, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com c 1 4e michinan t 3a*lp Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@nichigandaily.com MELANIE KRUVELIS and ADRIENNE ROBERTS MATT SLOVIN EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR ANDREW WEINER EDITOR IN CHIEF We believe there's a financial emergency in the city, and there's no plan in place to correct the situation. - Andy Dillon, Michigan state treasurer and member of the six-member review team responsible for the appraisal of Detroit's finances, remarks on the financial situation of Detroit on Feb.19. Keeping our parks and recreation 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. Open(er) housing Gender-neutral options should be campus-wide fter years of debate surrounding the Open Housing Initia- tive, the University will begin to offer gender-neutral housing options in the dormitories fall 2013. The newly renovated East Quad Residence Hall will allow a small number of students to live in gender non-restrictive rooms as part of the Gender Inclusive Living Experience, a new living community. The University's acceptance and implementation of this policy is a critical step in ensuring the safety and comfort of all students in the Michigan community. Moving for- ward, however, the University must become more expansive with their gender-neutral policies and increase the scope of the housing policy so all students have access. Last month, The Michigan Daily reported that GILE will be based in East Quad Resi- dence Hall. The new living community will allow students who "identity as transgender, gender non-conforming or as allies" to select a roommate of whichever gender they see fit and connect with a community of like-minded students. In order to accommodate these stu- dents, East Quad has set aside a total of 12 beds for interested students. This initiative is in response to the growing support for a petition introduced in 2008 by the Open Housing Ini- tiative, which fought for more inclusive living options. Four years later, the University has slowly progressed toward expanding its hous- ing policies. The GILE community will provide a safe and accepting environment for students who do not fit the restrictive, typical gender roles. Students should be stressing about homework, not they're living situation. It's also notable that this is one of the few programs around the country that allows freshmen to participate, according to the National Student Gender Blind campaign. In comparison to other schools across the country, however, the University has a long way to go. Wesleyan University, for example, has been accommodating its gender-neutral students since 1995. Rather than a limited number of beds - as is the case with the University's current plan - Columbia Uni- versity has standardized gender-neutral housing into its housing application process. Although moving in the right direction, the University is lagging behind both in scope and technique. Twelve beds can hardly be expected to be enough to accommodate a school of 27,000 undergraduates. And although a gender-neutral living community can offer support to those who want it, some students may prefer to not to be so visibly labeled and would rather opt for gender-neu- tral housing without automatically entering a living community. Instead of limitingthis to a specific commu- nity, all residence halls should be tolerant of student identity. The University of Michigan prides itself on promoting diversity within our community. In order to live up to that reputa- tion, gender-neutral housing needs to be made available to all students. ike many M my family h dition of vac north." Though my drive from St. Louis might be slightly lon- ger than most, spending the summer months on the lakes of Northern Michi- gan remains one of my favorite memories grow- ing up. A summer woul until we finished over Sleeping Bear in Lake Michigan Dunes National Lal the most popular ts in the area. Featu Lake Michigan shs was named the Mo in America by AB ing America in 201 located near EmpirF Mich. is open year tures camping, sw cycling and cross-cs On Monday, th portation Departm $100,000 grant fror ernment to contins of the Sleeping Bear 27-mile, non-motori the lakeshore. Thi million grant the pr ed in August of las will go toward the price tag for the tra mately $5 million c fundraising and $51 eral grants. The fir tion of the trail ope construction on the scheduled to start tl over the last sev idwesterners, federal funds have become increas- as a long tra- ingly scarce. Near the end of his sec- ationing "up ond term, President George W. Bush imposed a planto drasticallyincrease national park funding and attack the massive amounts of backlog that had piled up. That plan was frozen shortly into Obama's presidency in the face of the economic crisis. In a WashingtonPost article from August 2012, Thomas Kiernan, president of the National Parks Conservation TIMOTHY Association claimed, "It's clear that BURROUGHS inadequate federal funding is the - ----- - number one threat to the future of the national parks ... we're at a cross- dn't be complete roads of historic importance here." our annual hike The Obama administration's 2013 * Dunes to swim budget includes an overall increase . Sleeping Bear in funds for national parks, but still keshore is one of requires that 218 full-time employees ourist attractions be cut. Advocates claimthat thisbud- ring 65 miles of get continues the "bare minimum" oreline, the park approach that has resulted in $11 st Beautiful Place billion of backlog funding required C's Good Morn- for park improvements. During this 1. The lakeshore, same period, park attendance has e and Glen Arbor, continued to increase at a steady rate, r round and fea- earning $12 billion in 2010. Experts 'imming, hiking, are predicting a significant jump in ountry skiing. park attendance as they approach the e state's Trans- 100-year anniversary of the National sent received a Park Service in 2016. n the federal gov- When the federal funds fall short, se the expansion alleviation for the parks woes often 'Heritage Trail, a fall back on 'Friends of ... ' organi- ized trail through zations. With assistance from the s follows a $1.62 Sleeping Bear Heritage Trail orga- oject was award- nization, the Friends of Sleeping t year. The grant Bear Dunes group has held numer- $10 million total ous fundraisers to support the proj- ail, with approxi- ect. Though other national parks oming from local have similar groups as the dunes, million from fed- many are not able to cover the lack of st four-mile sec- funds from the federal government. ned in June, and Organized under the National Park next four miles is Foundation, these groups raise $150 his year. million annually from private and veral years, these corporate donations. Impressive, but that's still only asmall part of thesys- tem's $2.6-billion budget. While alternative energy and increasing miles-per-gallon ratings are grabbing environmental head- lines, our parks continue to dete- riorate because of insufficient funds. More proactive groups, such as the dunes organizations, are able to con- tinue to improve their facilities, but many others are facing significant neglect. The federal government has an obligation to maintain these parks, and make them accessible to the public. The Heritage Trail proj- ect is just one small example of how a reasonable amount of federal funds coupled with private and corporate donations can go along way. While mpgs grab headlines, parks are a priority. The United States' National Park program has a long history of pro- viding citizens with an opportunity to explore and experience nature. It is through this program that we can effectively teach the next gen- eration about the importance of conservation and protecting our environment. The federal govern- ment, with the help of the private sector, needs to recommit itself to maintaining our national parks. With added support, we can return these parks to their natural great- ness, making them true monuments to America's beauty and the gener- osity of her citizens. - Timothy Burroughs can be reached at timburr@umich.edu. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Readers are encouraged to submit letters to the editor. Letters should be fewer than 300 words and must include the writer's full name and University affiliation. We do not print anonymous letters. Send letters to tothedailyiOmichigandaily.com. BARRY BELMONT | The boring and the bombastic EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Kaan Avdan, Sharik Bashir, Barry Belmont, James Brennan, Eli Cahan, Jesse Klein, Melanie Kruvelis, Maura Levine, Patrick Maillet, Aarica Marsh, Megan McDonald, Jasmine McNenny, Harsha Nahata, Adrienne Roberts, Paul Sherman, Sarah SkalubaMichael Spaeth, Luchen Wang, Derek Wolfe MOLLY HARWOOD I a Continual scientific progress is one of the few things that we can count on in this world. With millions of researchers conducting mil- lions of experiments every year to probe every niche this universe has to offer, we are close to certain that every day we will know just a little bit more about ourselves and our world. Every step made by a researcher may not be in the right direction, but it invariably contributes to science's ceaseless march forward into the unknown. The work of science is some of the best work that human beings have ever taken up. And yet the journalism describing it is often misguided, overly ambitious or erroneous. From my experience, the vast bulk of writing on science can take one of two approaches: the boring and the bombastic. Most popular publi- cations let us leave aside the boring for now and focus on the bombastic. Rarely a week goes by without seeing a news outlet declaring some major advance in scientific knowledge that will revolutionize humanity in some way or another. Cures for cancer, new energy sources and genes of all sorts - this is fodder for con- temporary science journalism, grist for the 24-hour news cycle milling out content as fast as it can. The journalistic apparatus we have to work with is a great machine for getting facts out, but given the noise from the constant hum of news, if anything is to be heard - such as a great discovery by scientists - the signal must be amplified. This amplification lies at the heart of the disconnect between science and writing about science, though there are a few overlapping qualities between the fields of science and journalism: curiosity, attempted objectivity and the search for answers. They operate on vastly different time scales and seek vastly dif- ferent ends. Where scientific writing requires immense context to be understood, journalistic writing should be understood at first glance. The journalistic formula relying on bold, con- cise headlines and a skeletal structure fleshed out with handpicked quotes doesn't effectively communicate the scientific enterprise. If a headline in a newspaper read, "Bomb blast in Afghanistan kills dozens," we would all read- ily understand it. The significance of something like, "Largest known prime number found," is harder to assess. This speaks to the chasm between the public's and the scientists' under- standings of science. That second approach to scientific writing is partly to blame. It's boring. Not only that, but leafing through nearly any scientific jour- nal will serve to convince just about anyone that the material is thoroughly unintelligible to the uninitiated. Worse yet, the language scientists use to write to other scientists is often barren, tedious and dreary. Rare is the occasion that one finishes reading a scientific publication with the same excitement with which one began. There are several reasons for this situation. Partly it's from the fact that researchers chose to be scientists, not writers, partly because scientists often merely catalogue and report their findings - a rarely inspired form of writ- ing - and partly because there's an unspoken convention that being too dry is better than personalizing one's prose. If journalists had to explore journals to get scientific stories, there would be far fewer scientific stories than there already are. Thus, the rise of the scientific press release. Straddled uncomfortably between the boring and the bombastic, the scientific press release has to express often quite humdrum research in a rousing way in order for it to get pub- lished. Unfortunately, this frequently leads to overstated conclusions and deemphasized methodologies, while skirting aspects of peer review and validation. Much of the noise in scientific journalism - that is, much of the confusion among lay readers -- comes from the clangs of press releases falling through the press's echo chambers. How we express information can be nearly as important as the information we express - the signal matters only if it is sufficientlylarger than the noise. The information that scientific enterprises have given us is among the most important we could have. We know where we've come from, what we're made of and how we relate to the entirety of the cosmos because people have sought evidence, created theories and shared what they learned with others. If we are to understand further frontiers, we can- not be afraid to take a moment to assess our sit- uation and discuss it clearly with those around us, be it the bounds of science or the limits of writing about science. If our march forward is to be certain, it helps forcus to be as surefooted as we can. Barry Belmont is an Engitiee g graduate student. Death penalty's real cost Let's talk chump change, pocket change, nickels and dimes - that lucky penny you see on the floor but walk right past because ultimately, hey, what good is a penny in the grand scheme of things? Now let's talk millions. $308 million to be exact. We just changed ball games there - not sure if you noticed. When someone says the death penalty is more expensive than a life without parole, they seem wrong. However, they're in fact telling the truth. The death penalty is millions of federal and state tax dollars more expensive than a life in prison without parole. In Cali- fornia it costs an estimated $308 million per execution. While this is a morally charged issue, at that price do we really care what crime the defendant committed? In 2012, California voted on the abolishment of the death penalty. Since 1977, the current flawed sys- tem has cost the state about $4 bil- lion dollars. With 725 people on death row, California warehouses almost 25 percent of the country's total death row population. It costs about $47,000 to incarcerate a man for one year in California, but it costs $90,000 extra per year to house a man on death row. This puts the annual death row bill at $137,000 per person. The cost of one year in gener- al population is derived from mainly security and health care, but also includes food, rehabilitation pro- grams and facility costs. Additional death row costs include the officer, or officers, constantly escorting the inmates in and out of their prison cells. Each person awaiting a death sentence is placed in an individual cell, while those in general popula- tion typically share a cell. Individual supervision is also required for the two hours of physical recreation time inmates receive daily. These are the only costs of incar- ceration. The court fees are where the bulk of the costs lie. The trial for death sentences takes three to five times longer, needs twice as many lawyers, has a far more difficult jury selection process and has a practical- ly endless appeals process as opposed to life without parole cases. Of the 725 people on death row in Califor- nia, only thirteen have exhausted the appeals process. The majority of individuals on death row are poor. Tax dollars are funding virtually the entire process. However, the answer is not to try and repair this practice because every time a state has attempted to mend it, the death penalty has become unconstitution- al. Less than 2 percent of the crimi- nals who commit the most shocking of crimes are sentenced to the death penalty. After the 2008 recession and more stringent economic policies with the federal deficit at the fore- front of discussion, it's time to look at this issue from a new angle. The public is a finicky group to understand, and especially the American public. People are rarely aware of when or why they change their opinions on political issues unless the change was derived from a radical experience. In the case of capital punishment, the radical experiences are typically nation- wide and are delivered to individu- als by the media. If the key factor to changing the public's attitude stems from radical experience, then it's possible that presenting radical enough information would be able to change public opinion and, in turn, public policy. When a singu- lar execution costs millions, and the system in general generates a bill to the tune of billions of state and federal tax dollars, perhaps we've reached "radical enough." Politi- cians are seen as flippant if they take a monumental policy, such as capital punishment, and continually change their stance. Economics produces hard facts - just as hard as scientific facts. So, if radical enough economic facts were disseminated amongst the public, those may potentially sway the peo- ple. Money affects all of us - people have to pay taxes. That $308 million being spent per execution in Cali- fornia comes from state and federal taxes. That means that every U.S. citizen is directly affected. Most people don't realize that a death sentence is more expensive than life without parole. The economics of the death penalty may be radical enough to change public opinion. So what if people knew? What if the general public suddenly became aware of this completely counter- intuitive fact? Would it have an impact? It seems yes. National sup- port for the death penalty tends to be around 63 percent, and yet otly 53 percent of California sup- ported the practice when they voted in 2012. We can never know what exactly changed their minds, but we do know that it was on the ballot. Maybe if California - if not America - understands just how big the bill we're footing is; we can change the minds of U.S citizens and the poli- cies of our nation. Molly Harwood is an LSA senior. 4; 0