7lc ,, 4&W 'l T L lf X1 11 I ' l- l t','l{, I,' 4 J _)r[om A1,FIII11:1. I M rfM a.,, "e'. :a)i!r ' ., :,,,,. .. ,.h ,::;-: , , , .,..,,.. ......ri ~ y. ,, v;t-. n r'.;: ,. ' - a " .. l , - , n, m i S ", lea h ,4 1 F itir Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday, March 15, 2013 michigandaily.com GET LUCKY UNIONS GEO leaves negotiation table with University RUBY WALLAU/Daily Freshman Irene Suh, a member of Students for Choice, gives away condoms for St. Patrick's Day in Mason Hall on Thursday. 0 SAFETY city prepare forSt. Patty's Bargaining breaks down in shadow of right-to-work law By GIACOMO BOLOGNA Daily StaffReporter With right-to-work legislation that severely limits the ability of unions in Michigan to organize within workplaces coming into effect on March 28, members of the Graduate Employees' Orga- nization decided to walk away from negotiations with the Uni- versity after claiming the Univer- sity's bargaining team wouldn't budge on its proposed salary cuts. Instead, the union will take its chances bargaining next year when members have the option not to pay dues under the law. GEO, which represents gradu- ate student instructors and grad- uate student staff assistants at the three University campuses, and the University had been negotiating every day this week in the hopes of agreeing upon a three-year contract to circum- vent the effects of right-to-work until 2016. GEO's current con- tract expires in March 2014. Rackham student Liz Rodrigues, GEO spokesperson, said the deal being offered by the University didn't meet its requirements. "GEO members have - from the beginning of this pro- cess - been making decisions about what our bottom line is," Rodrigues said. "We had set bottom lines in terms of salary, in terms of our childcare agree- ment, and we have always said if these bottom lines are crossed we will walk away." University spokesman Rick Fitzgerald the University made no decisiontoleavethebargainingtable. "My understanding is it was GEO's decision," Fitzgerald said. "They have a current contract in place." GEO president Katie Frank said in a statement that GEO's bargaining team was willing to make compromises. "Inthewordsoftheirbargaining team, we made a 'herculean effort' to move toward their proposals," Frank said. "We were willing to make huge sacrifices to protect our contract in a state attacking collec- tive bargaining rights." Rodrigues said the Univer- sity's proposal to add another "fraction" to the designations of GSIs and GSSAs' pay was irrec- oncilable. Because GSIs and GSSAs don't necessarily work full time, their salaries are deter- mined by a range of "fractions" of full time they work. See GEO, Page 3 Administrators working to educate students on staying safe By TAYLOR WIZNER Daily News Editor This weekend, fans of maize and blue will be seeing a lot of green - and alcohol. University and city officials are promoting a "Stay in the Blue" campaign, advocating responsible drinking for the hol- iday weekend. The University will be host- ing several events over the weekend, including the Honors Convocation, cheering on the Michigan Basketball team in the Big Ten Conference Tourna- ment and St. Patrick's Day fes- tivities. Sarah Daniels, assistant dean of students, said the Division of Student Affairs is partnering with student groups to make sure there would be no con- flicts for visitors during the busy weekend. "In anticipating there will be a lot of external guests on campus, we want to make sure we have a robust weekend with positive messages out there for how students can celebrate appropriately with events that are alternatives to what people may consider as things to do this weekend - alternative events on campus this weekend that are safe and fun," Daniels said. Joy Pehlke, a Alcohol and Other Drug health educator with the University Health Ser- vice, said the student-driven safety campaign was launched for the first night football game against Notre Dame last year. A similar program for the St. Pat- rick's Day weekend aims to pro- duce the same result. "Part of the efforts we did then to really reduce harm were not only the events that were going on but some of the out- reach - outreach with the bars and restaurants, specifically on State Street and closer to cam- pus, and educate them on how to 'Stay in the Blue'," Pehlke said. Pehlke said the groups passed out 10,000 "Stay in the Blue" coasters to bars and restaurants along with a letter signed by a nuinber of University officials' supporting the effort to monitor alcohol practices this weekend. The letter asks the participating sites to include non-alcoholic specials, focus on serving food See PATTY'S, Page 6 SENATE ASSEMBLY Faculty run for spots on senate advisory board Eight candidates competing for three S open spots on SACUA By ASHWINI NATARAJAN Daily StaffReporter On Monday, the Senate Assembly will elect three Uni- versity faculty members to fill vacant positions on the Senate Advisory Committee on Univer- sity Affairs for three-year terms. The committee consists of nine Senate Assembly members and holds weekly meetings to discuss University policy and affairs. Eight faculty members nomi- nated by the Senate Assem- bly are running for three openings. Improved communi- cation between faculty and stu- dents, tuition affordability and freedom of academic expression were common topics the candi- dates said they would be inter- ested in pursuing if elected. Joseph Custer, a professor in pediatric diseases and communi- cable diseases, was an alternate member of the Senate Assembly from 2008 to 2011 and became an active member during 2012. He was also on the Institutional Review Board of the Massachu- setts General Hospital and the House Officer Selection Commit- tee at Harvard Medical School in the 1980s. "I'm from the Medical School, soit's a particularly unique point of view," Custer said. "But I also believe that, from a personal standpoint, Iowe this University something. I came here 25 years ago from Harvard and this place has been very kind to me, and I've been injected and infected with the Michigan vibrance, so part of it is giving back." Custer said he would like to see faculty participate more in handling University issues. He also said transparency amongthe administration, faculty and stu- dents has been an ongoing issue that needs to be addressed. "When there are issues about professional conduct or behav- ior, the way faculty and students are dealt with by the university should be absolutely transpar- ent," he said. Avery Demond, an associ- ate professor of civil and envi- ronmental engineering, serves on the Academic Affairs Advi- sory Committee of the Senate Assembly and is the director of the Environmental and Water Resources Engineering Program. Demond said her position as a female science faculty mem- ber will carry on the legacies of retiring SACUA members Kate Barald, professor of biomedi- cal engineering, and Kimberlee See BOARD, Page 3 Art and Design Senior Alana Hoey speaks to LSA Senior Lauren Brandt to raise awareness about sex trafficking, Hoey will be spending 27 hours on the Diag to raise awareness. Students lead 27-hr. sit-in to raise slavery awareness STATE GOVERNMENT Snyder picks Orr to be Detroit's emergency manager Bankruptcy lawyer says he can complete job in 18 months By JENNIFER CALFAS Daily StaffReporter On Thursday, Michigan's emergency loan board approved Republican Gov. Rick Snyder's top pick for Detroit's emergency financial manager in a unani- mous 3-0 vote. Snyder announced his choice, bankruptcy Kevyn Orr, at a press conference Thursday at Cadil- lac Place in Detroit. The gov- ernor said Orr, a partner at the Jones Day law firm in Washing- ton, D.C., fulfills the qualities he looked for in an emergency financial manager: strong inter- personal skills, technical skills and decision-making experience. The state will pay Orr $275,000 to overhaul Detroit's deeplytrou- bled finances. Orr, a Michigan alum who earned degrees from the college of Literature, Science and the Arts and the Law School, said he will resign from his position at See MANAGER, Page 3 Prc 27 i Th becam memb tice M camp( on Th about widei Art Hoey, Intern test represents Stand For Freedom is an impor- tant part in raising the campus million people conversation about international human trafficking and slavery. n slave trade "Every single person that's come by has been shocked by By STEPHANIE that statistic, but it's an accurate SHENOUDA statistic," Hoey said. "I don't Daily StaffReporter think that people realize slavery exists today, especially in the e stone benches of the Diag really broad terms such as land ne a temporary home for seizure, which is essentially ers of thelInternational Jus- commonplace in Africa." fission as they prepared to Hoey said she was unaware of out for 27 consecutive hours these issue until she joined IJM ursday to raise awareness and began focusing on learn- the 27million people world- ing about slavery and unlawful nvolvedinmodernslavery. imprisonment. She said the key- t & Design senior Alana stone of IJM's efforts involve chapter president of the "not just fixing the problem", ational Justice Mission,said but empowering individuals to make changes in their ownlives while preservingtheir culture. "The lawyers working with people in Uganda are from Ugan- da and that's what I really like about IJM," Hoey said. "It's not about tryingto fix things, it's giv- ingthelocalpeopletheresources to make their ownchanges." The goal of Stand For Free- dom was to educate and inform the general public about mod- ern slaveryswhile raising money for IJM and getting petitions signed to send to President Barack Obama. At 8:30 p.m., the petition - which asks the president to consider changing the guidelines for what actions are considered "slavery" - had See SLAVERY, Page 3 WEATHER HI:33 GOTANEWS TIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM INDEX NEWS ............................2 SPORTS.. . ...........8 Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail Profiling the CSG Greek Relations Commission Vol. CXXIII, No.83 PI NION .......................4 S U D O K U........................3 TOMORROW LO: 19 news@michigandaily.com and let us know. MICHIGAN DAILY.COM/BLOGS/THEWIRE ©20t3 The Michigan Daily ARTS ............................5 C LASSI F IEDS...............6 michigandoily.com