4 - Friday, February 28, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.cam 4 - Friday, February 28, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom 4e Mitigan :at'619 Edited and managed by students at the University ofMichigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com MEGAN MCDONALD PETER SHAHIN and DANIEL WANG KATIE BURKE EDITOR IN CHIEF EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR 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. Updating an outdated law Michigan must include the LGBTQ community in the ELCRA recent Gallup poll revealed glaring discrepancies between public perception and the realities of anti-discrimination laws in the state of Michigan. While nine out of 10 people mistakenly believe protections exist for members of the LGBTQ community, current laws are disgracefully outdated and do not encompass guarantees for LGBTQ citizens. The Elliot-Larsen Civil Rights Act - Michigan's anti-discrimination law - provides protection to individuals on the basis of numerous categories. Yet, individuals who identify as - or are even suspected of being - homosexual, transgendered or bisexual continue to face the unjust possibility of being denied employment, housing or access to public accommodations. To ensure the equality and fundamental rights of all members of the state, Michigan needs to amend the ELCRA to be more inclusive. The role of Detroit's fellowship programs peaking on campus earlier this month at the Ross School of Business, Republican Gov. Rick Snyder implored students - a sizable portion of the 300 attendees inBlau Auditorium - to remain in-state after graduation,ALEXANDER emphasizing HEXANNE opportunities HERMANN in Detroit in particular. It's a script Snyder has repeated frequently since assuming office - why be just another yuppie in Chicago when you can make a real difference in Detroit? Further, Snyder contends that many recent graduates and young professionals simply aren't aware of the opportunities available to them here. And he's right. There are numerous unique opportunities in Detroit meant to attract young professionals seriously considering relocating to the Motor City for the first time or those who might otherwise depart for greener pastures. Consider, for example, Challenge Detroit, a "leadership and professional development" fellowship that pairs 30 participants from across the country with Detroit-based employers in every industry and sector. Fellows become immersed in Detroit's social scene, volunteer opportunities, and leadership and networking events. Challenge Detroit is accepting applications through March 9, and is an excellent prospect for graduating students looking to jumpstart a career while making a difference in the city. The program is only one of several fellowships providing incentives for young professionals to broadly impact Detroit. The Detroit Revitalization Fellows Program similarly matches development professionals with key economic and community development agencies across the city. The D:hive Residency Program is also specifically tailored to attract recent graduates with limited professional experience to Detroit. If nothing else, these programs contribute to and accelerate the promising trend in Detroit's urban core that's currently witnessing a much-needed talent infusion. According to "7.2 SQ MI: A Report on Greater Downtown Detroit," in 2011 nearly 1,000 young professionals - defined as 25- to 34-year-olds with bachelor's degrees - were selected for three-month to two-year fellowships and internships in Detroit through programs like Challenge Detroit, the D:hive residency, Teach for America and the Detroit Revitalization Fellows. Additionally, the report - commissioned by the Hudson-Webber Foundation and other partners a year ago - claims that over 2,600 young professionals reside in the 7.2- mile area comprising Detroit's Greater Downtown, including the Central Business District and that these positive developments are no substitute for a cohesive agenda that strengthens Detroit neighborhoods and simultaneously builds capacity outside the immediate downtown-area to complement urban core revitalization. As Thomas Sugrue, author of "The Origins of the Urban Crisis: Race and Inequality in Postwar Detroit" - to many, the book on Detroit - recently talked with the Detroit Free Press about the city's future. "The future of a city, if it's going to be successful, the future of Detroit is going to be improving the everyday quality of life for residents who are living a long way from downtown and a long way from Midtown, who probably aren't ever going to spend much time listening to techno or sipping lattes," Sugrue said. But with the right energy and a commitment to social justice, young professionals can certainly make meaningful progress benefitting everyone in the city. For example, 24 of 27 fellows from Challenge Detroit's inaugural cohort remained in Detroit. And of all the fellowship programs mentioned above - As a result of Michigan's "at-will" law, employers don't need to provide a justification for firing an employee. Similarly, the absence of protections under the ELCRA allows LGBTQ members to be denied access to restaurants and hotels. Michigan's lack of protections demonstrates that the state's legislation is archaic compared to the advancements in many parts of the country. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder announced in February that the Obama administration's decision to extend equal rights to legally married same-sex couples in federal matters. Likewise, discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation is outlawed in 21 states and the District of Columbia, with 17 states instituting protections on the basis of gender identity. Whilea sizable portion of the United States is proactive inits efforts to guarantee equality, Michigan currently possesses a subpar set of protections. Select municipalities in the state - all of which are located in the lower peninsula of Michigan - enforce LGBTQ protections for citizens at the local level. However, these laws vary greatly between cities on both the type of discrimination and the identities they protect. Citizens shouldn't need to worry about whether their rights will be encroached upon or denied if they leave a particular city and travel elsewhere in the state. Unified and comprehensive legislation is needed in order to ensure the rights of all Michigan citizens. Republican Gov. Rick Snyder needs to stop relying on local governments to handle these issues and should instead push state legislators to create a comprehensive plan. Earlier this year, Snyder was reported to have had "a number of other things ... as priorities" when he was questioned about his lack of a stance on issues such as LGBTQ employment discrimination and gay marriage. Michigan can't continue to allow a portion of its citizens to suffer under unfair legislation. The state should follow in the steps of California and Massachusetts, which guarantee LGBTQ members equal access to housing, employment, government services, marriage and adoption rights. At a time when the rest of the country is moving forward and growing more open to equal rights for LGBTQ members of society, Michigan is severely lagging behind. Granting full equality protection to LGBTQ citizens is an initiative a majority of voters approve of. Updating the ELCRA will help Michigan become more inclusive and propel the state into a leadership role in the battle for equal rights. several adjacent neighborhoods. Similarly, 95 percent of rentals in Midtown and downtown have remained occupied since 2012 and currently hover near 98 Wit and Soc PI from Teach for America h the right energy in Detroit to D:hive to a commitment to Challenge a . c y Detroit to ,al justice, young the Detroit rofessionals can Revitalization Fellows - Make progress. none has been around longer percent, even as prices have risen, due in large part to the interest of young professionals. Improving the population's education, occupancy and rental rates represents important signs of progress in a city that needs these short-term wins. But one must caution, of course, than four years. These impacts will only improve and become more obvious as these programs leave their infancy, and past participants advance even further in their careers. - Alexander Hermann can be reached at aherm@umich.edu. MATTHEW MANNING I Sochi: the disaster we wailted EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Barry Belmont, Nivedita Karki, Jacob Karafa, Jordyn Kay, Kellie Halushka, Aarica Marsh, Megan McDonald, Victoria Noble, Michael Schramm, Matthew Seligman, Paul Sherman, Allison Raeck, Daniel Wang, Derek Wolfe ALICIA ADAMCZYK I I thought I had more time As the cleanup in Sochi continues this week, the impending disaster that had been so frequently dis- cussed before the event has been averted. There wasn't a terrorist attack, the facilities were finished, and, by and large, everything ran smoothly - so much smoother than we wanted. In the lead-up to the Winter Games in Sochi, the negative press surrounding the games was stag- gering. Everything ranging from Russian legislation against homo- sexuality, to the mismanagement of funds and allegations of cor- ruption. Even the poor stray dogs of Sochi made headlines, with the discovery of a Russian plan to elimi- nate the feral population before the arrival of hundreds of thousands of tourists, many with a penchant for petting animals on the streets with- out a second thought to the pos- sible health risks the animals carry. Following the coverage closely, I started to believe that we wanted something bad to happen. To our delight, we whetted our palate with proof of the imminent disaster as the press arrived in Sochi. Photos and comments began pouring out from the press about the "conditions" in Sochi. "Sochi Disaster" started trending on Twit- ter. Looking closer at many of the "issues," things like not being able to flush toilet paper or the tap water being undrinkable aren't really characteristics of a lack of prepa- ration or any form of disaster, but conditions that exist in most devel- oping nations. It's frankly embar- rassingthatthese minor peccadillos captured the imagination of the Western public. A great deal of the world's population lives in condi- tions similar to these. I suppose Russia should offer a heartfelt apol- ogy to the journalists, because the hotels in Sochi weren't, in fact, the Hilton in London or the Marriott in New York City. I'm sorry that Russia wasn't as nice as Vancouver in 2010 or Turin before that. But things are looking up! South Korea is next and perhaps they are developed enough for the press. But unlike similar or worse condi- tions that were rampant at the 2010 World Cup in South Africa (which caused an influx of more than 40,000 prostitutes in the country), Russia is somehow held responsible for being different. Even as the ice has all but melted from the Cold War, the West still takes an adver- sarial approach to Russia. Putin has, without a doubt, tyrannical tenden- cies and his regime should be open to criticism, but belittling Sochi for some non-functional toilets or bro- ken curtains is nothing but Western elitism. We live in a world with lin- gering Cold War prejudices, a world in which the average American still views the average Russian as their backwards rival. Yet as the American media throws allegations of corruption on Russian officials in Sochi, they seemed to have conveniently forgot- ten the allegations of bribery that accompanied the Winter Games in Salt Lake City in 2002. So severe were those offenses that several members of the Olympic Interna- tional Committee, the governing body of the Olympics, were forced to resign. Good thing Mitt Romney was there save the day. We are also quick to forget our own sordid history with homo- sexuality. Michigan and 16 other states still have a law banning sod- omy. It took a Supreme Court case in 2003 to overturn these laws. While no longer enforceable, these laws remain on the books in these states, and little effort is being made to change or amend them. The laws that caused such protest in Russia are arguably less severe than the law Michigan lawmakers crafted. There's an old line of jokes that go something like "In Russia, car drives you!" focusing on the overall backwardness of the nation. Inter- estingly, a minor amendment could make this remark applicable for the United States. "In the United States, media drives you!" We listen to the media and it drives our perception on what will or should happen. The Western media's complaints are shameful and show how spoiled and disconnected we really are. The disaster the media wanted, that it marketed so fiercely to the public, didn't happen. I guess there's some truth in one of these jokes. Although driverless cars may be right around the corner. Matthew Manning is a graduate student in the School of Public Policy. This weekend, I won't be waiting in the line at Skeep's. I won't be relaxing at home, binge-watching "House of Cards" on Netflix. I won't celebrate the end of midterms with friends. Instead, I will celebrate the life of my grandmother. I will go home Friday morning, I will sit with my family in an impersonal room in the intensive care unit of St. John's Hospital in Warren, Mich., and I will watch one of the most important people in my life take her last breath as she is taken off of life support. I don't write this so you pity me. I write this for my own sense of closure. I last spoke to my grandmother on Valentine's Day, when I called to see if she had any plans with friends, or with my parents, or my uncle, because I worried about her being alone. She didn't. She said she mightvisit with my papa, in the cemetery where he's laid for the past four years. I felt guilty, I remember. I had plans with my living, breathing boyfriend that night. I have yet to visit papa at his grave. She asked me about all the developments in my life, which I was all too excited to share. I rambled on about my work at the Daily, and my internship for the coming summer and all of the amazing, coming-of-age milestones that were consuming my life. Out of obligation, Iasked her what was new in her life. Nothing much, she said. Even now as I try so hard to remember every last word she said to me, I can't. I told her I couldn't wait to see her in two weeks, when I would be home for spring break. That didn't seem so long away at the time. My grandma, my nana, was stubborn. She was proud, and she had strong beliefs and she was good and giving. There were many moments when we didn't get along, but there were so many more when we did. I loved listening to stories about her life growing up, and about her family and papa, and everything else. My biggest regret, the irony of which is not lost on me as I attempt to establish myself as a journalist, is that I did not ask her more questions. How many nights did I spend scrolling through my Twitter feed or locked in my room, as she sat in my living room, anticipating conversation and company? How did I not realize that she was so much more interesting than whatever fashion blog I was reading, that her nights were so much more precious than mine, so much more finite? I had been meaning to sit her down to make a family tree, before all of the faces and names that had once defined her life were replaced with the absence of mind that so often accompanies old age. I thought I had more time. My only solace is knowing that the last conversation my parents had with her was a happy one. My mother bought her a ticket to Florida, where we are traveling for Spring Break, scheduled to leave this Sunday. They asked if they should get insurance for her plane ticket. She said no. This weekend, I don't want to go home. I don't want to go to the hospital, I don't want to see the rest of my family, I don't want to sift through Nana's belongings and I don't want to face my friends and pretend everything is ok. I do want Nana pestering me again to peel the potatoes at Thanksgiving, even though the turkey won't be done cooking for another hour. I do want to miss 15 minutes of family movie night to make her coffee, and I want to be sent back to the kitchen to put the right amount of cream into the steaming cup. I want to explain to her, again, the difference between the Internet in general and Facebook specifically, and I want to call her on Valentine's Day every year for the next 20. I don't want to say goodbye. Alicia Adamczyk is an LSA senior. E-MAIL MEGIEI::I AT tttSEtRlAMt tUMICH.EgtU I'M NOT R ST F7 M7 RCIS BUT- THERE! 3 YOU WE~I RE 4 I