4 - Tuesday, February 25, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4 - Tuesday, February 25, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@nichigandaily.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. Pedaling to a better future The ArborBike program will benefit students and reduce pollution his May, the University and the city of Ann Arbor will implement ArborBike, abike-sharingprogramthat allows members to pickup and use bikes from kiosks around the city for a low fee. This collaboration between the city and the University's Parking @ Transportation Services will establishbikekiosksthroughoutcampusinseveral areas, including: MainStreet, State Street, South University, North Campus and Central Campus. ArborBike will make transportation more convenient for students and Ann Arbor residents and help preserve the environment byreducingthe need to drive. The University shouldimplementtheprogram, andifsuccessful,helpexpand ittotheentirecity. ArborBike will make transportation available at more locations and more times, giving students easier access to areas that are not served by Blue Buses. Students will also not be bound by inconvenient bus schedules. Easy and inexpensive access to bikes will allow students to easily travel to and from important locations around Ann Arbor. In addition, being part of a bike- sharing program could be more convenient and affordable than bike ownership for students. The program may save students money, as they wouldn't have to buy a bike, pay for upkeep or worry about theft. In 2012, more than 90 bikes were reported stolen, but this program will relieve participants of the worry of being the next victim. To maximize benefits for students and make sure the program is accessible for all, the University should further ensure that B-Cycle, the program provider, keeps membership rates low. Additionally, there are several environmental benefits of the program. According to B-Cycle's interactive website, it is projected that if only two bike kiosks were set up at the University, the program would reduce six tons of carbon emissions and save 616 gallons of gas. It is also estimated that it would help reduce traffic by 415 cars, improving the downtown environment by alleviating congestion. The University plans to install 14 kiosks so these effects are projected to be even greater. If the entire city of Ann Arbor eventually incorporates bike stations, the effects can be amplified to reduce 219 tons of carbon output and traffic by 15,193 cars. In 2011, Coleman detailed her environmental sustainability initiative, of which this is an important component. According to Coleman, all of the University's planned environmental programs combined will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 25 percent and decrease vehicle carbon output 30 percent by the year 2025. However, as the University prepares to implement a program to increases bike ridership, it must call upon B-Cycle to provide helmets to users. Helmets tend to be expensive, so casual bike riders, especially students, may not purchase them on their own to wear when riding ArborBike bikes. However, helmets are necessary to protect students. Providing helmets as part of the bike-sharing program can help incentivize students to wear them. It is also important for ArborBike to create a way to ensure the cleanliness of the helmets. The implementation of ArborBike will help students get around our increasingly, spread-out campus. The University should implement the program in earnest - and barring any major difficulties - expand it to include more areas of the city. How to tell a true story guess it was around the end ankles and leaves you forgot were as wholly and resolutely as a body of high school that I stopped green until the rains came and the rejecting a transplanted heart. In my sleeping. I don't mean entirely, soldiers sang monsoon songs in the imagination,Iwasdark and beautiful of course, but for streets. It was our windows without and loved completely, separated at a month or two I glass in them, khamsin and jinn birth from a perfect, perpetually existed in a state and night air that was always sweet happy family that believed in what of deliberate and dusty with bougainvillea and I believed and wanted to be what insomnia. reconciled kitchen fights. I wanted to be. Falling into these When the America was where I spent my thoughts was a long way down, and sounds of lunch breaks in the bathroom, hot I walked that edge precariously. It telenovelas faded tears of shame running down my was a fault of innocence. I was too from the walls JULIA face each time I was reminded by young to understand that some tears around me and the ZARINA ignorance, innocence or plain fact, are not yours to cry. I was too naive men downstairs _______that maybe I was born to be the odd to understand that love is a family breathing smoke one out. That no matter where I who cares for you in their own way withpracticedcool moved or the kind of person I tried - even when you are young and it had drifted off into their own corners to become, we all carry reminders, is a painful reminder of a culture of the evening, I would open my heavy at times, impossibly light at and past you are desperate to leave window to let the moon in. From the others, of where we come from. That behind - because it is honest and top floor of our apartment building, even though the sand is gone, I can't true and the best way they can. I my own domain was infinite. I felt shake the desert out of my shoes. did not understand that real stories solitaryinmyknowledgeofthe hours Growingup,Iwasinclinedtospeak aren't linear and neatly bound in I would sit at the window, watching in absolutes because life is easier covers to sit on shelves gathering the eyes of the city blink slowly from to learn and understand when the dust, though that doesn't make them deep within a jungle of black steel universe is not implacable and events any less interesting or worthwhile. and concrete. I felt the heartbeats can be neatly categorized like in the From my window on the city, at the centers of a million different movies and books I loved. People I stopped trying to sleep and just curtain-drawn pupils lined neatly were good or they were bad; they watched. The streetlightsbecame the in brick rows along city streets. The were vulnerable stars in my own silent rush of the wings of millions or they were galaxy. In the of prayers whispered into dark calculated. R, hours between rooms - millions of stories never Happy endings Rea stories aren't days, t began retold in the daylight - scattered the found those who linear and neatly to remember gray and drafty holding patterns of deserved them things that I did my own thoughts. and no true love bound in covers to not know I had I was wondering how to tell a was unrequited. forgotten. I had life story that was completely true, I was resolutely sit on shelves sand between my because sometimes the facts are American or gdust fingers, desert incidental and all that really matters I resolutely gathering nights inmysoul, is character development - how wasn't, lost words on my you are different at the end of a depending on lips and past days series of events than you were at the who asked. I was fiercely loving on mymind. I hadspent everysecond beginning. Some people spend their or chillingly distant. I was eager up until then wondering how to tell entire lives learning how to love; to prove that I wasn't just another the story of my life, and it was only in others are born in love and spend passing face, eager to prove that I that moment thatI finally knew what their entire lives learning how to fall was every bit the parts of my past I would say. If I had forever, I would out of it. I didn't know quite where to I had handpicked and placed on write about my parents and my home place myself. display, delicately tended. I was more and the Big Bang and everything that Self-reflection is an exercise in eager to prove that I was resolutely defineswhoIam,whether I'vegrown what it means to risk everything you not the parts of my past that I had to accept it or not. If I had a book and know in the name of growing up. disassembled and left behind. wanted it to be critically acclaimed Self-doubt is a risky venture and self- I spent a lot of time trying to make I would write it in tears, and if I confidence is no less perilous. When my life imitate art, to fit neatly into wanted it to be factually accurate I approached without balance, either the outline of a novel or the frames of would write a physics textbook, but can prove to be both perpetuating a Bollywood movie. even then nothing is certain. and debilitating. Without a measure Back then I had the tendency But if I wanted it to be entirely of confidence, a person will never to arrange the events around me true, I would plan none of it and tell attempt to succeed, but without a with a degree of intentional literary it entirely in the present, in single measure ofinsecurity,theywill never significance. My life had character words. And if I had to choose just question their potential to improve. web complexities and thematic arcs one, I would say "Urgent," because My life up until that point could be like I thought only dead Russians whether it is "I love you" or "I accept divided into two distinct segments: knew how to write. Even as I you" or "I'm sorry," everything you the desert and everything that came collected the details of my friends' need to tell somebody is. after.-I grew up barefoot in a city of lives obsessively - what they wore, dirt roads, banyan trees and crowded how they spoke, what they believed - Julia Zarina can be reached busses. Cairo to me was muddy - I rejected the details of my own at jumilton@umich.edu. Merit: TheMichigan difference in action 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 COLLEGE DEMOCRATSI The case for raising minimum wage While the U.S. economyhas largelyemerged of the most vulnerable Americans is further from the Great Recession, income inequality weakened. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) persists as a true economic crisis. Wages are brought attention to the significant impact of stagnant, the cost of living continues to rise inflation on the Senate floor earlier this year by and opportunities for economic improvement noting that if the minimum wage of 1960 were are limited. One concrete way that we can adjusted for inflation, it would be $22 today. address this worsening inequality is to raise the A higher minimum wage would not only minimum wage. Last year, thousands of fast benefit low-income workers, but also the food workers went on strike across the country economy as a whole. While somehave suggested calling for a living wage. At $7.25 per hour, the that a higher minimum wage would create a federal minimum wage has not been raised surplus of workers and increase unemployment, since 2009. This means a full-time minimum studies have generally concluded that wage wage employee with a family still lives below requirements do little to disrupt the job market. the poverty line. With workers pushing fair In fact, a study by David Card, an economist at pay proposals, the time has come to raise the the University of California, Berkeley, indicates minimumwage. that a higher minimum wage may actually Last week, President Barack Obama signed increase employment. Additionally, because an executive order that mandated federal low-wage workers tend to spend a higher contractors pay their workers at least $10.10 percentage oftheirincome, raisingtheirincome per hour. While more must be done to increase would give the economy a much-needed boost. the minimum wage nationally, this is a good Democratic politicians have offered several step toward raising the federal minimum proposals to increase the minimum wage. wage, which would boost the earnings of 16.5 Michigan gubernatorial candidate Mark million workers. Schauer, a former U.S. Representative, wants Minimum wage impacts nearly all to tackle the issue of income inequality head Americans. About 80 percent of all college on and, if elected, he will fight to increase the students work part-time jobs, many at or near minimum wage to $9.25 in Michigan.However, the minimum wage. Last year, 284,000 college Republican Gov. Rick Snyder is opposed to graduates worked minimum wage jobs, making raising the minimum wage and does not it nearly impossible for them to independently believe addressing it and raising the standard support themselves or pay off their school of living for thousands of Michiganders is a loans. A full-time minimum wage worker's "burning issue." salary is just $15,080 per year. To put this in Inhis State ofthe Unionaddress,Obamaonce perspective, it would take nearly seven years again called on Congress to raise the minimum to pay in-state tuition for four years at the wage, but he is not waiting for Republicans in University of Michigan on this salary, without Congress to act. The president has vowed to taking into account the cost of housing, food do whatever possible to address this crisis, and other basic living expenses. which is why he is taking executive action to However, the minimum wage does not just begin to address this issue. In Michigan and affect young people. According to the Bureau Washington, Democrats are ready to get to of Labor Statistics, and contrary to what many work and address our low minimum wage. people believe, about half of all minimum wage Aside from the social and economic benefits, workers are over the age of 25, and many have there is one irrefutable reason to increase the added responsibility of supporting families the minimum wage: it's the right thing to do. and children. This summer, mothers, fathers, Obama declared "that in the wealthiest nation students and senior citizens went on strike on Earth, no one who works full time should demanding a wage they and their families can have to live in poverty." With that in mind, one survive on. thing has become clear: the time to raise the Not only is the minimum wage too low - it minimum wage has come. is also continuously decreasing in value. As inflation increases, the actual value of $7.25 This article was written by members of College decreases. Every day the purchasing power Democrats at the University of Michigan. avid Merritt and Kuhu Saha sit on tallstools surrounding the sales counter at Merit, Ann Arbor's new clothing store with a conscience. Both 20-somethings are University alums that graduated in 2008. Now they SOPHIA own their own USOW business and their own nonprofit organization, like the kind you get tax refunds for donating to. And they're pretty damn good looking. Intimidated? You should be. But six years ago David and Kuhu didn't know what the future would hold."When I was a senior, Igotreally' into the idea of being a consultant," David, a former Michigan basketball player, tells me. "But I also had a passion for young people and for the city of Detroit." Luckily, consulting didn't pan out and now David feels like he is right where he wants to be - creating a product that he is proud of and giving back to a community he believes in. David is Merit's founder and seems to be the ideas-man of the two young entrepreneurs. He gesticulates enthusiastically at the merchandise that lines the walls of the meticulously organized South University store as he explains Merit's aesthetic to me. In his words it is simple, fresh, modern, vintage style with a militant edge. Militant because Merit is fierce about the cause it champions. Militant because it looks good. Kuhu, the duo's implementer and executive director of the company's nonprofit arm, FATE, explains to me what Merit's cause entails. For every hat, sweatshirt or notebook patrons purchase, 20 percent of the item's cost is invested in a savings account. Two years from now, the money accrued within that account will serve asa scholarship fund for the 22 students (now sophomores) that have completed the FATE program. InDetroit, fate is aloadedword. The fate of Detroit's student population is often seen as predetermined by location and circumstance. The Motor City has been swept a dangerous national trend every 26 seconds a high student drops out. In Detroit of every four students will n it to graduation. Withouta education or a high school( boys and girls who drop1 a higher probability of b impoverished, unemploy incarcerated adults thai peers who stay in schoo more basic level, those ki educational opportunitiesI critical for them to realize t potential as individuals. FATE challenges that trend by retaking the te making it about bright not preordained failure program facilitates theE growth through monthly1 workshops with Ann Ar companies such as Google, I andZingerman's. Inthe workshops the students M are exposed to different OPPO business models and ideas. They be m also develop personal by d leadership I skills, creative ability and self- confidence. They become - in a clich, yet it sense - more than just a sta That's a big deal to Merit's, "We don'twantpeopletosee as some sort of Sarah McL 'Save the Children' type of: says David. Kuhu nods ad "We want people to connect students. When you wear with the Merit badge, yo just helping some faceless si You're supporting Amari, or or Jiyah in achieving their of becoming a doctor or director or whatever inspire continue their education. Th we wanted to make a websi customers can go and learna kids in the FATE program what they are funding." Merit's new meritgoodness.com, launcl past weekend. At the top of up into page, to the right of the badge, are in which three numbers: college tuition dollars school raised, products sold and minutes , one out of class provided. It is a reminder of iot make the merger of commerce and charity, a college that buyers can be both benefactors diploma, and consumers. out face As the beneficiary of a first- ecoming rate education being a University ed or of Michigan student, I often find n their myself falling into the collegiate 1. On a mindset that allows me to shrug my ids miss shoulders and say "I'm a just a wittle that are undergrad! I can't help anybody!" It heir full is incredibly easy to be lulled into the happy irresponsibility of college life, negative sure those slices of South University rm and pizza and Urban Outfitters sales rack futures, items are the best I can do right now. s. The I give change to the homeless woman student's outside of the 7-Eleven on State Saturday Street and pat myself on the back. I bor-area wake up in the morning and find a Domino's receipt from last night's bar hop and wince ... then console myself with a coffee [erit offers the and a cookie at Irtunity for me to Espresso Royale. There's nothing ilitant for a cause wrong with s that. I'm 22 and loing somethig all those things d do anyways. are normal - even expected. But I want to make a mportant difference, as I think we all do. Like tistic. the 22 kids who attend FATE, I have creators. ambitions that necessitate higher ourcause education and a community who Laughlin, will guide me towards reaching my crusade," full potential. That way, maybe I'll amantly. grow up and create something as with our meaningful as David and Kuhu. clothing For now, however, Merit offers :u're not the opportunity for me to be, in some treet kid. small way, militant for a cause just Shamon by doing something I'd do anyways: dreams shop for fresh clothes. And then lose a movie them. And then buy more, because s them to I need another super-soft tee or a sat's why warm beanie or a sweatshirt my te where friends will want to "borrow." The about the numbers on the website will rise and and see rise, but they won't be just another statistic. They'll be part of a cause. website, hed this - Sophia Usow can be reached f its start at sophiaus@umich.edu. A