4A - Monday, April 14, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michiganclaily.com 4A - Monday, April 14, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Th1icdiigan &U Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 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. Renovating Detroit Duggan's proposal will strengthen and help the Detroit community April 9, Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan announced that owners of 79 vacant homes in the Marygrove neighborhood will have three days to make arrangements to fix up their homes before the Detroit Land Bank Authority auctions them off to new homeowners. This marks the beginning of the mayor's ambitious plan to target blight across the city. The plan was realized with the help of Talmer Bank, which will offer each bid-winning homeowner $25,000 of forgivable loans at the rate of $5,000 to be forgiven each year the owner lives in the home, for a maximum of five years. This proposal is worthy of praise. It's an efficient form of blight removal and control because it maintains salvageable homes and also works with community members to guide the process. Blessings in disguise was set on Notre Dame. No question about it. I had toured the school and had fallen in love with the campus, the students and the tradition. Notre Dame was the school for me. Unfortunately, the kind folks at the University of Notre Dame PATRICK Admissions MAILLET Office didn't agree. When I received my rejection letter, I was heartbroken. How could this have happened? I worked so hard throughout high school, took SAT prep classes, wrote great essays - Notre Dame was the perfect fit for me. After getting rejected from the school of my dreams, I had to decide which school would be the right fit for me. I began touring the schools that I had been accepted to. Actually, to be fair, I only went on one of these post-acceptance tours. when I arrived in Ann Arbor for the first time, I liked the general feel, but wasn't entirely sold right away. My tour guide was atrocious and my parents and I were famished. Instead of finishing the tour, we dipped out midway through as we passed through the Diag. We decided to have lunch at this quaint little restaurant called Good Time Charley's. We had nachos and talked about how terrible the tour guide was. Little did I know that three years later, I would be celebrating my 21st birthday a few feet from the very table we ate at - a night I will remember forever ... well most of it, at least. After eating, we decided to embark on a self-guided tour of campus. During college visits, my mom would always pick out students and ask them about the school. Though this method was quirky and downright embarrassing, it actually helped me gauge schools and the type of kids at the institution. At Michigan, every kid my mom stopped was ecstatic to tell someone new about how much they loved the school. I noticed that everyone wore maize and blue and everyone was involved in one of the 1,000-plus student organizations. By the third kid my mom stopped, I was sold; I knew that Michigan was the place for me. When move-in day came, my parents and I noticed that my dorm was not part of the original tour we had gone on. In fact, the entire campus my dorm was part of was not seen during our tour. I had been assigned to Bursley Hall on North Campus and it didn't take me long to realize my dorm was separated from everything else. Needless to say, I was upset. While helping me move in, my mom couldn't help but notice that the kid across the hall from me was playing some classic music. A die- hard Bruce Springsteen fan, my mom has a special place in her heart for classic rock and approached the kid to tell him that he was play- ing some great hits. His name was Chris and before I knew it, my mom was introducing him to me. When I met him, I had no idea that four years later I would've lived with Chris and that he and his friends from high school would become some of my most cherished friends. The people that lived in my hall with me in Bursley helped define to, The Michigan Daily, I saw an advertisement that said, "Write for The Daily! Come to one of our mass meetings!" Considering that I had nothing else to do with my recently freed-up schedule, I decided to stop by. When I walked into the newsroom of the Daily for the first time, I had no idea that over the next four years, I would sit on the editboard, be an Assistant Editor of the Opinion Section and eventually a columnist. Though the Daily is famous for its openness, it has but one restriction on who can be on staff: no members of CSG. Throughout my life, my par- ents have raised me to look at life's mishaps as blessings in disguise. Though this mindset is hard to appreciate when life throws an unfortunate obstacle your way, accepting the fact that things hap- pen for a reason is truly the key to happiness. The fact that I am a stu- dent at Michigan, writing this very column. Even acknowledging some of the people who are reading it are all results of blessings in disguise. I have written more than 50 pieces for The Michigan Daily. This column will be my last. I will Currently, blighted properties drive down the prices of the surrounding houses and neighborhoods, don't generate tax revenue for the city and jeopardize the safety of the surrounding area. This new program aims to combat many of these issues, while also stimulating the rehabilitation of clearly salvageable properties in an important area of Detroit - Marygrove College, University of Detroit Mercy and Sinai- Grace Hospital are all in the neighborhood - with a free incentive to new homeowners. In the future, this new plan will serve to increase neighborhood safety, generate tax revenue and drive up the property values in the neighborhood. However, Detroit must be cautious of the fact that not all homeowners of abandoned houses have left them intentionally, and that this program shouldn't have an agenda to push new homeowners into the area while pushing community members out. In order to ensure that current homeowners receive adequate help and information in retaining their homes, the city should reach out to residents at risk of losing their homes and provide them with preventative assistance and help in acquiring control of their foreclosed homes. Furthermore, though the Detroit homes are salvageable, the Talmer Bank loans of $25,000 each may not be sufficient for full reparation. In the future, larger loans may be needed to fully incentivize homeowners to make the necessary repairs. Other land banks within the area - many of which are already involved in some sort of corporate giving in Detroit - should also partner with the city to help expand the scope and scale of the loans. Duggan's plan is a step in the right direction - many other cities such as Minneapolis and Baltimore have implemented similar programs to combat blight. A similar measure has been taken in New Haven, Conn., with the formation of a task force called Real Options Overcoming Foreclosure. Blight removal is a major stepping-stone in the revival of Detroit. Duggan's plan for forgivable loans will drive up property valie, incentivize migration into the city and expand the tax base. Both Duggan and Republican Gov. Rick Snyder must help expand this program to a larger scale. the trajectory never be able of my Michi- to fully thank gan career and the editors of looking back, I Accepting the fact that this incredible wouldn't have institution, wanted to live things happen for a nor my readers anywhere else. for their Soon after reason is truly the key enthusiasm getting com- t and dedication. fortable with tohappiness. To my family campus, classes and friends: and developing thank you for a good group your continued of friends, I decided that I needed encouragement and unwavering to get involved. Considering that support - even when my columns I'd been a part of student council pertained to things that meant throughout middle school and high absolutely nothing to you. And to school, I decided to run for Central this University and the incredible Student Government (back then people that make it up: I thank you it was called Michigan Student from the bottom of my heart. You Assembly.) have allowed me to join a family I recruited all of my friends to that I am honored to be a part of. help get the vote out and we even The friends that I have made, the threw a few campaign parties. games that I have watched and When the results finally came out, the lessons that I have learned I was about 60 votes short of what during my time here will not soon I needed to be elected. I felt disil- be forgotten. These last four years lusioned and lost. The only way I have been the greatest of my life. had ever known how to get involved Attending this school has been the was through student government. best blessing in disguise of all. As I was sitting in the Bursley Dining Hall reading a publication - Patrick Maillet can be that I was getting very accustomed reached at maillet@umich.edu. Policy Matters: Maura Levine discusses the d-the way First Amendment protections apply in OP U Mprivate places that attract the public, such as shopping malls. Go to michigandaily.com/blogs/The Podium ALEX ABDUN-NABI Funding the Michigan Difference Student organizations at the University of Michigan are an incredible source of vibrancy and community on our campus. More than 1,400 of our organizations are run by students and for students to provide our campus with opportunities for personalgrowth, professional development, education and advocacy. Students benefit massively from student organizations and their activities, gaining not only skills, but memories and friendships that they will retain well beyond their days in Ann Arbor. Theonlymissionofthe StudentOrganization Funding Commission of the Central Student Government is to support these students and their organizations.We provide about $300,000 a year in funding for students to explore our world, make it a better place, educate themselves andbethe Michigan Difference.We are committed to ensuring that as many events as possible take place on our campus, and that the events we fund have a broad campus impact or bring benefit to students, faculty and staff at the University. We are focused on providing funding to a wide cross section of campus. Last semester alone, we funded 222 groups, providing more than $130,000 in funding. We provide funds for conferences, speakers, performances, social events, travel, service and many, many other types of student activities. It's almost impossible for a student to graduate from the University without attending at least one CSG-funded event. We're very proud of this impact, and humbled that you, the students of the University of Michigan, have entrusted us with such an important responsibility. But we believe that our impact has been limited by our own funding constraints, something that inhibits us from supporting students. Our mission is simple, to enable students to do what they want to do. We are not failing that mission, but we're not achieving it in the manner we would like. Each year, we receive an average of $1.16 million in funding requests and we only have about $300,000 to disburse. That means we're leaving more than $700,000 of student requests for funding unmet, forcing the cancellation of some events and the re-organization of others. We don't believe that this is right, fair or appropriate for a campus that values student activities and boasts about the number and activity level of its student organizations. Ideally, we would like to be able to fund every student group that walks in the door, allowing all students to achieve what they wish to achieve. This is impossible with our current level of funding, and is, in reality, almost impossible to ever achieve. But we believe we can and we must do more. CSG exists to serve students, and if we have to turn away hundreds of students who need thousands of dollars, then we are not doing our job the way it ought to be done. This is why I and my fellow co-chairs of the Student Organization Funding Commission wholeheartedly and unequivocally support a $2 increase in the CSG student fee. This increase will generate a minimum of $75,000 for SOFC, all of which will be budgeted to support student organizations in their important endeavors. The cost increase is less than the cost of a cup of coffee, but the impact will be immeasurable, increasing the already impressive diversity of events and programming on campus, and allowing Michigan students to achieve their best. The increase is covered under financial aid,andwebelievethatitwillnotbedetrimental to students to pay $2 more for the benefits they will receive. We are conscious of the rising cost of education, but we believe that education is not just what you learn in the classroom, but what you learn outside of its four walls, and that we should all be willing to pitch in at least a little bit to enrich our Michigan experience, and make our time at Michigan more valuable. Alex Abdun-Nabi is the Co-Chair ofnthe Student Organization Commission. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Barry Belmont, Edvinas Berzanskis, David Harris, Rachel John, Nivedita Karki, Jacob Karafa, Jordyn Kay, Aarica Marsh, Megan McDonald, Victoria Noble, Melissa Scholke, Michael Schramm, Matthew Seligman, Paul Sherman, Allison Raeck, Linh Vu, Meher Walia, Daniel Wang, Derek Wolfe JORDYN KAY I It's OK to feel a little lost I was always goal-oriented. I definitely am not). Having a goal- So now here I am, a junior in actually can't recall a time when oriented attitude is no longer an college with a major and two it was any different, even when I option or something I pride myself minors and a pre-law track. Can was four years old. There had to be on, or one of my weird personality you tell I'm confused? If you can't an end in sight, I would not just do quirks, it is something society has you've clearly missed the point so something for the hell of it, there forced upon me. far. I am confused but I'm also only had to be purpose. Now, being goal- But what if I really just don't 20, so shouldn't that be OK? Isn't oriented when you're in elementary know yet? Or what if I still want to this the time in my life where I'm school and being goal-oriented be everything from a dancer to a supposed to be unsure and make when you're (almost) 21 and in veterinarian like I did when I was mistakes and just throw caution to college are two very different 10? Why has the option to explore the wind? things. When I was 11, being goal- my options been stripped away It was just about two years ago oriented meant needing to finish from me just because I am older? that I moved out of my parents' a book, or place first overall at my Picking a career is not something house and now I'm supposed to dance competition. Today, as my anyone should do lightly. After all, know what I want to do with my junior year in college begins to it could end up defining the rest of entire life? It seems absurd. What come to a close, being goal-oriented your life (yes, that sentiment makes if I get to law school and I hate means figuring out what I want to me want to cry also). However, it? What if I should've become a do with my life, figuring out my there is somewhat of an expectation teacher? Or a writer? Or famous? future. And it's because of that, that that you should know what you OK, that last one is a bit of a stretch, for the first time in my life being want to do upon entering college. but still. Most college students have goal-oriented actually scares me to Find a major, find a career, have a just become legally responsible death instead of bringing order to goal. Just pick one. Obviously, give for themselves and then they turn my life. Honestly, the word future it some thought and take some time around and are expected to make makes my heart race a little. to figure it out, but not too much all these life-changing decisions. I came to college believing time, I mean, how dare anyone be a I have no idea where I will end up that I was going to be a doctor, junior who hasn't declared a major and that's OK. We need to realize a neurosurgeon to be specific, yet, which I was. I was the junior that our major or career aspirations because God forbid I make my who hadn't declared her major yet. do not have to define the rest of our life easier in any way. I am now Everyone else had declared, but I lives. Our goals change since we as planning on going to law school. wasn't ready, it's a big commitment people continually change, and if Let's just say chemistry was not and if I was to say I didn't have it takes a little longer to figure out my forte, but I digress. The point is commitment issues I would be what exactly our goals are, that's that I'm expected to have this goal, lying. And yet, I've committed to OK too. And when all else fails, as a junior, I am supposed to know psychology because I wouldn't you can always audition to be on whether or not I want to go to grad dare go into my second semester "Survivor." At least that's what my school or law school or if I plan on of my junior year without having plan is. just making an attempt at entering declared my major. That simply was the workforce right out of college (I not allowed. Jordyn Kay is an LSA junior. CONTRIBUTE TO THE CONVERSATION Readers are encouraged to submit letters to the editor and viewpoints. Letters should be fewer than 300 words, while viewpoints should be 550-850 words. Send the writer's full name and University affiliation to tothedaily@michigandaily.com. CHECK US OUT ONLINE Keep up with columnists, read Daily editorials, view cartoons and join in the debate. Check out @michigandaily and Facebook.com/MichiganDaily to get updates on Daily opinion content throughout the day.