The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, November 4, 2014 - 3 PREVIEW From Page 1 the balance, but U.S. Rep. Gary Peters (D-Detroit) has taken a commanding lead in the polls over Republican Terri Lynn Land, for- mer Michigan Secretary of State. What was once a four-point lead in early September has tripled to a more than 12-point advantage for Peters, according to the Real- ClearPolitics aggregate. Peters, who specialized in financial issues during his three terms in Congress, supports rais- ing the minimum wage and deficit reduction, favors policies such as cap-and-trade to combat climate change and has also campaigned on his support for abortion rights and having access to contracep- tion. Land, meanwhile, favors lower tax rates for businesses to stimu- late economic growth, supports free-market solutions to combat climate change, opposes same- sex marriage, favors restrictions on abortion and would support repealing the Affordable Care Act. Attorney General Republican Attorney General Bill Schuette is seeking a second term as the state's chief legal offi- cer as he tries to fend off Demo- cratic challenger Mark Totten, a law professor at Michigan State University. Schuette leads Totten by roughly four points, according to a Detroit News poll released last week. Schuette has highlighted his efforts as a "voice for victims" in his reelection bid, but has been criticized by Totten for his sup- port of a state ban on same-sex marriage and his challenges to the Affordable Care Act in court. Tot- ten hopes to refocus the role of the Attorney General as "the people's lawyer" by prioritizing efforts such as protecting consumers from predatory business schemes. Michigan 12th Congressional District Rep. John Dingell's (D - Dis- trict 12) 58-year run in Congress is coming to an end, but his wife Debbie Dingell, a former General Motors executive and a Democrat- ic party activist, is looking to keep the seat in the family. She hopes to fight for women's and children's issues, increase state support for higher education and is an advo- cate forgayrights. OpposingDing- ell is Republican nominee Terry Bowman, an assembly line worker at a Ford Motor Co. plant and the founder of Union Conservatives, which seeks to promote conser- vative principles to union mem- bers. Bowman supports the state's right-to-work laws and opposes the Affordable Care Act for its potential to incentivize part-time rather than full-time employment. No formal polls have been con- ducted for the race, but Dingell is heavily favored in this left-leaning district. State Senate In Michigan's 18th senate district, incumbent Democrat Rebekah Warren is seeking reelection against Republican Terry Linden. Warren previously served two terms in the state leg- islature before being elected to the Senate in 2010 and supportswom- en's reproductive rights, increased state support for education, eco- nomic innovation and expanding access to healthcare. Information about Linden's campaign or views on issues could not be found and he declined multiple requests for comment. State Legislature Incumbent Democrat Jeff Irwin is seeking a third term rep- resenting the 53rd district in the state legislature and faces chal- lenger Republican John Spisak, a former small business owner and currentastay-at-home father. Irwin supports increased state funding for K-12 and higher education, and supports investing in the physi- cal infrastructure to promote economic growth. Spisak's top priority is to improve the state's infrastructure and is also an advo- cate for fiscal responsibility in government. FINANCES From Page 1 governor and U.S. Senate have been no exception to this trend, becoming some of the most expensive in the country. In the gubernatorial race, $28.8 million has been spent on television ads alone, according to the Center for Public Integrity. Republican Gov. Rick Snyder's official campaign has spent $7.6 million, supported by another $6.5 million from the Republi- can Governors Association and $1.3 million from the former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg's Independence USA political action committee. The Democratic Governors Associa- tion has done the majority of the ad spending for Democratic chal- lenger Mark Schauer, providing $8.9 million so far, while Schau- er's campaign itself has contrib- uted $2.6 million. The RGA and DGA are 527 organizations, meaning that unlike the candidates' official campaigns, there is no cap on how much they can accept from contributors or on how much they spend. According to the Michigan Campaign Finance Network, the largest Michigan contributor this election cycle to the RGA was ETC Capital, a Farmington Hills-based invest- ment firm that has given roughly $2.7 million. The DGA's largest in-state contributor this cycle is the United Auto Workers, which gave $1 million. As expensive as the guber- natorial race is shaping up to be, the race for Michigan's open U.S. Senate seat has proven to be even more costly. The Center for Responsive Politics rated it as the ninth-most expensive Senate race this election cycle, topping $46.9 million. Republican candi- date Terri Lynn Land's campaign has spent over $11.8 million, while U.S. Rep. Gary Peters, the Democratic candidate, has spent $9.5 million in his campaign. Just like the gubernatorial race, outside spending for the Senate race has outpaced that of the candidates themselves. Lib- eral groups either supporting Peters or opposing Land have together spent roughly $18.7 mil- lion, while Conservative groups supporting Land or opposing Peters have spent $8.8 million. The two largest spenders in the race are the SuperPAC Ending Spending Action Fund, a con- servative group advocating for a reduction in government spend- ing, and the NextGen Climate Action, a liberal environmental group backed by billionaire Tom Steyer, a hedge fund manager. Steyer has spent $58 million this election cycle, the largest single donor in the disclosed political system. While abundant spending on behalf of both candidates has distinguished the races for governor and Senate, lopsided financial advantages have char- acterized two other prominent Michigan campaigns. In the race for Attorney Gen- eral, Republican incumbent Bill Schuette has raised $3.7 million compared to Democratic chal- lenger Mark Totten's roughly $679,000, according to the Michigan Campaign Finance Network. Schuette has received large donations from the PACs for Decider Strategies, a Republi- can political consulting firm, and Detroit law firm Miller Canfield, as well as the Michigan Beer and Wine Wholesalers Association. For Totten, the largest contribu- tors have been from the PACs for UAW and the Michigan Educa- tion Association. Fundraising in the race for Michigan's 12th congressional district has been similarly one- sided. Democratic nominee Deb- bie Dingell has raised over $1.3 million compared to just over $42,000 for Republican Terry Bowman. According to the Cen- ter for Responsive Politics, more than half of Dingell's campaign war chest-has come from sources outside the state. Despite the influx of out- side money in these races, it is unclear whether the candidates' positions have altered as result of such trends. Traugott noted that though the current state of campaign finance has empow- ered some outside groups with a narrow issue focus, many of the groups like the RGA and DGA are just newer fundraising apparatus- es ofthe standard political sources that existed pre-Citizens United. "I think that the greatest impact on position-taking comes from direct contributions rather than these indirect contribu- tions," Traugott said. "They have the ability to contact the (elected official's) office and remind them how they supported them during the campaign." UHS From Page 1 very soon after the shift - Doug Strong, CEO of the University of Michigan Hospitals and Health Centers, said the health system was suffering. "It caused us to slow down because it was complicated and people had to learn it," Strong said. "As a result we were suffer- ing more financially than we had been previously ... as we speak we are resurfacing from that." UHS Medical Director Rob- ert Ernst agreed that the change to MiChart was a major step for UHS, particularly because they were transitioning from paper charts to computers. "It was a really major shift in our practice when we moved from paper records to an elec- tronic record system," Ernst said. "And I don't think you can underestimate the disruption." Two and a half years later, UHS members have become much more comfortable with the inner workings of MiCh- art. With familiarity has come success, and in many ways the UHS online system is thriving and nearly all of the paper charts have been moved online. "People who have been users of this system have had an oppor- tunity to build a record, and that took some time," Ernst said. "There were instances when we were working with both the paper record and the electronic, and we've kind of grown out of that now." Electronic records have resulted in bidirectional com- munication between the health care provider and the patient. Using an online health portal, MyUofMHealth.org, students can request prescription renew- als, view test results and make appointments. Previously, stu- dents had to call or even come to UHS to perform these tasks. The convenience of care has brought increased patient satis- faction. Ernst said patient satis- faction with ability to view test results was 70 percent without the portal. Since then, this num- ber has now climbed to 90 per- cent. "That addresses what we had known as a gap," Ernst said. "We've really made a tangible improvement in that." UHS is still looking to improve student usage of the portal, which about half of students currently use. UHS has taken measures such as putting portal information on business cards and having kiosks at checkout with computers for patients to make portal accounts. Though 50 percent of patients are actually using the por- tal, only 5 percent are making appointments through it. Ernst said he is looking to increase this number over time. UHS is the only site within UMHS that offers patients the option of scheduling an appoint- ment online. Ernst is an advo- cate of this feature particularly because it encourages continuity; patients can only make appoint- ments with a doctor they have seen in the past, a feature that is supported by studies indicat- ing a link between a consistent patient-doctor relationship and better quality of care. "It's not as intuitively obvious to most students that they would benefit from continuity until they've had it," Ernst said. "Then they really find it to be satisfy- ing." The biggest challenge that persists with the online system is internal communication with- in UHS, Ernst said. Rather than making a phone call or going to see them in person, doctors can contact their medical assis- tants and nursing staff through the system, and Ernst said staff members are still working out this part of the routine. "It has become almost some- thing else to do," he said. Epic is not a simple system. Ernst said there are other, less advanced systems that are tai- lored specifically to college health centers and might be eas- ier to work with initially. How- ever, Epic's functionality results in greater efficiency once its capabilities are well understood. UHS is now reaching that point. UHS has begun to launch screening algorithms to encour- age protocol-based features such as STI screenings for women. Ernst said this functionality has greatly improved efficiency because it takes advantage of a patient's presence at UHS. A patient can receive - or at least schedule - the routine check that day. "That is the high-end Epic functionality that is not associ- ated with the off-the-shelf, more tailored college health electronic records," Ernst said. The use of Epic is also crucial because it allows UHS to be on the same system as the rest of the University hospitals. This would not be the case if UHS were using the less complex programs typi- cally meant for college health systems. "The fact that we're using the same system as the medical cen- ter has really eliminated this loss of information," Ernst said. "If a student goes to the emergency room ... that sort of sharing of information when there needs to be sharing of information has been fantastic." MiChart is continually becom- ing a useful tool for UHS. Just last week, UHS launched online nutrition services. "We've really settled in now," Ernst said, "so we're much more efficient with it than we've been before." DETROIT From Page 1 into teams and develop products that they pitch to a panel of pro- fessional mentors. Ultimately, one team wins the "competition," earning a $400 prize. How the winners use the money is up to their discretion. Last year's program had two winners. One winning team designed a product called Graf- fiti Gowns, medical gowns that can be drawn on, as a way to engage younger children in hos- pital environments. Resnick said this team used some of its prize money to con- sult with a patent lawyer and try to patent a washable material for the gowns. "The end goal, really, is to give what we envision the promising team from our workshop money so that they can continue to have resources to continue this work," he said. "We just want to see these students empowered to go on their own." Resnick added that even those who do not win funding are given the tools to succeed. Not all projects set out to cre- ate products - others include valuable services, such as local tutoring or community service organizations. Once the program ends, Resn- ick said many of the projects go on to be implemented, and par- ticipants stay in touch with their fellow students and mentors through Facebook groups and over e-mail. One example is LSA sopho- more Monica Mungarwadi, who was a student in the program during her senior year of high- school and is now a member of d[en]. Her group project was called the Middle School Initia- tive, which would recruit stu- dents from middle schools to take part in a diversity education program centered on race and ethnicity. The initiative was success- fully launched last year in her hometown of Farmington Hills. She said the skills she learned in the d[en] program were invalu- able ingettingthe Middle School Initiative going. y "One of the first things that I learned was writing a busi- ness model," she said. "I had never even heard what a busi- ness model was. That helped a lot because it helped us struc- ture our organization: what our main goal was, what our mission statement was, how much money we wanted to put towards our program, how to get the funding that we needed." Tom Frank, executive direc- tor of the University's Center for Entrepreneurship, who was a guest judge at last year's con- cluding d[en] competition, said a couple of teamseven sought his mentorship after the pro- gram came to an end. He hap- pily extended it and said he was impressed by the program over- all. "Two of these high school teams presented the best startup ideas that I had seen all year, and one of them I would have invested my personal money in if that was not completely outside of our conflict of interest," Frank said, referring to Graffiti Gowns. Frank said high school stu- dents yield innovations that go beyond the sometimes-cookie cutter version of "entrepreneur- ship" that is often prevalent at the university level, which tends to focus on tech startups. "People solve problems that reflectthe world thattheyilive in, and the problems that we were presented by the d[en] students were really cool to me because they came from a completely fresh perspective," he said. Frank said the sentiment was also visible recently at the CFE's Urban Entrepreneurship Ini- tiative Symposium, where, he said, many Detroit natives were present. The initiative encour- ages sustainable business meth- ods for solving important urban issues and was founded by David Tarver, a lecturer at the College of Engineering and the CFE. "The things that they cared about around financing are not the same things that somebody who's commercializing a laser in one of our research labs cares about," Frank said. "So there again, you get the benefit of this feedback from the community: 'Don't set up a venture capital storefront ... show me how I can finance the next phase ofgrowth so I can manufacture this thing I've created.'" Tarver also taught a d[en] workshop last year, which pro- vided an overview of methodolo- gies for growing a business. This is one of his areas of expertise - he has successfully developed numerous profitable businesses, namely Telecom Analysis Sys- tems, which he started in his basement with two friends and ultimately sold for $30 million. Read the full story at michigandaily.com DEMOCRATS From Page 1 age students to vote this election cycle, especially because non- presidential elections are known for attracting fewer voters. Many of the candidates cited low voter turnout among young voters as the reason for substantial Demo- cratic losses in the 2010 midterm elections. "We need you tomorrow," Dingell said to the cheering crowd. "We've got to take the state legislature back. We are here tonight to create the energy, to create the enthusiasm to remind your roommates and the people and in your houses and in your dormsthattomorrow matters and what's at stake." Schauer said he believes the student vote will push Democrats ahead in the election. "I am an optimist about our future and I trust you with the future of this state," Schauer said. "It is in your hands and I am com- pletely comfortable with that." After the rally, the College Democrats posted flyers and chalk messages around campus. "We're doing everything we can to make sure that if you're a student at the University of Mich- igan, you know that it is Election Dayandyouknowwhothe Demo- crats are," Culbertson said. In addition to encouraging stu- dents to vote, many candidates discussed their positions on fun- damental issues like the environ- ment, women's rights, health care and LGBTQ rights. Many candi- dates also discussed their goals for empowering the people over big business and corporations. "This is really a critical elec- tion to show that big money can't buy elections," Peters said. "It is the people of the state of Michi- gan who get to determine who their Senator is, who their Secre- tary of State is, who's their Attor- ney General, not these out of state billionaires." Culbertson said that the state elections, and especially the guber- natorial race, are still very impor- tant for out-of-state students. "We're voting for someone who is going to sign the state budget for higher education and sign the road funding, and they're going to be signing bills of anti-discrim- ination legislation," Culbertson said. "Even if you're only going to be on campus for four years, all of those things will and should mat- ter to you. I think this election is incredibly important and it's incredibly important to show up on Election Day." F RIlDAY Nov21 The Future @11AM Sta p of Global Tech Adt~u Centerran Entrepreneurship FE AT U RING Co-founder & General Partner, DCM dcm Dr. Dixon R. Doll Dixon Doll has been one of the architects of some of the greatest waves of technology innovation the world has ever seen. His venture firm Doll Capital Management, or DCM, has led investments for years in the United States and Chins. Notably, Mr. Doll's partners have received acclaim by K- Forbes and other premier investment and business publications, moat recently for DCM's leadership in the Chinese technology revolution. Wherever new and important economic trends and development have occurred, you can be sure that Mr. Doll's influence has been present. He will be drawing upon this unparalleled experience and perspective to share not only how global technology innovation has grown but also where, how and who will develop it in the future. Register today http://goo.gl/iVhRmg JAMES R. MELLOR LECTURE SERIES MICHIGAN ENGINEERING UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN #TURNUP4ELECTIONS We'll be updating michigandaily.com all day with election results. t