INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880
The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 137, No. 51
THURSDAY, APRIL 8 , 2021
n
8 Pages – Free
ITHACA, NEW YORK
News
Dining
Sports
Weather
Slope Safety
Health Bar Blues
Big Red to Olympics
Mostly Sunny
The slope provides a social space for Cornell students, but is it COVID safe?
A sports bar might not be the most energizing snack, writes Amelia Clute ’22.
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Kyle Dake ’13 swept Jordan Burroughs in a best-of-three match for the Olympic trials, qualifying for the Olympics. | Page 8
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HIGH: 73º LOW: 50º
Schill MRP ’02 Joins County Legislature Heights. Her platform emphasizes efficient vaccine distribution and increasing housing security. “Our top priority right now is addressing COVID Cornell’s director of campus planning, in the community, and I would say the county Leslie Schill MRP ’02, took her oath of office is doing a great job and is still innovating even as Tompkins County Legislator Tuesday, after weekly,” Schill said. She expressed the importance of speed, accessibility a special election on and health educaMarch 23 to replace “It feels good to be back in a public tion in vaccinating Anna Kelles (D-2nd Tompkins County district). servant role. That’s something residents. Kelles, who I identify with.” Schill said her served as a experience as a Tompkins County Leslie Schill MRP ’02 campus planner legislator for five and community years, resigned after leader will help progressing to the New York State Assembly, representing the 125th District. Schill will run her achieve her platform. Schill’s current role for re-election in November’s regular race, at Cornell focuses on sustainability, long-term opposing Veronica Pillar M.S. ’14 Ph.D. ’19 for development and maintaining relationships between Cornell and Tompkins County. the second time since the special election. According to Schill, past projects she has Schill will serve out the rest of Kelles’ term as legislator representing the second district, which worked on serve as models for future initiatives includes the areas of Fall Creek and Cornell she hopes to carry out in the county and beyond. By VEE CIPPERMAN Sun News Editor
As an example, she noted the Community Development and Housing Fund, a collaboration between the county, the City of Ithaca and Cornell that has financed 815 affordable housing units and built 600 units over the past 11 years, COURTESY OF LESLIE according to Schill. SCHILL “I work on a lot of these initiatives,” Schill said. “I have the background and the current knowledge on them, and I can bring that to bear to create an even better collaboration between our county government and Cornell.” Before this position, Schill worked in municipal governments and on community-building Community building | Schill looks to strengthen See SCHILL page 3
connections between Cornell and Tompkins County.
Cornell Returns to Green Alert Level Virus transmission eases after case spike By ANGELA BUNAY Sun Assistant News Editor
BEN PARKER / SUN SENIOR EDITOR
Action now | Protesters gather downtown Wednesday to support the Climate and Community Investment Act.
Activists Rally for Climate Justice
Organizations advocate for bill before NYS Senate By TAMARA KAMIS Sun News Editor
Just over two weeks after the Climate and Community Investment Act was introduced in the New York State Senate, Cornell students and other Ithaca residents, including New York Assembly Rep. Anna Kelles (D-2nd district), gathered Wednesday afternoon to advocate for the bill’s passage. Thirty-seven people from a variety of climate organizations rallied in front of Kelles’s downtown Ithaca office for this legislation that would raise billions of dollars through taxes on corporate emissions to fund sustainability projects like
solar panels, train people for green jobs, support frontline communities and reduce the cost of utilities for over half of New York residents, according to NY Renews. The group included activists from Climate Justice Cornell, Sunrise Ithaca, the Ithaca chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America, Tompkins Mothers Out Front, Our Climate and New York Renews. One of the event’s speakers was Kelles, who supports the CCIA and said she will vote for it as soon as the bill reaches the New York State Assembly. “The most critical thing about the CCIA is not only does it establish a very needed
revenue stream to combat climate change, it is one of the first bills that I’ve seen that puts equity at the forefront,” Kelles told The Sun. According to Kelles, her progressive colleagues have expressed significant support for the bill. But for the CCIA to be effective, according to Kelles, the New York State Legislature needs to ensure that it does not transfer funds collected through this legislation to the general budget. Eva Milstein-Touesnard ’22, a Climate Justice Cornell organizer, began the event with a land acknowledgement and a summary of what See CLIMATE page 2
After more than two weeks in COVID-19 alert level yellow and following record-high case levels reported on campus, Cornell has returned to the green alert level, according to Cornell’s COVID19 Dashboard. Cornell reported 19 positive cases in the past week, and of the 6,392 students and faculty tested Tuesday, Cornell only reported three positive cases. Quarantine capacity is 74 percent available, marking a stark change from capacity levels that weeks ago hovered below 30 percent. At the time of publication, the University has yet to send a campus-wide update notifying the
Cornell community of the alert level change. On March 19, the University went into yellow when Cornell reported 74 positive cases, tied to transmission among students violating public health guidelines including North Campus residents and those traveling outside of Ithaca. President Martha Pollack wrote at the time that an increasing number of students were ignoring virus restrictions and missing their surveillance tests and Daily Checks. When Cornell moved to yellow, the University warned of entering into orange alert if COVID conditions worsened on campus, which would have See GREEN page 3
JULIA NAGEL / SUN ASSISTANT PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Green again | A student walks past COVID-19 signage on campus.