ANTIRACISM, 4
RETURN OF RHETT, 8
SILVER LININGS, 11
TAKING STANDS, 12
Ibram X. Kendi shares his insights.
Rhett the Second makes his debut on campus.
A mostly virtual semester may not be so bad.
Sports boycotts while playing in quarantine — that’s 2020.
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TUESDAY, SEPT. 1, 2020
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THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER AT BOSTON UNIVERSITY
YEAR L. VOLUME XCIX. ISSUE 2
Classes to take unprecedented format this Fall Melissa Ellin Daily Free Press Staff
ANGELA YANG | DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF
Students sit on the College Communication lawn, either physically distanced from one another or wearing face coverings.
Campus life transformed in wake of precautions Melissa Ellin Daily Free Press Staff Traditional campus life may be nearly unrecognizable this Fall, with social distancing infused into all aspects of university activity. Boston University administration also holds the right to shut campus down again. Dean of Students Kenneth Elmore said the University made decisions — detailed on the Back2BU website under “Same Campus, New Campus Life” — for the health and safety of its community. He said on-campus residents have a collective responsibility to adhere to the guidelines to ensure maximum safety. “I think what we’ve got to imagine is how we are resetting a social contract where we’ve got to be much more mindful about each other,” Elmore said, “where we’ve got to hold each other mutually accountable for doing some basic things like wearing
face covers in public.” The University has the ability to entirely terminate students’ housing agreements and ask everyone to leave campus, as it did in March. In the event of this, students will once again be refunded for the unused remainder of their room and board fees. Students who have already chosen to return to campus can opt to go remote at any time — as stated in Learn from Anywhere documents — but room and board will not be refunded if they leave campus to go remote. An application to request Spring housing will be available for those not returning to campus in the Fall. Their old assignments will not be held for them. The University also released an advisory stating it may move students from their assigned residence to enforce a quarantine or isolation period, or to de-densify a residential building. Students in quarantine or isolation
housing will receive food and care from the University when relocated — if they were living on campus — to a space with a private bathroom. As for visitors, no one who is not affiliated with BU will be allowed in dormitories, and students cannot enter the living spaces of those who are not in the same dormitory. Campus dining will offer contactless serving and limited seating in dining halls. Face coverings will be mandated in dining halls. Students can pick up pre-packaged meals at dining hall stations, or order Rhetty to Go meals at any time during normal service hours. Lobster Night, according to the BU Dining Services website, is still set to happen Sept. 10 — although students will be served lobster rolls as opposed to whole lobsters. The University has partnered with GrubHub to offer pick-up orders CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
Amid police reforms, city’s advocates push for more Daniel Kool Daily Free Press Staff Outraged over the murder of George Floyd, protesters in Boston and around the world took to the streets this summer demanding law enforcement reforms. While the City and state have made some reforms, many activists are calling for more changes. Mayor Marty Walsh declared racism a public health crisis and proposed a $12 million, or 20 percent cut, to the Boston Police Department’s overtime budget on June 12. The funds would be redirected to the City’s health commission, economic support for minority businesses and other community investments. On June 17, Gov. Charlie Baker proposed a bill requiring that police officers receive their licenses through
standardized training with clear expectations for recertification. The bill also called for police officers’ discipline and training records to be visible to out-of-state departments. James Machado, executive director of the Massachusetts Police Association, told The Daily Free Press in June that his group supports the bill. “We are always proponents of advancement and the professionalization of law enforcement,” Machado said. Boston’s operating budget for the fiscal year 2021, which includes Walsh’s proposed cuts, was passed on June 24 by the City Council with an eight to five vote. The day before the vote, Councilor Michelle Wu, who rejected the budget, tweeted that its “slight changes from the pre-pandemic budget don’t represent the type of transformative
investments that our community members, activists and residents have been reaching out for.” Compared to 2020, this year’s budget cuts the BPD’s total funding by more than 3 percent. The department remains the second-highest funded line item in the budget, according to the American Civil Liberties Union. Tahia Bell-Sykes, an organizer for Mass Action Against Police Brutality, said that more needs to be done. “Any decrease in funding for the police, if it’s going to the right areas, is great,” Bell-Sykes said. “But it’s just not enough.” The areas with the least amount of crime have the most public services, not the most policing, Bell-Sykes added. Councilor Kenzie Bok, who chairs CONTINUED ON PAGE 3
The Learn from Anywhere model that Boston University has adopted for Fall 2020 will allow students to choose their learning experience: virtual, in-person or a mix of the two. Regardless of individual selections, however, the way classes operate will see many changes this semester. Some classes will be entirely remote, meaning that both in-person and virtual learning students will attend class via Zoom each day. Other classes will be entirely in-person — if the room size and number of students enrolled permit it — and other classes will have “pods.” The pods are assigned groups formed by the professor or teaching fellow who will designate which days of the week in-person students will be eligible to come into class. On the days a student’s pod is not assigned for in-class learning, that student will be required to attend the
lecture virtually. This year, classes will be equipped with added technology that will allow professors to simultaneously teach virtually — via Zoom — and in person. There are pro LfA classrooms and basic LfA classrooms, each of which provide slightly different technological offerings. Each pro LfA classroom will have a camera that will record lectures, and professors will be able to share PowerPoint slides on their personal computer or the room’s desktop. The slides can then be projected onto the screen in the classroom and screen shared on Zoom for those joining remotely. In a basic LfA classroom, professors will need to use the wall outlets to plug in their personal laptop, as these rooms do not have computers installed. Cords will be required to sync the laptops with the microphone and camera in these rooms. CONTINUED ON PAGE 4
Massachusetts in reopening limbo Isabel Contreras Daily Free Press Staff As college students from around the world return to Boston, many are eager to enjoy their favorite Boston businesses. Restaurants and retail stores have been reopening their doors throughout the summer after initial coronavirus shutdowns, but many Boston businesses are not quite like students remember them. All individuals over age two must wear a face covering in stores, on public transportation and when social distancing is not possible. Businesses can refuse entry to those who decline to wear masks without having a medical exemption.
In response to the pandemic, Massachusetts officials have put in place a series of precautions and regulations in accordance with Gov. Charlie Baker’s four-phase plan to reopen the state. Boston is currently on the first step of Phase Three — the second-to-last stage — of the state’s reopening plan. The city moved to this phase on July 13, a week later than the rest of the Commonwealth. After an uptick in cases and violations of state guidance, however, Baker indefinitely postponed step two of the phase. Here is what that means for local businesses and services in Boston and the rest of Massachusetts: CONTINUED ON PAGE 3
LAURYN ALLEN | DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF
A person wears a mask while riding the Green Line, following state health rules.