The Daily Northwestern Thursday, October 26, 2017
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PHA survey reveals discomfort in frats By ERICA SNOW
daily senior staffer @ericasnoww
A Panhellenic Association survey found that more than threequarters of respondents have felt “uncomfortable” in a fraternity space, or that a fraternity has placed its own interests above their safety. The 2017 PHA Sexual Assault Task Force survey, sent to PHA members last spring, was created to compile qualitative and quantitative data about women’s experiences in fraternity spaces, said PHA president Karalyn Berman. The survey received 182 responses. According to the survey, 44.5 percent of respondents “have felt obligated to engage in a behavior
or activity that they didn’t feel comfortable with because of a fraternity member.” Additionally, 46.2 percent of respondents said they have tried to express concerns or discomfort to a fraternity member but “felt ignored or invalidated.” The survey included multiple choice questions and freeresponse sections for women to write about their experiences. Medill junior Juliette Johnson, who has worked for The Daily, said the survey helped illustrate how the PHA community was feeling after the conclusion of an investigation into allegations of druggings and sexual assaults. The University ended its investigation of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity » See SURVEY, page 6
Colin Boyle/Daily Senior Staffer
Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity’s former house on Northwestern’s campus. Interfraternity Council announced Wednesday it will cease to recognize the chapter until 2021 following “unbecoming” actions.
SAE loses recognition until 2021
IFC says fraternity engaged in actions that made NU ‘less safe’
By ERICA SNOW
daily senior staffer @ericasnoww
Interfraternity Council has ceased to recognize Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity until 2021 after the chapter violated its suspension by recruiting
new members and engaging in actions that have “continued to make the Northwestern community less and less safe,” according to a statement released by IFC on Wednesday. IFC president Rodney Orr told The Daily that chapter presidents voted on the decision Tuesday night. The SESP
senior added that fraternities can be recognized on three levels: from their international headquarters, from their universities and from their schools’ fraternal governing bodies. Orr said IFC’s decision will prohibit SAE from recruiting, hosting events or receiving financial resources from IFC.
Any person “known to have joined SAE in an official or unofficial capacity” will be banned from “joining any Interfraternity Council recognized chapter or attending any event sponsored by the Interfraternity Council or a member chapter » See SAE, page 6
D65 board officials EPD begins Ridge traffic program talk state funding By JAKE HOLLAND
New formula to prioritize districts with less wealth By RISHIKA DUGYALA
daily senior staffer @rdugyala822
Evanston/Skokie School District 65 officials said new state legislation changing the way schools are funded is a good step forward, but has also brought to light a few concerns. The new “evidence-based” funding formula — which became law in August after years of negotiation — prioritizes districts with poor property wealth, District 65 board member Candance Chow said. It also establishes a multifaceted procedure to determine each district’s funding need, she said.
When the legislation takes effect in July 2018, it will guarantee that all of the state’s 852 school districts receive at least the same amount of money as last year, and it will infuse $350 million in new revenue into the system. “The formula is, in the larger scale, a major accomplishment,” Chow said. “There have been huge inequities in state funding.” However, because District 65 — and Evanston Township High School District 202 — has high property wealth, board president Suni Kartha said it will not see any new money under the formula. District 65 board members said the provision would not help address the district’s rapidly growing student body. Roughly 1,500 students were » See FORMULA, page 6
Serving the University and Evanston since 1881
daily senior staffer @jakeholland97
Evanston police began monitoring traffic Wednesday along Ridge Avenue, especially from Greenleaf Street to Davis Street,
kickstarting a new initiative aimed at reducing crashes in the area. The initiative — coordinated by Evanston Police Department, traffic engineers and other city officials — was created to address an uptick in accidents and complaints of aggressive and distracted driving, EPD traffic unit
supervisor Sgt. Tracy Williams said. The number of traffic crashes at the intersection of Ridge Avenue and Greenleaf Street increased from 12 in 2016 to 20 this year as of Tuesday, according to an EPD news release. Williams said EPD wrote 80 traffic-related tickets over a
Colin Boyle/Daily Senior Staffer
A car moves near the intersection of Ridge Avenue and Greenleaf Street. Evanston Police Department announced Tuesday a traffic initiative aimed at reducing crashes in the area.
six-hour period Wednesday, 60 of which were written for distracted drivers. He said many of the drivers were using cell phones, and one was using an iPad. Five drivers illegally drove through red lights and three red light tickets were written, Williams said. He added that officers will monitor the area on and off as they search for a solution to the traffic problems. Ald. Donald Wilson (4th), who helped create the initiative, said the city should address the issue holistically. Making changes in one place could force aggressive drivers to take a different route, possibly causing problems down the block, he said. Still, he said making drivers aware of the dangers of reckless driving is the first guard against traffic accidents. “It’s important to promote the problem and make people aware that the driving conduct is in » See TRAFFIC, page 6
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