Housing Guide
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T H E S T U D E N T - R U N N E W S PA P E R S AT G R A N D VA L L E Y T H U R s D AY, s e p t e m b e r 22, 2011
Gender neutral housing
Inside this issue
passed at GVSU
Fall 2012 housing app to reflect new option By Derek Wolff
GVL Archive
Football Preview
GVL Senior Reporter
B1
Joining a growing trend on campuses across the country, Grand Valley State University will offer a gender neutral housing option on the 2012 housing application. From Harvard to Stanford, gender neutral housing has been popularized across the U.S. in response to a rise in activism in support of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender students. GVSU students will now have the opportunity to choose a transgender option, not just male or female, when applying for student housing. A box at the bottom of the housing application will also ask applicants if he or she requires gender neutral housing in addition to the applicant’s gender choice. The Student Senate initially passed a resolution on
lanthorn.com Online slideshows
GVL Graphic / Val Waldbauer
GVL / Eric Coulter
Troy Davis Vigil Amnesty International, NAACP hold a candlelight vigil for death row inmate Troy Davis, who was executed late Wednesday night after several delays.
Back to School Blog Education isn’t a guarantee, so make the most of it while you can. ED HOLMAN GVL Columnist
www.lanthorn.com/blog
What’s Inside
A B C
A2 News A4 Opinion A5 Downtown B1 Sports B4 Laker Life B5 Marketplace C1 Housing Guide
Buses remain crowded despite ridership decrease By Lizzy Balboa GVL Staff Writer
Although officials at Grand Valley State University said the university has made appropriate accommodations to prevent bus overcrowding this year, there have still been complaints of overcrowding despite the significant decrease in ridership since last fall. Conrad Venema, Rapid planning manager, said GVSU added another bus to its contract with the Rapid to prepare for a swell in ridership. However, Pew Campus Operations recorded a 5.97-percent overall yearly decrease in bus riders when comparing the third week of 2011 to the third week of 2010. This decline disrupts an increasing trend from 2002 to 2010 that saw ridership grow by the thousands every year. Even though the busses have fewer users, some students still feel that they are too crowded. “At least for 30 percent of the time I have gone on the bus, I had to stand,” said senior Melissa Ostrowski, who said she was late for a clinic downtown once while waiting more than 35 minutes for a bus. Ostrowski said even if her bus has sitting room, it is always crowded and sometimes too full to pick up more students at other stops. Ostrowski is not alone. Sophomore Chris Benedict
See Buses, A2
GVL / Emanuel Johnson
Breathing room: Students crowd a Rapid Route 50 bus during peak busy hours. Students have complained about overcrowding despite a decrease in ridership and an additional bus in the GVSU rotation.
Jobs Act could kickstart economy BY THE NUMBERS
98%
Businesses whose payroll taxes will be cut in half for their first $5 million in payroll
100%
percent of expensing that will be extended through 2012
4,000 $50
Please Recycle
See Gender, A2
billion
Total tax credits given to a business that hires workers who have been out of work for over six months Total planed investment into modernizing highways, transit, rail and aviation
$35
million
proposed money to invest in preventing layoffs of 280,000 teachers and keeping cops and firefighters on the job Courtesy Photo / 3.dp.blogspot.com
By Dan Spadafora GVL Assistant News Editor
When President Barack Obama unveiled his plan to put Americans back to work two weeks ago, he knew for many citizens the speech had little to do with politics. “The millions of Americans who are watching right now: they don’t care about politics,” Obama said. “They have real life concerns. Many have spent months looking for work…
The purpose of the American Job Act is simple: to put more people back to work and more money in the pockets of those who are working.” The five-section American Jobs Act proposal presented by Obama on Sept. 8 aims to get America back to work by creating tax incentives for small businesses and provide pathways for the unemployed to get back to work. Although many of the proposed incentives look to improve the state of the small business
See Jobs, A2