Year in Review 2021-2022

Page 65

NEWS: GREATER ITHACA COMMUNITY

A C T I N G M A Y O R L A U RA L E W I S I N T E N D S T O C O N T I N U E P U R S U I N G M A J O R C O M M U N I T Y I N I TA T I V E S I N I T H A C A

L

BY LORIEN TYNE & O L I V I A S TA N Z L

ocal government officials in the City of Ithaca are confident that the community initiatives started by former mayor Svante Myrick will continue following his Feb. 6 resignation. Myrick resigned after 10 years as mayor and assigned Common Council Representative Laura Lewis as acting mayor. In addition to her new mayoral position, Lewis will be retaining her vote and seat on the Common Council as the Fifth Ward alderperson until the next election. Lewis has confirmed she will be running as a candidate in the November 2022 general election and has expressed her support for affordable housing, the Ithaca Green New Deal and the Reimagining Public Safety initiative. The Ithaca Green New Deal was adopted by the Common Council in June 2019 and has two goals: to achieve carbon neutrality communitywide by 2030 and to ensure benefits are shared among all local communities to reduce historical social and economic inequalities, according to the City of Ithaca. While Myrick initiated a number of local efforts like Reimagining Public Safety and the Ithaca Green New Deal, Lewis said the Common Council had to approve and endorse those efforts. “There’s been budgetary support behind initiatives that may have stemmed initially from Mayor Myrick, but these are initiatives that have my full support and that most certainly are continuing with city staff and Common Council effort,” Lewis said. Every January, the mayor appoints an acting mayor and an alternate acting mayor from the Common Council. There are five wards that make up the city and for each ward there are two Common Council representatives. On Jan. 5, Myrick appointed Lewis as acting mayor and appointed Second Ward Alderperson Ducson Nguyen as alternate acting mayor. Lewis said that before she agreed to be acting mayor, Myrick informed her of his plans to resign and accept a position as the executive director of People for the American Way. Lewis said she thinks it is important for there to be support and protection for renters and tenants as well as support for a higher degree of home ownership. Within the city, 74% of households is rentals and the average cost of renting a home in the city increased to $823 in 2012 from $529 in 2000, according to reports from Tompkins County. The City of Ithaca is a collegetown populated by students from Cornell University and Ithaca College, and a total of approximately 15,000 students live off campus in Tompkins County. These expenses do not account for other housing costs like

heating, and lower-income residents are being displaced as a result. “We need more housing,” Lewis said. “We certainly need more affordable housing … and actually heat-

rent hikes. Land-use reform is another angle Nguyen said he is a big proponent of, especially Middle Missing Housing. Middle Missing is a recent initiative that confronts the issue of the market gap in ur-

Laura Lewis, acting mayor of Ithaca, sitting in her office Feb. 22. She will run for office in the mayoral election in November 2022. Ash Bailot/The Ithacan

ing, and lower-income residents are being displaced as a result. Lewis will only serve until the November 2022 general election. The successful candidate will then finish out the remaining year of what would have been Myrick’s four-year term, and there will be another election at the end of 2023 for the next full term. Siobhan Hull is the Ithaca hub coordinator for the Sunrise Movement, an organization that advocates for political action on climate change. Hull said the Ithaca Green New Deal needs someone to be an advocate for the program like Myrick was. “I am concerned that the acting mayor currently does not have a history of being a large climate proponent,” Hull said. “I do worry about the Common Council’s general reluctance to implement the Ithaca Green New Deal. As the Ithaca Green New Deal currently stands, it is more of a promise than actual policy measures.” Despite her concerns, Hull said Myrick’s resignation creates an opportunity for a new generation of climate-conscious people to occupy his position and push for even more change than he created. Nguyen is another council member who feels strongly about the importance of housing. He said he wants the city to pass Good Cause Eviction legislation, which would grant tenants certain protections like restrictions on large

ban areas through a range of multiunit or clustered housing types. “Even after some of those very successful efforts at increasing housing supply, especially affordable housing, we still have a ways to go,” Nyugen said. “Which to me, means allowing for … ways to make the city tastefully denser and affordable and inclusionary for all people.” Sophomore Nick Viggiani, Class of 2024 senator for the Student Governance Council at Ithaca College, said he thinks that there may be some lull in progress on local initiatives while Lewis begins her role but that no drastic change in policies will result from Myrick’s resignation. Looking into the future, Viggiani said he hopes Lewis will prioritize affordable housing. “As a college student, I consider living off campus and I feel like getting affordable housing is really key,” Viggiani said. “It would be really beneficial for a large demographic. There are people who live in the town who also have to deal with those landlords, so I’d love to see it for Ithaca as a whole.” Cynthia Brock, First Ward representative since 2011, said the support for initiatives and how they proceed is very much dependent on council members and that is always changing. A recent election took place and five new members were sworn in. “Every time a council changes, of course that council has a new voice in how programs that were started previously will continue,” Brock said. “It’s hard to tell what the future may bring.”

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Football Head Coach Leaves

4min
page 146

New Football Head Coach

3min
pages 147-151

Women’s Cross Country Captain 144–145 Equestrian Club

10min
pages 143-145

Gender Equity Gap

5min
page 142

Club Sports

5min
page 140

Editorial: Limited Club Sports Funding

4min
page 141

Basketball Guard 1,000 Career Points

3min
page 136

Sprinter Breaks 60-Meter Dash Record

4min
page 135

Football Kicker Travels Country

6min
page 134

All-Americans

5min
page 133

Editorial: 63rd Cortaca Jug Sparks Concerns

5min
page 131

IC Athletes Attend NCAA Convention

4min
page 132

Shang-Chi

3min
page 116

Cortaca Jug 2022 Venue

3min
page 130

Tick, Tick ... Boom

3min
page 115

Dune

3min
page 114

Super Hearts Day Nerf Event 104–105 State and National Parks

17min
pages 103-107

Encanto

3min
page 113

Editorial: Cons of NFTs

4min
page 111

NFT Trend

3min
page 110

The Milkstand

5min
pages 108-109

Campus Hip-Hop Culture

4min
page 102

Astrology

5min
page 96

School of Music Mental Health Group 98–99 Via’s Cookies

10min
pages 97-101

Pellet Gun Shootings

5min
pages 91-95

Shots-Fired Incident

3min
page 89

Pandemic Budget Cuts 86–91 SAFETY

5min
pages 85-86

Spring Semester Reopening

4min
page 84

Two Swastikas Discovered

5min
page 87

Testing Options

4min
page 83

Surveillance Testing

3min
page 82

Editorial: Mask Mandate Removal

4min
page 81

Indoor Mask Mandate Dropped

4min
page 80

Quarantine Regulations

4min
page 79

Booster Shots

4min
page 78

Synagogue Hostage Crisis Response

5min
page 72

In-Person Fall Classes

4min
page 77

Afghan Refugees

9min
pages 73-76

Reproductive Rights Rally 68–69 Ithaca Decarbonization Plan

20min
pages 67-71

Trader K’s Closing

4min
page 66

Acting Mayor Laura Lewis

4min
page 65

Gentrifcation

4min
page 64

Day of Learning: Grappling with Antisemitism

5min
pages 61-62

Mayor Svante Myrick Resigns

4min
page 63

Campus Climate Initiative

5min
page 60

Commentary: College Fails Students of Color

6min
page 59

Understaffng

5min
page 57

Health Support & Services

4min
page 58

Mouse Sightings

4min
page 56

Commentary: Free Public Transportation

5min
page 55

Inflation

2min
page 54

Center for IDEAS Director

8min
pages 48-50

Zine Addresses Rape Culture

4min
page 52

Student Veteran Support

4min
page 51

Presidential Search

3min
page 44

President La Jerne Cornish

4min
page 46

AAUP Calls for Transparency

5min
page 45

Reaction to 10th President

5min
page 47

Dean Searches

12min
pages 41-43

Editorial: Music Theater School Merger

5min
page 35

Alumni Donations

5min
page 31

Opera Director Program

4min
page 33

Commentary: Course Registration

10min
pages 37-40

Tuition Increase

3min
page 36

Sakai to Canvas

4min
page 32

August & September

2min
page 11

Academic Program Prioritization Phase Two

4min
page 34
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