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CAMPUS LIFE
LSA student attends ONE program in Washington
NEWS
ACA Ruling University experts react to Supreme Court decision. >> SEE PAGE 2
NEWS
Campaign aims to combat extreme poverty and preventable disease
Tiny Houses Art students collaborate with non-profit to serve A2 homeless community >> SEE PAGE 3 VIRGINIA LOZANO/Daily
Ann Arbor mayor, Christopher Taylor, speaks at the City Council meeting Monday.
OPINION
University funding Performanced-based model ineffective and must change >> SEE PAGE 4
ARTS
XXL fun ‘Magic Mike: XXL’ gives women what they want. >> SEE PAGE 6
SPORTS
Just do it Michigan signs record-high apparel deal with Nike. >> SEE PAGE 12
INDEX Vol. CXXIV, No. 115 | © 2015 The Michigan Daily michigandaily.com
NEWS .................................... 2 OPINION ...............................4 ARTS ......................................5 CLASSIFIEDS......................... 6 CROSSWORD........................6 SPORTS..................................10
Thursday, July 9, 2015
City officials discuss possible changes to snow removal policy Council considers pedestrian safety, sustainability By ALAINA WYGANT Daily Staff Reporter
Snow removal and other topics concerning the environment were discussed at the Ann Arbor City Council meeting Monday night. Resident Robert Gordon, who was awarded Ann Arbor’s Green Fair volunteer of the month award, spoke about local landfill space and ideas on how to make use of it. “There’s going to come a day when we are going to realize that landfill space could be park space, could be places where there’s affordable housing, could be places where there’s retail,” Gordon said. “... we’re wasting it on garbage — most of which is recyclable or compostable. There’s a lot of work to do.” One of the main topics on the meeting’s agenda was the city’s current snow removal policy. The current legislation states that
property owners are required to remove snow more than one inch deep from public sidewalks. If an owner fails to remove it, the city issues a notice to the owner to do so and, if after 24 hours the sidewalk isn’t cleared, the city removes it. Ann Arbor’s Pedestrian Safety and Access Task Force recommended changes to this policy. One of the proposed changes is to require property owners to remove snow even if the snowfall does not reach more than one inch. This change would hold property owners responsible for clearing ice from their sidewalks. Members of council had differing opinions of the proposed policy change while others expressed concern for other aspects of the city’s snow removal ordinance. Councilmember Jane Lumm (I– Ward 2) said she wasn’t comfortable with the policy’s method of warning residents to remove their snow. Lumm said she thought only one warning was not enough and asked other councilmembers what alternatives were available. Lumm said some snow removal contractors and services don’t
remove snow until two inches have fallen. She also said she was concerned that seniors, the disabled, and those who spend time out of the city wouldn’t see the single snow removal warning issued by the city, and would therefore be unable to meet the local snow removal standards and, as a result, be unfairly fined. “It just doesn’t seem reasonable that on a second occurrence a person should be fined $250 to $500 plus costs to remove,” Lumm said. Mike Anglin (D–Ward 5) said there needs to be better legislation for snow removal than the city’s current policy. He argued, because many Ann Arbor residents rent and may be in apartment housing, the responsibility of snow removal should fall on the owner, not the occupant. “I can’t see this as something I’d be willing to take a look at right now and push this obligation onto elderly people and people with limited incomes who then would have to hire people to have this done,” said Mike Anglin. “It’s another type of taxation which I would not like see.” See CITY, Page 3
By ALYSSA BRANDON Summer Managing News Editor
This year, a Wolverine will be heading to Capitol Hill to participate in ONE Campaign, a program that works to help fight extreme poverty and disease in Africa. Sara Isaac, a rising LSA senior, was one of 16 college students selected to serve on the Student Advisory Board of the ONE Campaign and attend the campaign program based in Washington D.C. Each year, ONE Campaign selects students from various campaign chapters located at college campuses across the U.S. to participate in the three-day program. Throughout the program, students collaborate with political leaders, activists and others to plan new campaign programs to implement on college campuses. According to a press release from campaign leaders, this year’s students were selected because of their skills as on-campus organizers around ONE’s mission of ending extreme poverty. They were also selected because of their eagerness to engage with other students and young people to encourage similar activism. In a statement, Laurie Moskowitz, who serves as senior director of U.S. Campaigns, said she was excited to hear fresh ideas from this year’s Student Advisory Board. “ONE’s Student Advisory Board brings together the best and the brightest of ONE’s student activists to provide crucial insight and shape the organization’s campus work,” she said. See ONE, Page 3