ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-SIX YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM
Friday, January 6, 2017
Ann Arbor, Michigan
michigandaily.com
A lasting bond
Battle of unbeatens
The Michigan hockey team is hosting an alumni game Saturday at 7:30 to support former player Scott Matzka, who is in the middle of a fight against ALS. » Page 7
The Michigan women’s basketball team is hosting Ohio State at Crisler Center on Saturday, as both teams look to remain undefeated in Big Ten play. » Page 7
FLINT
Google, ‘U’ launch app to measure water safety DESIGN BY: MICHELLE PHILLIPS
Military health insurance pilot program devised at UM Center
Cost-cutting health care included in the 2017 National Defense Authorization Act MADELEINE GERSON Daily Staff Reporter
President Barack Obama approved a insurance design developed by University of Michigan researchers as a provision of the 2017 National Defense Authorization Act on
Dec. 23. The defense bill, which authorized a $619 billion defense budget, also approved the testing of Value-Based Insurance Design — a health care reform plan that reduces the financial barriers to essential, high-value clinical services — for a pilot in TRICARE, a health care
program for active and retired military members and their dependents. Originally created by faculty at the UM Center for V-BID in 2005, V-BID prioritizes the medications and services that are of highest priority to the consumer. V-BID represents an
effort to shift the health care system from a fee-for-service system with high co-pays and deductibles to one with clinical nuance that considers the needs and health conditions of individuals. The University’s V-BID See HEALTH CARE, Page 3
Aiming to assist Flint residents, the risk assessment tool also evaluates lead levels RHEA CHEETI
Daily Staff Reporter
University of Michigan researchers have released an app that helps Flint residents assess lead contamination levels by utilizing functions related to water testing and providing infrastructurerelated information. The team also worked with Flint Mayor Karen Weaver on data analytics for lead pipe removal. The app, released in early December, gives residents information about distribution centers for water and water filters, locations where lead has been found in drinking water,
areas where infrastructure is being replaced within Flint, the likelihood that water in a home or particular location is contaminated and instructions for water testing. Jacob Abernethy, professor of electrical engineering and computer science, was one of the faculty members approached by Google to create an app that would assist those affected by the Flint water crisis, which led to the creation of MyWaterFlint app. “What came about was an idea for an app that would be useful for (Flint’s) citizens to See WATER, Page 3
University professor pens water safety ‘U’ faculty A2 residents sign letter report to Obama following Flint crisis design pins
GOVERNMENT
BUSINESS
opposing Sessions
The report details necessary public safety measures for drinking water quality
Law professors join in against Trump’s pick for attorney general
Last month, a 100-page report detailing measures that needed to be taken to ensure the safety of public drinking water in Flint was delivered to President Barack Obama. The report, written by the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology, included the collaboration of Rosina Bierbaum, a University of Michigan professor of Natural Resources and Environment. President Obama mandated the creation of the report in the wake of the Flint water crisis and wavering public trust in safe drinking water. The aim was to help eradicate all remaining water quality issues and it called for short- and long-term measures to be taken in order to guarantee safe drinking water for all Americans. As a member of PCAST, Bierbaum co-chaired the group of PCAST members and experts addressing drinking water safety. This working group spearheaded the report, which concluded that, although largely safe, American drinking water quality could be further improved by a few measures, such as more succinct
HEATHER COLLEY Daily Staff Reporter
Over 1,000 law school professors from institutions in 49 states — including seven professors and five assistant professors at the University of Michigan Law School — signed a letter in opposition to President-elect Donald Trump’s nomination of Sen. Jeff Sessions (R–Ala.) as U.S. Attorney General. The letter, addressed to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, presented arguments about why the Committee should reject the nomination at the confirmation hearings next week on Jan. 10 and 11. The letter listed areas of concern in regards to Sessions’ politics, which include support for a wall along the country’s southern border, regressive drug and incarceration policies and a questioning of the relationship between fossil fuels and climate change. See SESSIONS, Page 3
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AARON DALAL For the Daily
communication across agencies and real-time water quality monitoring. At the last PCAST meeting in Washington, D.C. on November 18, Bierbaum presentedthe goals of the report. “Our real focus is on advancing science and technology,” she said. “Not to
micromanage how it gets done.” In addition to presenting the research findings Bierbaum included her policy recommendations. “The federal government must lead but must clearly involve state, cities and drinking water experts to improve methodologies
that can do comparative risk assessments of contaminant mixtures and across the complete water system,” she said last November. Bierbaum added that the recommendations should supplement the ongoing measures under the Safe See FLINT, Page 2
BAMN
KEVIN ZHENG/Daily
Civil rights activms group BAMN draws support for their group at Angell Hall on Thursday.
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INDEX
Vol. CXXVII, No. 3 ©2016 The Michigan Daily
for social awareness
Michigan alums seek to raise funds prior to Trump’s inauguration DAVID DORSKY For the Daily
In the wake of President-elect Donald Trump’s election, Ann Arbor entrepreneurs Kate Lind and Nate Stevens started a new project, Pincause, that designs and sells pins intended to raise awareness of social justice issues. Pincause recently released its first pin — a multicolored hand design — in support of women’s rights and the women’s rights marches that will take place across the United States on and before January 21, the days surrounding Donald Trump’s inauguration. “At first we had it as a closed fist that was many different bright colors, and then we decided to open it up and make it into the American Sign Language for love, which I think is perfect because our message is about love and inclusion,” said Penelope Dullaghan, the artist behind the multicolored hand design. Stevens, a University of See PINS, Page 3
NEWS.........................2 OPINION.....................4 ARTS......................6
SUDOKU.....................2 CLASSIFIEDS...............6 SPORTS....................7