2020-02-24

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ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-NINE YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM

Monday, February 24, 2020

Ann Arbor, Michigan

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Red-hot

SPORTSMONDAY

Michigan beats Purdue, 71-63, for fivegame win streak.

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Panel analyzes impact of gun violence in PoC communities

Panelists share personal stories, advocate for legislative change NAVYA GUPTA

DESIGN BY LIZZY RUEPPEL

Students discuss several recent ‘U’ sexual misconduct allegations Community disappointed, but not surprised at news of Philbert, Mars, Anderson CALDER LEWIS & JASMIN LEE Daily Staff Reporters

Following announcements of multiple University of Michiganaffiliated faculty and staff facing misconduct claims since the Winter 2020 semester began, a number of students told The Daily they have lost trust in the University’s ability to protect them. Several University faculty

members faced sexual misconduct accusations made public within the past month. Martin Philbert, provost and executive vice president for academic affairs, was placed on leave effective Jan. 20 for sexual misconduct and harassment allegations. Engineering professor Jason Mars stepped down from his position as CEO of Clinc, an AI company he founded, after The Verge published allegations of sexual misconduct and abusive behavior against him on Feb. 13.

Daily Staff Reporter

The School of Information and the Center for Academic Innovation at the University of Michigan co-sponsored a discussion on how to maintain safety in extended reality technological worlds. UMSI assistant professor Florian Schuab hosted the discussion and featured the expertise of Kavya Pearlman, founder and CEO of XR Safety Initiatives. Pearlman was a cybersecurity strategist at Wallarm, a former information security director at Linden Lab and a former Facebook third-party security risk advisor. She said her professional experience corroborates with her personal interests in emerging technologies, gaming and virtual worlds. Pearlman said because it is abnormal for her to go more than a few days without using virtual reality, it is important to have a governing set of rules for those who go into virtual worlds. She discussed how being a woman as well as a person who wears a hijab has put her at risk of harassment multiple times, including a specific instance of sexual harassment.

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See MISCONDUCT, Page 2A

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Alum sues University over injuries Dr. Hausker from North Campus falling tree speaks on

Expert talks safer use of extended VR experiences

JENNA SITEMAN

School of Public Health since 1995. The Detroit Free Press reported the University has known about other sexual misconduct allegations against Philbert since 2003. In response to a request for comment, the University’s Office of Public Affairs directed The Daily to Schlissel’s statement on the several recent allegations during the Feb. 20 Board of Regents meeting.

Students Demand Action, a division of Everytown for Gun Safety, and the American Civil Liberties Union hosted a discussion on the impact of gun violence on communities of color. About 30 students and professors attended the event on Friday evening at Annenberg Auditorium. Nursing junior Grace Bontrager, co-leader of the Students Demand Action at the University of Michigan, said she formed the group after the Parkland school shooting in 2018. Bontrager said their group was the first SDA to start on a university campus. “I wanted a concrete way to get involved in gun violence prevention in my community,” Bontrager said. “It’s a lofty goal but essentially (SDA) wants to end gun violence in America by working with everyone in the country and the 300+ SDA groups across the nation. Our three

CAMPUS LIFE

RESEARCH

Past Facebook advisor highlights dilemmas plaguing new digital worlds, technologies

On Wednesday, multiple sexual assault allegations brought against the late Robert E. Anderson, former director and sports physician of University Health Services, were made public. University President Mark Schlissel sent an email to University students and faculty on Jan. 22 informing them of Philbert’s leave from office. Philbert was appointed as provost and vice president for academic affairs in 2017 and previously served in various roles in the

Daily Staff Reporter

main pillars of what we do here are education by talking about the issue, policy, legislative work and community work.” The conversation began with the three panel members introducing themselves and sharing the impact gun violence has had on their lives. University alum Benjamin Hester, a representative of Solomon Rajput’s campaign for Congress, spoke about the recent loss of his teenage cousin. Hester said his cousin wasn’t a part of any gangs and did not possess firearms but was leaving school when an altercation occurred. “It’s something that I’ve been thinking about and working through, and it just never really makes sense to me to be angry at some 20-year-old running around trying to play gangster because he didn’t feel like there was anything else or that there was another life that he would have wanted to live,” Hester said.

Michael Heinrich was left paralyzed and accuses school of negligence JENNA SITEMAN Daily Staff Reporter

In April 2017, thenEngineering senior Michael Heinrich was just shy of graduating when a rotted tree fell on him while riding his motorcycle to class. The accident left Heinrich quadriplegic after he was paralyzed at his C-6 vertebrae in the neck region of the spine. Heinrich, who was studying to be a geotechnical engineer, said he was riding his motorcycle on a pathway below Northwood housing on North Campus when he heard a loud crack behind him. By the time he realized what was happening, he said he was pinned to the ground, paralyzed. From the moment he hit the ground, he said he knew he was going to be paralyzed for the rest of his life. “After my accident, I was conscious,” Heinrich said. “I might have blacked out for 10 seconds or so, but I knew what was going on, and I was laying there. I was like, ‘I need to get up.’ And I realized I couldn’t get up. At that moment, I knew I was paralyzed.” After spending the summer in intensive care and then rehab at Michigan Medicine in 2017 — accumulating more than $2 million in medical bills — he and his family turned to the University to ask for help paying the bills. Heinrich’s family then pursued legal action, seeking some compensation for the care that Heinrich received

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and would need in the future. The lawsuit — a copy of which was obtained by The Daily — was filed in October 2018 under claims of gross negligence. The Daily also obtained the transcript of a hearing on June 26, 2019 at the Washtenaw County Circuit Court. Currently, lawyer Dean Googasian of The Googasian Firm, PC, a firm handling catastrophic injury cases, is representing Heinrich. His case is still in litigation. University spokeswoman Kim Broekhuizen said in an email to The Daily that the University regrets the incident but cannot comment on ongoing litigation. “The University is sorry this accident occurred,” Broekhuizen wrote. “However, the tree had been appropriately inspected prior to the accident and appeared to be healthy. As a result, the circuit court dismissed the case and the plaintiff has appealed.” Heinrich said the case was filed under claims of gross negligence and alleges the University knew the tree was rotted and yet did not follow proper procedure to ensure the safety of those passing by the tree. According to the transcript The Daily obtained, University lawyer Keefe Brooks said gross negligence is “conduct that essentially exhibits an I-don’tcare-type attitude.” In this case, the University arborist, Marvin Pettway, had inspected the tree for rotting and had allegedly noticed the fungus

but determined it was not convincing of full-rot. According to Googasian, Pettway said during his deposition, that if it fell, it could “crack the concrete built for trucks to drive on.” But Brooks said that Pettway didn’t determine it a risk with the information he collected. Under this provision, the University asserted they do not owe Heinrich compensation. Heinrich pointed to an aspect of the lawsuit that mentions patches of fungi that were apparent on the base of the tree, showing it was rotting. “The reason why there was even a possible case is that at the time, we looked from the Google Street maps view and you could see fungus at the base of the tree,” Heinrich said. As time passed, Heinrich said he and his family felt the University became increasingly callous about the situation. While he was in the intensive care unit only a few days after the accident, Heinrich was intubated and had a tracheotomy to help him breathe. His neck was snapped and his spine was broken, along with many other bones. While in this state, he said a University liaison from the Engineering department visited him in the hospital demanding graded assignments for a course for which he served as an assistant instructor. Heinrich said he was in disbelief he was being asked this in the hospital. “The liaison was obviously fully aware of my situation,” Heinrich said. “She was like, ‘We need these papers that

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INDEX

he graded.’ And here I am in the hospital trying to explain where these papers are and I was like, ‘What? You need these papers, and yet I’m literally here possibly dying.’ The University didn’t care if I was alive. They didn’t care about anything.” Heinrich also said he was extremely upset when this liaison told him, during this exchange, that the University didn’t have the funds to help mitigate any costs for him. “I might have broken my neck, I might have snapped everything in my body, and if there were five stages of grief for your body, I was essentially grieving,” Heinrich said. “I was going out of those pretty quickly and still, I wasn’t broken until the University told me, ‘We’re not going to help you out.’” Heinrich also described his struggle with everyday care. Before the accident, he said his parents lived in Ludington, Mich., but they have since moved to Ann Arbor to care for him full-time. Heinrich said care is a large financial burden, and he is now receiving federal food stamps. He also said he receives coverage through Medicaid and Medicare and uses disability rights and social security to pay for health care. He said he now requires special medical appliances to urinate, which would cost $36,000 per year without his insurance. Heinrich said he has been forced to pay this because

moving to renewables

Previous Bill Clinton EPA official examines various clean energy transition, alternatives LAURA MILLAR For The Daily

Dr. Karl Hausker, the Senior Fellow of the World Resources Institute’s Energy and Climate Program, delivered a lecture to around 60 students and Ann Arbor residents at the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy early Friday afternoon. In his lecture, Hausker examined how humans can and will solve the climate crisis through the use of renewables, nuclear plants and carbon capture. He also discussed the role of states, cities and companies in the clean energy transition. In addition to his role at the WRI, Hausker previously served President Bill Clinton as deputy assistant administrator for Policy, Planning and Evaluation with the Environmental Protection Agency as well as the chief economist for the U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources. During the lecture, Hausker discussed getting to net-zero by producing enough renewable energy to meet annual energy use requirements in buildings and cities throughout the nation.

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NEWS.........................2A Vol. CXXIX, No. 76 OPINION.....................4A ©2020 The Michigan Daily CROSSWORD. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6A

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