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Lecturers’ union extends contract with University
If LEO votes to strike, likely won’t be before Sept. 15 LILY GOODING & VANESSA KIEFER Daily News Editor & Daily Staff Reporter
FILE PHOTO/Daily Jordan Acker, U-M Board of Regents Chair, discussed the COVID-19 response with The Daily this past week. (Note: This photo was taken before the COVID-19 pandemic in 2018)
Regents Chair Jordan Acker talks U-M COVID-19 response
In interview with The Daily, Board official shares goals for the upcoming year JULIA FORREST Daily Staff Reporter
The Michigan Daily sat down with the Regent Jordan Acker (D), chair of the University of Michigan Board of Regents, to discuss the University’s plans for addressing COVID-19 concerns, the new Equity, Civil Rights and Title IX office, the expansion of the Go Blue Guarantee, climate change initiatives, Ron Weiser and more. This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity. The Daily cannot independently
verify Acker’s comments on documented cases of classroom transmission at the University of Michigan. The Michigan Daily: What is your response to the University of Michigan faculty signing petitions this week requesting stronger COVID-19 protections for the fall semester? How do you plan to address concerns surrounding COVID-19 guidelines? Jordan Acker: Well, I think that one of the things that we’ve done really well is keep everyone safe in the classroom, whether it’s
vaccine requirements, masking requirements. We still haven’t had a single documented case of classroom transmission. All the public health experts suggest that our current path forward is the right one to balance that in-person experience that we can only have in Michigan, with a mask in a classroom, with the safety of our staff, with the safety of our faculty, with the safety of our students. The best way to get there is to make sure that everyone is vaccinated. We’re getting there — the students are doing a great job, the faculty is getting there, the
staff is getting there. But we need to be there to make sure that we’re protecting everybody. TMD: How do you believe the creation of the Equity, Civil Rights and Title IX office to replace the Office of Institutional Equity will place a greater emphasis on supporting prevention and reporting efforts? And are there any other initiatives or policies you support that you’d like to see implemented this year addressing prevention and reporting efforts? See ACKER, Page 3
The lecturers’ union, if they vote to strike, likely will not do so until next week. The University of Michigan Lecturers’ Employee Organization, the union representing non-tenure track faculty, has reached an agreement with the University’s administration Tuesday to extend their current contract to Sept. 15. “Given LEO’s commitment to secure a contract and our hope that the mediation and bargaining this week will be fruitful, the Union has proposed a contract extension until September 15th,” LEO President Kirsten Herold said in a statement to The Michigan Daily. “The Employer has agreed and we will continue to engage in the bargaining process.” The extension will allow negotiations between the University’s and LEO’s lawyers over contract terms to resume through Sept. 15. It follows weeks of negotiations after the organization gave the University an ultimatum to negotiate a new contract by Sept. 8. University spokesperson Rick Fitzgerald confirmed LEO reached out to extend their contract and the University agreed. According to Fitzgerald, LEO and the University met with the state mediator Tuesday and have another session scheduled for
Thursday. LEO and the University also scheduled a bargaining session for this upcoming Friday. “From the University’s perspective we’re prepared to continue bargaining as often as needed to get a settlement,” Fitzgerald said. “We would take this indication from LEO of extending the contract another week as a positive sign in the negotiation process.” When the lecturers’ contract ends on Sept. 15, the LEO members will no longer have to abide by the collective bargaining agreement and can vote to strike. If LEO does choose to go on strike following the Sept. 15 deadline, it will still violate rules from the state of Michigan prohibiting public employees from going on strike. Last fall, the Graduate Employees’ Organization’s members elected to strike after their contract negotiations with the University failed. This resulted in a procession of protests and rallies across campus as well as cancellation of many Graduate Student Instructortaught classes throughout the strike’s progression. The University sued GEO in response, on the grounds that both the Public Employment Relations Act and GEO’s collective bargaining agreement prohibited the strike.
Read more at MichiganDaily.com
ACADEMICS
CAMPUS LIFE
Many excited for more connection but nervous about delta variant
Over 800 organizations vied for attention amid COVID concerns
Students reflect on the first week of in-person classes EVAN DELORENZO Daily Staff Reporter
After two and a half semesters of virtual learning and social distancing, many students said they were excited to return to a semblance of normalcy yet still nervous about the delta variant as they headed back to the classroom this past week. With 91% of this semester’s classes now in person, many students told The Michigan Daily they were relieved to make the transition from Zoom calls to lecture halls. Between awkward breakout rooms and all-too-real Zoom fatigue, some students particularly felt the absence of one-on-one connections that once defined in-person instruction, LSA senior Alex Meyer said. “We were lacking face-to-face contact (during virtual learning),” Meyer said. “It’s harder to build relationships with classmates and professors over Zoom.” Looking back on the past year and a half, LSA junior Regan Monnett found that the challenges of virtual learning made this week’s return to the classroom all the more memorable. “The past year makes me appreciate the classroom in person much more,” Monnett said. “It also helps me remember to be patient with everyone because everyone’s adapting as everything goes along.” As eager as students are to be back in the classroom, concerns over the looming threat of the delta variant still linger among both the student body and faculty. COVID19 cases have risen in Michigan to nearly double their September 2020 numbers. “I’m definitely nervous about how
things are and have been in terms of COVID,” Monnett said. “Some of the buildings have been very busy so far, which is nerve-wracking.” Just as flexibility and resilience were key to navigating the last three semesters, the past week has already tested students’ ability to adjust in a period of unfamiliarity, Meyer said. “Even just my habits of taking notes, it’s harder to get back into it now as opposed to before. It’s a lot harder to pay attention,” Meyer said. Many students said they felt nervous in anticipation of this week’s in-person classes. This was especially true for LSA junior Brianna Evans, who transferred to the University this past year. “I was really nervous because I hadn’t learned in person in a while and because I’ve never been here before,” Evans said. “I was anxious about finding classes, but so far, it’s been okay.” Now that Kinesiology junior Peter Grobel — who transferred to the University his sophomore year — is able to experience in-person classes for the first time, he said he is excited to finally learn what it means to be a Wolverine. “I hope to get the full Michigan experience, having all clubs and all classes in person,” Grobel said. “It’s just nice to have everything up to full speed, albeit (with) masks and some restrictions.” Students fill every classroom, residence hall and library, reviving the once-desolate campus he experienced during his first year at the University, Grobel said. “Campus is definitely much more lively compared to last year when it was completely empty,” Grobel said. “There would be two people at the bus stop, and now you see lines of freshmen going and going. Campus
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is alive again.” This spirited atmosphere has welcomed many new faces to campus. Countless times over the past week, Art & Design freshman Mari Kamidoi said they witnessed campus-wide kindness firsthand. “My first impression of Michigan was that everyone’s really friendly,” Kamidoi said. “I haven’t met a single unfriendly person.” Uncertainty remains a defining theme of the 2021 school year, with many students unsure of what the fall semester will ultimately look like. While grateful for in-person instruction, Meyer anticipates a return to online learning in the coming months. “Most of my labs are using a mixed format now with a whole section built around virtual learning,” Meyer said. “I’m sort of expecting that we can see a return to virtual classroom classes come mid-semester, so I’m keeping my expectations low.” Hundreds of University faculty and Graduate Student Instructors have signed a petition calling for greater COVID-19 planning and safety precautions, citing the rising threat of the delta variant and its potential to infect vaccinated people. In an email to faculty Sept. 2 — which some faculty said they found insufficient — University President Mark Schlissel and Provost Susan Collins said classrooms are the “safest place” to be this semester in response to the faculty and GSI’s demands for more detailed COVID19 guidelines. For the time being, however, students are making the most of in-person instruction as they continue to tackle school in the age of COVID-19.
Read more at MichiganDaily.com
Club fair Festifall returns in-person bigger than ever RONI KANE & KAITLYN LUCKOFF Daily Staff Reporters
The brass Block ‘M’ in the center of the Diag is usually clear of footprints, with students sharply changing their trajectory to safely avoid trodding upon it and tempting academic fate. However, during Festifall on Sept. 1 and 2, the sidewalks throughout the Diag and Ingalls Mall were so packed with U-M community members that numerous individuals walked over the infamous ‘M’ to navigate the large crowd. After operating as a completely virtual experience last September, Festifall — an annual campus involvement fair showcasing over 800 U-M programs and organizations — returned in-person over a three-day period for the fall 2021 semester. At the outdoor event, U-M students perused many of the clubs, honors societies, academic certification programs, project teams and social and professional organizations available at the University of Michigan. Heather Guenther, communications director for the U-M Division of Student Life, wrote in an email to The Michigan Daily that the number of students involved in student organizations significantly decreased over the 2020-2021 academic year. As a result, this year’s Festifall was the biggest yet, with a recordbreaking number of organizations attempting to recruit new members and rebuild after a year of mostly virtual activities. “More student organizations applied at the last minute compared to previous years,” Guenther wrote. “Given the notable transition
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for many organizations, 812 organizations participated this year, more than 200 more compared to previous in-person events.” The Daily spoke with several Festifall participants, a majority of whom agreed the in-person event made it easier to connect with different vendors than in a virtual setting. In particular, many said they were more likely to attend the event this year because they could simply follow the crowd from table to table and did not have to worry about “Zoom Anxiety” when speaking with an organization. Engineering sophomore Gordy Gwilt attended Festifall online last year and was representing the student organization he joined, Michigan Mock Trial, at their booth on the Diag on Sept. 1. Gwilt said navigating Festifall online last year was somewhat overwhelming since it was time-consuming to collect information about different organizations. “Last year with it being online, it was kind of hard to just walk around and see random clubs,” Gwilt said. “You kind of had to know what you wanted (to join) going in.” Some student organizations took advantage of the in-person format by putting on eye-catching demonstrations for the crowd. Notably, members of the cheer team donning bright yellow shirts spread out across the Diag on Sept. 1 and ran through a series of short routines for onlookers. Information senior Benjamin Millunchick, a member of the cheer team, spoke with interested students as they stopped to watch the performance. Having experienced Festifall previously in both in-person and online formats,
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Millunchick said the cheer team benefits from being able to perform for attendees and explain their competitive schedule. Millunchick said that after a year of socially distant coursework and extracurriculars, the size and energy of the crowd might inspire students to join new organizations and meet new friends. “I forgot how many people go to school here,” Millunchick said. Despite — and because of — the energy surrounding the event, not everyone felt comfortable with the size of the crowd. In an attempt to adapt Festifall to concerns surrounding COVID19, the University chose to spread the event out over three days, as opposed to one. Aug. 31’s activities were held in the Grove on North Campus in an attempt to de-densify the Central Campus events, and all organization tables were spaced 6-feet apart. Because the University does not require masks outdoors, the majority of attendees were unmasked. Even without a specific requirement, LSA sophomore Tara Yu elected to keep her mask on. Yu told The Daily being in close contact with so many unmasked people made her feel uncomfortable. Yu said she appreciated that the event was outdoors, but suggested it might be even safer if everyone was wearing masks. “I didn’t imagine that there would be so many people here (at Festifall),” Yu said. “Right now, with the delta variant going on, it might be better for everyone to wear a mask.”
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See FESTIFALL, Page 2
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