SENCHA TO CLOSE, OWNER TO REOPEN ELSEWHERE P2 MONDAY, MARCH 11, 2019
EARLY WEEK
SENCHA IN STADIUM VILLAGE IS SET TO CLOSE BY END OF MAY
MNDAILY.COM
CAMPUS
Snow place to go
RENAMING
U Regents critical of renaming Some regents say a recent renaming report lacked research, historical context. BY AUSTEN MACALUS amacalus@mndaily.com
Students Vinh Nguyen, Tam Nguyen and Long Nguyen throw snowballs on Saturday, March 9 on campus.
TONY SAUNDERS, DAILY
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The University is working to clear heavy snowfall and find storage for excess snow.
HOUSING
BY NATALIE RADEMACHER nrademacher@mndaily.com
After a night of heavy snowfall, Steven Blodgett goes out at 5 a.m. to plow snow around the University of Minnesota campus. On a snowy day, Blodgett said he can be out working until around 5 p.m. A gardener for University Landcare, Blodgett is among those who have been working overtime to clear snow from roads and sidewalks, keeping the University running throughout the winter. But Blodgett said he is getting tired as snow continues to fall into March after a record-breaking snowfall in February. Along with Blodgett, the University is struggling to keep up with the snow. University Landcare is having trouble keeping enough student workers this winter and is having to find alternative places to store the snow plowed on campus. On Sunday, Daniel Bereketab, a custodian at the University, was out shoveling snow on the steps of Pillsbury Hall. Custodians normally do not clear snow, but Bereketab said he was offered overtime pay to shovel following a heavy snowfall Saturday night.
City looks to bolster renter protections The proposed policy aims to change dynamics between City, landlords and renters. BY EMMA DILL edill@mndaily.com TONY SAUNDERS, DAILY
Kaler said. “I think it’s clear state support has been declining, but we haven’t done everything we can do to find alternative forms of revenue besides raising tuition, which I’m opposed to,” said Regent Michael Hsu in an interview. Regents also pointed out growing competition with the Minnesota State system, which received equal or less funding than the University system until 2015. To prevent resident tuition from rising too
A proposed Minneapolis City Council policy discussed last week aims to change future City guidelines to be more centered on students and other renters. The Renter-First Policy lays out a framework for future City policies that would strengthen disciplinary measures for negligent landlords and make property information easier to access for renters and landlords. Ward 3 City Council member Steve Fletcher drew upon his own experiences living in student housing at the University of Minnesota when examining the policy. Fletcher subleased at a Dinkytown property even though his leasing contract prohibited subleases. The lease violation prevented Fletcher from contacting City inspectors to force their landlord to make repairs. “We knew there were major dangerous fire violations happening in our house and we had to decide: Do we give up our cheap rent or fix this situation?” he said. Ward 2 City Council member Cam Gordon said the policy aims to change the culture of fear that often discourages interactions between tenants and the City. “We end up seeing [among] tenants and landlords … there’s a sort of a culture, a history of being afraid to enter into any kind of work with the City because there might
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u See RENTERS Page 2
University Landcare blows snow off the path in front of Coffman Union on Saturday, March 9.
Some places in the Twin Cities area received over six inches of snow Saturday evening, adding to the record-breaking 39 inches that accumulated in February. The University is having to find new places to store snow as the Minnesota State Fairgrounds, its typical storage site, is likely to hit capacity after the snowfall over the weekend.
Tom Ritzer, assistant director for University Landcare, said it is not easy finding storage locations near the University due to land around campus becoming more developed and getting more expensive to use. This is not the first year the University u See SNOW Page 3
ADMINISTRATION
Regents may reexamine reciprocity agreement to boost revenue The regents discussed tuition increases, alternative revenue and state funding at a retreat. BY MADELINE DENINGER mdeninger@mndaily.com
The University of Minnesota is running out of alternative revenue sources to avoid tuition increases, officials say. President Eric Kaler met with board members at a Board of Regents retreat Wednesday in Chaska to discuss decreasing
Just a week after University of Minnesota President Eric Kaler announced recommendations for renaming Coffman Union and three other buildings on campus, members of the Board of Regents heavily criticized the renaming process in what turned out to be a contentious meeting Friday. In the board’s first major public discussion on the renaming efforts, several regents found fault with the University’s process of reviewing administrators who upheld racist and anti-Semitic practices on campus. Some regents questioned the rigor and accuracy of a University task force charged with examining building names, while others raised concerns about judging historical figures based on contemporary standards. The board is expected to continue debate on renaming, with a vote expected later this spring. Regent Darrin Rosha was perhaps the most vocal critic, digging into the task
state support, alternative revenue sources and tuition, among other things. Board members said without adequate state funding, the University will need to consider “bold” solutions to prevent sharp resident tuition hikes, including examining the school’s current reciprocity agreements. State support as a percentage of the University’s budget has decreased over the past decades. DFL Gov. Tim Walz recently proposed the state fund $39.2 million of the school’s $87 million biennial budget ask. Under this proposal, resident undergraduate tuition could raise as much as 6 percent,
STUDENT LIFE
Proposed policy would prohibit pets on campus, regulate service animals Emotional-support animals would be limited to University housing if a new policy passes. BY JAKE STEINBERG jsteinberg@mndaily.com
Only designated animals would be allowed in University of Minnesota buildings and on grounds owned and controlled by the University, according to a proposed administrative policy. A work group led by University Services is drafting a policy that would prohibit most pets from University offices, labs and classrooms. Service animals for people with disabilities will still be permitted. But emotional-support animals, which typically aren’t trained to be in public, will be limited to University housing. “Our main goal is to provide guidance around the issue of pets ... so people know what is and isn’t acceptable,” said University Services Chief of Staff Paige Rohman. The policy recognizes a number of conditional exceptions, such as animals used
during instruction, animals on campus for medical treatment and animals recognized as official NCAA mascots or participating in patriotic ceremonies. Rohman said a dog could bark, lunge or excrete, as well as irritate people with allergies. When an adjunct brought their dog to campus, it licked a facilities maintenance worker. “For folks of the Muslim faith, the saliva of a dog is not clean, and that created a conflict because it was not a comfortable environment for our employee,” she said. High-profile instances of conflict between emotional-support animals and people — particularly on airplanes — inspired the University to explore creating the policy in December 2017. Since then, University Services has been working with the Disability Resource Center, Housing and Residential Life and other partners to define what animals are allowed on campus. Emotional-support animals are allowed in University housing under the Fair Housing Act pending approval from the DRC. u See PETS Page 2
JACK RODGERS, DAILY
Sophia DeGarmo plays with her dog, Riley, in her apartment on Friday, March 8. Riley is a registered emotional-support animal who helps DeGarmo manage her mental health.
VOLUME 119 ISSUE 45