March 14, 2019

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NEW ‘NIGHT MAYOR’ COULD SPARK NIGHTLIFE PAGE 2 THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019

LATE WEEK

THE POSITION WOULD MAKE MPLS NIGHTLIFE SAFER

MNDAILY.COM

STATE GOVT.

STUDENT HEALTH

Sides clash over tuitionfreezing bill

An invisible fight

Students with eating disorders lack campus resources

Fewer than 20 percent of college students who have been diagnosed with eating If the state bill is adopted, it disorders reported receiving treatment. could have a negative impact BY AUDREY KENNEDY on UMN’s budget, officials say. akennedy@mndaily.com BY ISABELLA MURRAY imurray@mndaily.com

In a tearful testimony in front of lawmakers last week, Minnesota State Community and Technical College-Moorhead student Matt Benjamin described his struggle to stay in school while supporting his family. Benjamin’s testimony was in support of a bill that would freeze tuition at the University of Minnesota and freeze or reduce tuition at the Minnesota State system. The legislation would significantly impact Benjamin, along with an increasing number of working students who face rising tuition costs. “I’ve become fluent in the art of juggling the bills to stretch every dollar to its fullest potential,” Benjamin said. “Unfortunately, the better future I’m looking forward to is overshadowed by the mountain of student loans waiting to be repaid just a few short months after graduation.” The bill fostered heated discussion between Senate higher education committee members about college affordability and the “unsustainable” rising costs for students across the state. Lawmakers then tabled the legislation until Tuesday, when it was laid over for possible inclusion in the higher education omnibus bill. “What I’m trying to do with this bill is ... create the conversation that we’re having, and push our institutions to be better,” chief bill author and Senate higher education committee chair Sen. Paul Anderson, RPlymouth, said Tuesday. Sen. Jason Isaacson, DFL-Shoreview, was the bill’s biggest opponent. A decline in the state’s investment in the University and Minnesota State colleges in recent years won’t allow for the tuition freeze or decrease at the schools, he said. “The reality is, the reason tuition is going up is because we’re not investing. Not because the schools are somewhat at fault or nefarious in any way,” Isaacson said. “They have taken serious cuts because of that.” Isaacson said the Legislature needs to find better ways of supporting higher u See FREEZE Page 3

CAMPUS

UMPD partners with nonprofit to address campus homelessness St. Stephen’s Human Services’ joint effort with UMN police will help homeless individuals. BY MOHAMED IBRAHIM mibrahim@mndaily.com

With a rise in homelessness on and around campus, the University of Minnesota Police Department will formally partner with a nonprofit this month to address the issue. UMPD will work with Minneapolis nonprofit St. Stephen’s Human Services’s Outreach program to find long-term placement for homeless individuals. The two organizations will formalize their agreement in the next two weeks, officials said. “We thought it would be good to be proactive about how we handle our homeless population and our encounters, and try to seek long-term solutions for placement and services,” said UMPD Chief Matt Clark. St. Stephen’s provides short-term shelter and permanent housing for homeless individuals. Last year, the Outreach program helped St. Stephen’s find housing for more than 400 individuals and provide shelter to more than 1,300 people who would have otherwise slept outside. The Outreach program’s six members provide other services, like handing out water during the summer or providing harm reduction supplies to intravenous drug users. “We’re just sort of a place that people can come and, you know, not feel judged,” said St. Stephen’s Outreach team lead Chris Knutson. “When we talk to people on the streets, we’re coming to them where they’re at [and] we’re not trying to push anything on people.” The yearlong contract will require the Outreach team to work with UMPD on and around campus a minimum of six times. The organization will train officers to use a humanitarian approach to homelessness, while UMPD will conduct ride-alongs with Outreach team members to provide them with information on the locations where displaced individuals tend to gather on campus. “Getting a heads up from them about where camps are popping up – that kind of thing is useful to us because it helps guide where we’re spending our time,” Knutson said. u See HOMELESSNESS Page 8

University of Minnesota student Abby has suffered from food and body image issues for as long as she can remember. But when it started to take over her life last year, she realized she needed to seek help for her eating disorder. “I originally didn’t think I was severe enough. … I still feel that way. With the diagnosis that I have, I feel like I’m not sick enough to be needing this,” Abby said, who asked to not use her last name because her parents aren’t aware of her diagnosis. In 2018, 4.5 percent of students on the Twin Cities campus self-reported that they had been diagnosed with anorexia and/or bulimia in their lifetime, up from 3.7 percent in 2015, according to a University survey. But the survey didn’t account for other types of eating disorders, like binge eating and other specified feeding and eating disorders. u See EATING DISORDER Page 3

ELLEN SCHMIDT, DAILY

Psychology and nutrition junior Taylor Peterson poses for a portrait on Tuesday, March 12 at University Commons apartments. Peterson went to The Emily Program to recover from her eating disorder in high school. Now, she is studying to become an eating disorder therapist at the same institution. Left, Peterson displays her journal, which she said helps her keep her thoughts positive.

STUDENT LIFE

New group to help those with traumatic childhoods H.O.P.E. aims to support students who went through traumatic childhood incidents. BY NORAH KLEVEN nkleven@mndaily.com

A new student group that started at the University of Minnesota last month hopes to provide support and teach coping mechanisms to students affected by traumatic events during childhood. H.O.P.E. is working to create a community for students with traumatic childhood experiences while raising awareness about the issue. The student organization was founded by research assistants of Canan Karatekin, an associate professor in the University’s College of Education and Human Development.

Research on adverse childhood experiences, or ACEs, only began in the 1970s. ACEs are experiences of “abuse, neglect, exposure to domestic violence and neighborhood violence, peer victimization, and parental mental illness,” according to Karatekin’s website. Many researchers define ACEs differently, but in many cases they are defined as moderately to severely stressful experiences that occur during childhood up to the age of 18, Karatekin said. “We saw a need for college students to have a supportive environment where we understand these experiences ... because it does affect their mental health well-being [and] their physical health well-being.” said Emame Thompson-Eja, a University secondyear psychology student and a research assistant in the Child Wellbeing Research Group, a project led by Karatekin. Thompson-Eja said meetings and events

sanctioned by H.O.P.E. — which stands for healing, overcoming, persisting and encouraging — will focus on teaching ways for its members to overcome adversity, build resilience and self-efficacy and offer social support for members struggling with ACEs. ACEs can be correlated with unemployment, underachievement, incarceration, substance abuse and can even be linked to physical ailments such as asthma and cardiovascular disease, Karatekin said. “[ACEs] affect the whole body as well as mental health,” she added. Morgan Bilz is a first-year University student who said the promise of leaving home to attend college was what pulled her through some of her most trying days. During her childhood, Bilz said she and her four siblings experienced divorce and u See H.O.P.E. Page 3

RELIGION

UMN community uneasy after church’s LGBTQ decision The United Methodist Church recently voted to bar LGBTQ clergy and same-sex marriages. BY DYLAN MIETTINEN dmiettinen@mndaily.com

The United Methodist Church General Conference decision to disallow LGBTQ individuals within the church last month has caused concern for many in the University of Minnesota’s Methodist community. Historically, LGBTQ clergy and marriages have not been allowed in the UMC. However, there are wide discrepancies in how to adhere to these rules around the world. The choice of ordination or marriages are often left up to churches individually or by region. United Methodist Churches around the University, including Centennial UMC in St. Anthony Park, have been rocked by the decision, leaving many parishioners questioning the fate of the UMC. Centennial is a reconciling ministry and queer-affirming church, meaning it supports the membership, ordination and marriages of those in the LGBTQ community. “We don’t know the way forward for our church, but maybe it’s time for a creative way forward. Maybe it’s time for something new,” said Centennial Pastor Whitney Sheridan. On Feb. 26, a special session of the UMC General Conference, which hosted more than 800 church delegates from around the world, was held in St. Louis, Missouri to address whether they would recognize same-sex marriages and/or ordain LGBTQ clergy. Representatives in the UMC voted in support of the Traditional Plan, which they say adheres to the scriptural belief of marriage

TONY SAUNDERS, DAILY

Rev. Lauren Rheingans, campus minister for the Wesley Foundation, receives communion during a weekly worship service in Coffman Union on Sunday, March 10.

and sexuality, disallowing LGBTQ clergy and same-sex marriages. No one is refused communion in the UMC, but there will now be harsher penalties for ordaining LGBTQ clergy, Sheridan said. If she were to officiate a same-sex marriage, she would lose pay for a year; if she officiated another same-sex marriage, she would be defrocked. University members of the Wesley Foundation, a religious student organization affiliated with Centennial UMC, voiced concerns about the General Conference’s decision. Fourth-year University student Lily Dunk

is co-president of the Wesley Foundation and identifies as lesbian. She said she was disappointed in the General Conference decision, but the decision was a long time coming. “The UMC has been talking about [LGBTQ rights] since the 1970s. We’ve tried to live together for 50 years, and it hasn’t been working,” Dunk said. However, Dunk said the UMC’s decision will not impact the Wesley Foundation’s inclusion. “Wesley will not stop being affirming. We will cease to exist before we deny queer u See CHURCH Page 8

VOLUME 119 ISSUE 46


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