February 22, 2021

Page 1

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2021

ADMINSTRATION

CARES funds round two: preparing for distribution

MNDAILY.COM

POLICY

U students acclimate to Biden’s immigration policies

The U must begin distributing CARES funds to students by the middle of April. By Abbey Machtig amachtig@mndaily.com Working toward a mid-April deadline, the University of Minnesota is in the process of ironing out details around the distribution of the second wave of CARES funds. The Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act, the national relief package first passed at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and renewed in December 2020, designates an additional $21.2 billion for higher education relief. Of that amount, the University has received approximately $40 million, around $12.8 million of which must be distributed directly to students. The U.S. Department of Education has reported that with the second wave of CARES funds, there will be fewer restrictions on how the funds can be used, which may make relief funds more accessible to students. As a result, students should expect a different process for applying for and receiving CARES funds, University officials said. At this time, the federal guidance has not clarified whether undocumented students will be eligible for funds. The University must begin distributing funds in mid-April, though aid can continue to be pushed out through January 2022. A new distribution process The first rounds of CARES funds were distributed to students last spring using a survey process. Eligible students had to submit their general financial aid information and provide an explanation of how they would use the funds. This process required a considerable amount of documentation on the University’s part and was “overly complicated,” said Bob McMaster, vice provost and dean of undergraduate education. For this round of distribution, the University will split the available funds into three categories to be allocated to students. The specific criteria and details for these categories are still being developed, McMaster said. The first category will distribute a set amount of funds to Pell grants, which are intended for low income students. Another category will provide aid to students who have had their ability to complete or progress toward completing their degree impacted by the panSee ADMINISTRATION Page 2

Left, Antony Maikuri, a Ph. D. student in the College of Education and Human Development pursuing Evaluation Studies, poses for a portrait in the St. Paul Student Center on Thursday, Feb. 18. Center, Viola Winter, a Ph. D, student at the University of Minnesota studying Kinesiology, poses for a portrait in Northop Plaza. Right, Hemant Persaud poses for a portrait in downtown Minneapolis. Persaud is a first year Ph. D. student studying Strategic Marketing at the University of Minnesota. (Audrey Rauth / Minnesota Daily)

Students impacted by Trump’s antiimmigration agenda expressed hope and skepticism about Biden’s policies. By Samantha Woodward swoodward@mndaily.com

When Antony Maikuri arrived to study in the United States during the Barack Obama administration, he said it felt like home. Maikuri said Obama’s relationship with Kenya, Maikuri’s home country, helped build a culture of welcomeness and openness. After Donald Trump’s election in 2016, that all changed, he said. “[Trump’s attitudes toward people of color] felt like a direct attack to Africans,” Maikuri said. “It really created that fear and mistrust, like, ‘Wow, why do you want to go there?’” As President Joe Biden steps through his first 100 days in office,

international programs at the University, said some international students did not want to study in the U.S. because of negative attitudes toward them and Trump’s stricter immigration policies. “It looks like the welcome mat has been pulled up,” McQuaid said. German international Ph.D. student Viola Winter said the student visa process was nervewracking enough, and under Trump, maintaining legal immigrant status became that much more difficult. See POLICY Page 2

METRO

City Council considers cap on rent increases Many students renting in the University area are cost burdened. By Lydia Morrell lmorrell@mndaily.com Minneapolis City Council members and community leaders are looking to advance a rent stabilization proposal that would cap the annual rent increase so landlords cannot dramatically increase costs. Council members have not determined the percentage increase limit, but the typical amount for other cities with the ordinance ranges from 3% to 10%. The proposal could end up on the ballot this November. The ordinance will go through a public hearing around the end of the month, and the University’s

Center for Urban and Regional Affairs (CURA) will present research on rent stabilization ordinances in other cities to help inform council members. Minnesota has a law that states cities require voter approval to enforce rent control. So, officials are looking to pass the ordinance either through a charter amendment or a city council process that is then voted on by the public, said Ward 2 City Council member Cam Gordon, who is leading the proposal. More than half of all renters in University-area neighborhoods are considered “cost-burdened,” according to 2015-2019 data from Minnesota Compass. A cost-burdened household pays more than a third of their income toward rent and may have difficulty affording necessities like food or medical care. Ryan Allen, director of the Ur-

FOOD INSECURITY

ban and Regional Planning program at the University’s Humphrey School of Public Affairs, said he has seen rents in large metropolitan areas increasing much more quickly than household incomes in recent decades. He said that rent stabilization could be a tool to help bridge this gap. “The research on the effects of rent stabilization or rent control policies indicates very, very clearly that for housing units that are affected by the stabilization. … the rents go up at a slower rate than they ordinarily would have,” Allen said. In some cities with rent control ordinances, Allen said newly constructed residences are exempt from this rule so developers are not discouraged from building. For renters, this ordinance is an See METRO Page 2

Students are signing up for food benefits in high numbers.

Podcast carries stories of incarcerated Japanese Americans in World War II A Ph.D. candidate and her brother created the oral history project. By Nathanael Ashton-Piper and Katelyn Vue npiper@mndaily.com, kvue@mndaily.com

Health Promotion Specialist Rebecca Leighton poses for a portrait in front of the Nutritious U food pantry bags in Coffman Memorial Union on Wednesday, Feb. 17. Leighton leads the campus-wide strategic SNAP outreach project. (Shanon Doyle / Minnesota Daily) students enrolled in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), a government assistance initiative once called “food stamps.” In December, student SNAP requirements changed, allowing more students to join the program. With the new qualifications, a student needs to qualify for work-

Uncommon Apartments in Dinkytown on Thursday, Feb.18. Minneapolis City Council members are considering a cap on dramatic rent increases. (Jasmine Webber / Minnesota Daily)

PODCAST

Student surge in SNAP eligibility

By Emalyn Muzzy emuzzy@mndaily.com Every Sunday, Edward Cruz II, a fourth-year environmental science policy and management student at the University of Minnesota, hops into the back seat of his roommate’s yellow Nissan Juke and heads to the Roseville Walmart. Once there, they start in the produce section, weaving through aisles as they make their way toward the back of the store. In his weekly haul, Cruz said he always has green onions, vegetarian fake meat and tortillas. Once finished, the group walks to the front of the store to pay, and Cruz swipes his EBT, electronic benefits transfer, card at the register. Cruz is one of many college

some in the University of Minnesota community are hopeful that he will reform Trump’s immigration policies. ‘The welcome mat has been pulled up’: High pressure and confusion under Trump Maikuri, a third-year Ph.D. student in the College of Education and Human Development, said he is hopeful for the Biden administration’s immigration plans. He said he thinks it will approach international students with humanity rather than like someone “who doesn’t care who is being affected [by their actions].” Meredith McQuaid, dean of

study or have a $0 estimated parent contribution on their FAFSA and make under $1,755 a month if they are a single person. “As of right now, it’s just a temporary exemption until 30 days after the emergency order, the pandemic end or until the person’s recertificaSee FOOD INSECURITY Page 2

When Hana Maruyama was in high school, her mother encouraged her to do school projects surrounding the family’s history. Now as a University of Minnesota Ph.D. candidate, Maruyama and her brother, Noah Maruyama, are collecting and preserving the stories of Japanese Americans forcibly incarcerated during World War II. The podcast “Campu” spotlights objects such as rocks, fences, food and paper — objects commonly found in jails and prisons — to add intimate details of life inside the concentration camps. The name refers to the term “campu no kuse,”

which describes the custom of “incarcerees” collecting objects in the camps. “Campu” incorporates firsthand oral histories from the camps with the help of Densho, a Seattle-based nonprofit that aims to preserve and share the history of the incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II. “So many have reached out to say, ‘This [podcast] was incredibly healing for me, and it felt like it was my family history, even if you weren’t actually talking to my family members,’” Hana said. “I think that feedback has been just incredible and exactly what we set out to do in the very beginning.” Since its launch in September, the Los Angeles Review of Books podcast review channel named “Campu” a top-five podcast to listen to in January, and the New York Times listed it as a top-eight new podcast. See PODCAST Page 2 Volume 121 Issue 9


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