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CATALYST
BRIEFS THXGIVING pg.
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November 28, 2018 VOLUME XXXVII ISSUE XI
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OPINION pg.
New College of Florida's student-run newspaper
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Reduced class size leaves students forced to choose between graduation food or PCP BY ALEXANDRA CONTE The annual end-of-year graduation PCP may be cancelled due to a reduction in funding and a $2,000 increase to the commencement ceremony food budget. The New College Student Alliance (NCSA) budget has taken a hit due to the decrease in enrollment this year. The NCSA budget is funded by student fees and is responsible for helping to fund organizations, clubs, graduation and Palm Court Parties (PCP). With this year’s budget restraints, the NCSA cannot afford to fund both the annual commencement PCP and the food that accompanies the graduation ceremony. The administration has offered to
pay $7,500 towards the graduation food. In return for covering most of the food fees, the administration wants the NCSA to forgo PCP and use the funds set aside—$3,500—to pay for the rest of the graduation buffet. This year’s buffet was budgeted at $9,000, a $2,000 increase from last year. “The food has been catered by Metz (NCF’s food service provider) for the last two years and has actually been budgeted as being $7,000 in the past,” NCSA Vice President of Relations and Financial Affairs (VPRFA) Eva Ernst said in an email interview. “I look forward to understanding the reasoning behind upping this by $2,000. As far as I understand, it is usually standard buffet food, small sandwiches, appetizers, etc.” Ernst’s position requires her to work with the NCSA co-presidents and Dawn Shongood, student government business manager/coordinator, to create the NCSA budget for the year. Ernst plans to meet with President Donal O’Shea to determine why the administration is
Photo courtesy of New College of Florida
The 2018 commencement ceremony.
willing to pay $7,500 for graduation food but will not cover the remaining $3,500 balance for PCP. She has already discussed the issue with the Vice President for Finance and Administration John Martin. Martin explained to Ernst that
the $7,500 the administration offered is comprised of profits made from campus vending machines and the rent the Sar-
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Nutrient separating baffle box aims to reduce trash and pollution in Sarasota Bay
BY KATRINA CARLIN
https://doc-0k-18-docs. googleusercontent.com/ docs/securesc/s7jurnmk912se8sp3mgg3hd8llrh0uos/obdpo7fpcdn719co01n4qb7
With red tide in the air all summer, people have had the health of Sarasota Bay on their minds more than usual. Red tide, also known as Karenia brevis, is a naturally-occuring algae. However, water pollution can contribute to the presence of these algae blooms. In the city of Sarasota, all of the storm drainage leads to the bay. According to Bill Nichols, an engineer with the city of Sarasota and the project manager on a new initiative to reduce pollution from storm drainage, “326 acres of discharge” flow out into the 10th street boat basin. Sarasota County received a grant from Southwest Florida Water Management District, a Florida state regional agency, half of which was matched by the City of Sarasota, to install a nutrient separating baffle box that cleans silt and unwanted debris from the storm drainage before it reaches the bay. The baffle box has a series of compartments, skimmers and other mechanical parts designed
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Photo courtesy of Bill Nichols
All kinds of things end up in Sarasota’s storm drainage system.
to divert the trash to the bottom of the box and allow the clean water to flow through. The baffle box design prevents resuspension of the particles and ensures that future rainfall does not wash out the collected debris. The box needs to be cleaned out every three months; it was cleaned out
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for the first time at the end of October. When it was cleaned, the city pulled out tires, tree limbs and miscellaneous trash. The box does more than just separate out major debris. It also has built-in systems designed to reduce the amount of pollutants in the drainage. The baffle box separates trash via a few different pro-
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cesses: skimmers for floating pollutants, sedimentation for those that can sink and a trademarked mixture of “biosorption media” for absorbing hydrocarbons. City engineers believe the baffle box will reduce the amount of trash flowing into the bay. The city first realized it was necessary when they dredged the 10th street boat basin, where much of the storm drainage leads. “We took 20,000 tons out of the boat basin,” Nichols said. “Most of it is from discharge from the stormwater drainage. When we were dredging, we took seven or eight rubber tires out and I thought, ‘Why?’ Nichols assumed people were throwing tires into the bay. He realized he was wrong after completing the baffle box project. “When we cleaned out the baffle box and drainage system leading to it, we took out several tires,” Nichols said.
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