First Copy free
Oct. 18, 2010
Volume 13, Issue 3
theAccent.org
Perry and White duke it out pg. 3 Community vs Austin community community|pg8 Campus for mascot reveal college news • education
news • education
Lead levels lead to RGC drinking fountains closing
SGA president Jorge Amador resigns office
Rio Grande Campus lead levels
Former SGA Vice President Sophia Downing assumes presidency, will nominate new vice president on Oct. 22
0.015
Highest level of a contaminant that is allowed in drinking water and is an enforceable standard according to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
<0.00600 <0.00500 <0.00400
Basement
<0.00300
First floor 0.00554
East Corridor north end
West Corridor south end (N)
West Corridor south end (S)
West Corridor south end (N)
Fountain locations
Second floor
0.00194
0.00609
East Corridor near Little Store
0.00248
0.00243
South end near Room * 0 mg/L is the EPA 001.0 goal for all lead levels
0.00486
0*
0.00513
<0.00100
0.00398
<0.00200 0.00559
August Lead levels mg/L
Odin Amador
Staff Writer
The former SGA Vice President, Sophia Downing, is now president, following former President Jorge Amador’s resignation from the office of SGA president. In accordance with SGA rules, Downing will nominate her pick for a new Vice President at the next SGA meeting, which will be at ACC’s Highland Business Center on Oct. 22. Her criteria for nomination will be to pick someone competent enough to perform the duties of SGA president. Downing will chose her nominee from the existing pool of SGA senators. At the Executive Council meeting on Tuesday, she encouraged communication and ideas concerning her upcoming nomination. Amador announced his resignation from the position of SGA President at an SGA meeting Friday, Oct. 8 at the Highland Business Center. Amador was elected in the spring semester of 2010. He was unopposed for the SGA position. His resignation was not publicized prior to the meeting and came as a surprise to many in attendance. “Don’t think that I’m quitting on you,” Amador told his colleagues in the SGA, “I’m not. I’m not quitting on the students -- never have.” His reasons for resigning were vague, and a prolonged discussion among SGA senators ensued. For over twenty minutes before the meeting was called to order. During the impromptu round table, Aaron Hinojosa, SGA Co-Advisor, went into specifics about the events that led to Amador’s resignation. “John [Jacobs] (also an SGA Co-Advisor) and I have been working with Jorge on issues,” Hinojosa told the group. “There are really important responsibilities he has as president, and he hasn’t really been fulfilling them. We’ve been trying to work with him for a few months now, and we didn’t see any progress.”
Action Level (AL) -
EPA Action Level
Third floor
West Corridor West Corridor West Corridor south end south end (S) north end
Information compiled from Baer Engineering and Environmental Consulting, Inc. report dated Sept. 16, 2010
SAFETY FIRST — Lead levels in the drinking water in the Rio Grande Campus main building reveal that levels are below the actionable level. Baer Engineering and Environmental Consulting, Inc. is currently conducting tests.
Photo courtesy of SGA.
NEW PRESIDENT —
Former SGA vice president Sophia Downing is now president due to the resignation of Jorge Amador.
He explained why the advisors and the Executive Council, which is the administrative body of SGA and is made up of the president, vice president, parliamentarian, secretary, treasurer, senate chair and director of communications, recommended to Amador that he resign. “We’re sure that the best thing for the group is this. The group has to move on. We have meetings to attend. Never have we ever cancelled a meeting with the president of the college, and we had to do it this semester ... there’s a learning process to any position. I guess, take this as a learning opportunity. There’s responsibilities, you have a certain role to play in the college and the organization, and if you’re not fulfilling them, then there may be a better option for you.” When the Executive Council reconvened for a special meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 12, at the Student Life offices in Rio Grande Campus, the dust appeared to have settled and SGA was back to business. “We have a pretty good team right now,” she told the group. “I want to move ahead with what we’ve been working on and keep the energy going.”
Lead levels not immediate danger to students, staff according to experts Natalee Blanchat
Staff Writer
The drinking water at Rio Grande Campus was tested once more for lead in early October and the results will be posted soon on the Austin Community College website according to ACC’s Public Information and College Marketing Department. “When the plumbing is redone, it will be replaced according to current building codes and this will eliminate the lead,” according to a statement released by ACC’s Public Information and College Marketing Department and Executive Director for Environmental Health, Safety and Insurance, Rebecca Cole. Currently there is no set date for when the plumbing will be replaced at the Rio Grande Campus. Concern over lead in the drinking water at the campus has caused the college to post signs advising students and faculty not to drink the water. All of the drinking fountains in the main building were shut off, and signs labeling the water non-potable went up on Sept. 29. Baer Engineering and Environmental Consulting Inc. collected water samples at Rio Grande in May of 2010. ACC’s Environmental Health and Safety Insurance Department posted a link to Lower Colorado River Authority (LCRA) lab results from the Baer Engineering and Environmental Consulting Inc. reports on ACC’s website. The link shows the results from tests conducted on all of the fountains at RGC campus on the dates of May 27,
See CAMPUS, pg. 4
Karissa Rodriguez • Photo/Web Editor
WATER SAFETY — Student Irving Nuñez fills a cup with water from
a water jug stand located on the first floor of the Rio Grande campus while on his way to class. ACC has advised people not to drink tap water in the main building at the campus.
news • education
Strike documentary opens Big Read John Walker Staff Writer
Film shows three-year strike by minorities
Sarah Vasquez • Life & Arts/Multimedia Editor
CATCHING UP — ACC History Professor Larry Willoughby talk with Buddy Ruiz and Andy Ramirez before the screening of “The Economy Furniture Strike” documentary produced by Paradigm Shift Multimedia and the ACC Center for Public Policy and Political Studies.
A screening of The Economy Furniture Strike, a documentary which captures the flash-point of Austin’s Hispanic political renaissance in 1968, kicked off Austin Community College’s partnership with the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), for 2010’s Big Read, which aims to promote the importance of literature in America.
In a capacity ceremony at the Emma S. Barrientos Mexican American Cultural Center (MACC), students and faculty joined community members and dignitaries in ushering in the initiative. The film, narrated by legendary journalist Dan Rather, was produced by ACC’s Center for Public Policy and Political Studies. It brings to light the little noted, but lastingly important walk-out and three year strike, which resulted in improved working conditions for minorities in Texas. The upheaval launched the careers of several of Austin’s first Hispanic political figures, including Texas political icon Gonzalo Barrientos, who introduced the film. In his invocation, he recalled the time
as “the whirlwind of a country in transformation.” The screening was followed by a panel discussion featuring former Austin Mayor Gus Garcia, the filmmakers, Paradigm Shift Multimedia, and one of the strike’s architects, Lencho Hernandez. For the next six weeks, the Arts and Humanities Division of ACC will sponsor events all over Austin. Upcoming events include “Honoring the Service” Veteran’s Day Reading at Riverside campus on Nov. 11, Ti-Jean and His Brothers, a drama production will be at the Rio Grande Campus Mainstage theatre Nov. 12-14 and 19-21. There will also be film screenings and dance performances, all geared toward their mission to arrest the
See Government, pg. 5