TheTuftsDaily3-4-15

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THE TUFTS DAILY

TUFTSDAILY.COM

Wednesday, march 4, 2015

VOLUME LXVIV, NUMBER 29

Where You Read It First Est. 1980

Local residents learn urban farming by Sophie Lehrenbaum Assistant News Editor

The 2015 class of the City of Somerville-sponsored Urban Agriculture Ambassador Program (UAAP) will admit 20 new participants this March, Program Coordinator Kim Schmidt said. According to Schmidt, UAAP makes up a segment of the Mayor’s Urban Agriculture Initiative, which focuses primarily on imparting residents with the basic skills central to growing food in urban areas. Green City Growers, a Somerville-based business, shares its expertise with the 20 people who are admitted into the UAAP through a four-week-long series of all-day classes held on Saturdays. In return, urban agriculture ambassadors are expected to invest 30 volunteer hours back into the community by donating their services to local nonprofit organizations and programs related to urban agriculture. Training is intended to begin during the last week of April and carry through the first three weeks of May. “This is its third year in existence … and it is mostly about educating residents about how to safely grow their own food in an urban environment,” Schmidt said. “Somerville was the first city in New England with an urban [agriculture] ordinance … so this all sort of works together with supporting the city. The city is paying for this program.” Schmidt explained that some of the issues discussed by Green City Growers during instructional periods include overcoming gardening hurdles inherent to city-spaces, such as limited space and light, as well as highlighting and addressing concerns that are associated with urban farms, such a lead content in soil. “[Our goals include] keeping residents healthy [and] educating them about food sources,” Schmidt said. “Last year, [ambassadors] worked at different mobile farmers markets, getting fresh local produce to local residents. [ Within the city services, this is] a lot of overlapping and working together.” UAAP goes along with the Mayor’s Urban Agriculture Initiative, which aims to act as an impetus for the wider implementation of local agriculture in order to ultimately promote a healthier community. According to first-year student Kinsey Drake, who is the secretary of the on-

campus organization Balance Your Life, there is potential for collaboration between UAAP and Balance Your Life. Balance Your Life aims to “improve nutrition, increase physical activity, and improve overall wellbeing of Tufts undergrads,” according to its website. “I could see members individually becoming ambassadors based on the common interests of the club,” Drake said. “It could be a great way to connect our goal to promote a healthy lifestyle with the origins of our food … In the summer and fall months, I could definitely see the club volunteering to work on a weekend or for a similar event.” Shape Up Somerville, another of the city’s programs and a predecessor to UAAP, stems from the similar goal to promote a healthier community in which differences in socioeconomic background do not translate into disparities in the attainability of balanced lifestyles. According to Shape Up Somer ville Coordinator Erica Satin-Hernandez, the program came to fruition 15 years ago through funding from Tufts University. She explained that while the scope of the program was initially narrowly focused on childhood obesity prevention in local students in the first through third grades, the lens of the organization broadened with time, as did its aspirations for the greater community. “A lot of the focus was individualized … but this was different,” Satin-Hernandez said. “This was the first study at the time that showed how community-based environmental changes can have a huge impact on obesity rates. Now our scope has broadened a great deal, and we’re looking at the social determinants of health as well as … physical activity, nutrition and things that take place outside of the doctor’s office.” The city is trying to better understand and manage the roles that social factors such as poverty and racism play in health-related issues, SatinHernandez explained. Their mission, she explained, is put into action through three primary programs that have been instituted for longer periods of time, as well as smaller programs that occur on a year-toyear basis. Through ‘Systems Change’ programs under Shape Up Somerville, the city works to engage individuals from all corners of the community see FARMING, page 2

Nicholas Pfosi / The Tufts Daily

Facilities workers clear snow from various campus locations.

Snow cleanup, icicle removal continues across campus by Isha Fahad

Contributing Writer

Successive bouts of snowfall in the wake of Winter Storm Juno, which hit New England at the end of January, have left large deposits of snow on rooftops across campus, causing an increased risk of leaking and damage to facilities. Director of Facilities Operations David Nelson explained that the periodic melting and refreezing of snow on rooftops drives water back under shingles. This water then finds its way under built-up

roofing and into the building. “As much as we try to eliminate roof leaks, there are times when, due to the melting and re-freezing of the snow, ice dams can form,” Nelson told the Daily in an email. Tufts Facilities Services Department is trying its best to counter problems pertaining to roof leakage or damage, according to Senior Director of Facilities Steve Nasson. For example, due to the accumulation of snow and ice on its roof, Tisch Library has experienced some leaking around its skylights, accord-

ing to Director of Tisch Library Laura Wood. “We are reporting issues to university operations for their assistance and repair,” Wood said in an email. “Pragmatically we are attempting to catch any active dripping with containers. This is quite an extraordinary winter.” The safety of the students, faculty and staff is the number one priority when dealing with storms and their aftermath, Nasson noted. “We were very lucky, if you see SNOW, page 2

Somerville passes ordinance, mandates list of off-campus students by Kathleen Schmidt News Editor

The Board of Aldermen of the City of Somerville recently voted unanimously to pass the Ordinance Regulating University Accountability. The ordinance requires Tufts to supply Somerville with a list of addresses of students living off campus each semester, as well as the number of students at each address and the graduating year of each student. The ordinance will go into effect on Sept. 1, according to Alderman at Large Mary Jo

Inside this issue

Rossetti. Names will not be included on the list. This ordinance was passed to enforce a previously existing zoning ordinance, which states that no more than four unrelated adults may share an apartment, according to Rossetti. The new ordinance came about after Boston passed a similar ordinance regarding university accountability in ensuring the safety of students living within city limits, Rossetti said. “Residents in mostly the West Somerville area through-

out the years have had some disturbances that really irritated them, worrying first and foremost about the health and safety of the students, knowing that some landlords were [renting] apartments to students beyond what our city’s ordinance stated,” she said. Tufts Community Union ( TCU) President Robert Joseph said that while the Board claims this ordinance is geared toward student safety, the ordinance could lead to student evictions. see HOUSING, page 2

Today’s sections

Spoken Word Alliance at Tufts is sending a team to a spoken word competition later this month.

THEESatisfaction combine witty rap lyrics with atmospheric melodies on “EarthEE.”

see FEATURES, page 3

see ARTS, page 5

News 1 Features 3 Arts & Living 5 Editorial | Letters 8

Op-Ed 9 Comics 10 Sports Back


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