Friday, September 5, 2003

Page 1

F R I D A Y SEPTEMBER 5, 2003

THE BROWN DAILY HERALD Volume CXXXVIII, No. 65

An independent newspaper serving the Brown community since 1891

www.browndailyherald.com

New shuttle, escort service debuts on the Brown campus BY CARLA BLUMENKRANZ

Tuesday marked the debut of SafeRIDE, a transportation system that combines and extends Brown and RISD shuttle services and employs professional drivers in place of students. Drivers from the outside vendor Road Island Red now circle three routes around the Brown campus. The first two, variations of the former shuttle route, run in opposite directions, while the third runs between two stops on Thayer Street and the Brown stadium for the duration of this academic year. All three shuttle routes will run from 7 p.m. to 3 a.m. in September, and from 5 p.m. to 3 a.m. October through May. The BrownMed Express, has also been expanded, making eight stops en route from Faunce Arch to Rhode Island Hospital weekdays from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. And the Escort Service, renamed onCall, has expanded its service area for students, faculty and staff who require dropoff or pick-up off-campus between 5 p.m. and 3 a.m. New wheelchair-equipped vans allow community members with disabilities to use all three Brown shuttles, BrownMed Express and two shuttles running on RISD’s campus. The escort service for students, faculty and staff with disabilities also continues to run, under the name DSS onCall, from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. The new service is “clearly more expensive” than the previous, studentrun shuttle, according to Abigail Rider, director of real estate and administrative services. But it became a necessity after the University determined in May that student drivers create too many liabilities to employ. State law requires professional drivers

Sara Perkins / Herald

All three SafeRIDE routes will run from 7 p.m. to 3 a.m. in September, and from 5 p.m. to 3 a.m. October through May.

see SAFERIDE, page 5

Empty NLRB seat will not delay Brown graduate student unionization decision BY JULIETTE WALLACK

An empty seat on the National Labor Relations Board will not delay a longawaited decision as to whether Brown graduate students can unionize, according to a board spokeswoman. Graduate students and University administrators across the country are waiting to see whether the board will overturn a 1999 decision that allowed New York University graduate students to unionize. Brown appealed to the NLRB in December 2001 that the board outlaw graduate student unionization after University graduate students voted on the possibility. The results of that election were impounded and will be released if the NLRB rules grad students can unionize.

One of the NLRB’s five seats became vacant when member R. Alex Acosta’s term ended in August. Although the four remaining board members are split evenly between political affiliations, the timeline for the decision will likely remain the same, according to Patricia Gilbert, associate director of information for the NLRB. “The (new) appointees to the board are generally in the majority of the party of the president,” Gilbert said, because the president nominates candidates. “It follows that if we have a president who is a Republican … generally the majority would be the appointment of three Republicans.” It’s difficult to tell whether graduate students’ right to unionize would be hurt if the

Parking shortage results in fewer permits for students BY JULIETTE WALLACK

Sara Perkins / Herald

Faced with drastic parking space shortages, the parking office issued 700 student permits for the beginning of the academic year, 150 fewer than last year. The news that they hadn’t received parking just days before returning to school — in their cars — surprised many students. Walter Hunter, vice president for administration, said it is likely the number of student permits will increase as the parking office completes a reassignment lottery. Brown’s parking crunch reached an alltime high this year when construction projects forced the temporary closure of two parking lots, Hunter said. “We wound up losing quite a few spaces,” he said.

Brown’s parking crunch reached an all-time high this year when construction projects forced the temporary closure of two parking lots.

see PARKING, page 4

I N S I D E F R I D AY, S E P T E M B E R 5 , 2 0 0 3 Students use summer to pump up Dean’s presidential campaign in Rhode Island page 3

With seven diamonds and six coal, see who gets this week’s coveted cubic zirconium diamonds & coal,page 6

Bush-bashing by profs doesn’t belong in the classroom, says Alex Carnevale ’05 column, page 7

decision is made with a new member, said Sheyda Jahanbani GS, spokeswoman for Brown Graduate Employee Organization/United Auto Workers. Jahabani said UAW representatives have not warned Brown graduate students there will be a delay because of the vacancy and eventual appointment. But, she said, when Brown appealed to the board, part of the basis for the appeal was that the NLRB made the NYU decision when there were empty seats on the board. For that reason, she said, it’s feasible the NLRB might wait until the vacancy is filled and there is a full board to release a decision. “That sends up a flag in my head,” she said. “It’s one of the elements that they were appealing on.” But Gilbert said the board usually makes decisions with only three members, so a single vacancy might not affect the timeline. “I’m not sure what the board has decided as to who will participate,” she said. “I think the way the process is is that most of the decisions are by a three-member panel, but all of the members can participate if they so choose.” Even if the new NLRB member is a Republican, it’s possible he or she won’t necessarily rule against graduate students just because of political affiliation. “Nobody really knows what some of these … board members will do on a case like our case here at Brown,” Jahabani said. But, she said, “they try to make decisions based on law as they understand it,” no matter what their political party. “This is really in new territory. The graduate student decision will be a precedent-setting decision.” Herald staff writer Juliette Wallack ’05 edits the metro section. She can be reached at jwallack@browndailyherald.com.

TO D AY ’ S F O R E C A S T Cut the NFL preseason some slack even if it ends in injuries, says Jon Meachin ’04 sports column, page 8

Liz Daniels ’04 heads for the Olympics Trials after stellar performances at Nationals sports, page 8

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Friday, September 5, 2003 by The Brown Daily Herald - Issuu