10-20-20 entire issue hi res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 137, No. 21

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2020

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8 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

News

Science

Sports

Weather

Winter Is Coming

Cancer Research

Best Season

Cool And Rainy

With temperatures dropping, eateries will not be able to serve as many outdoors. | Page 3

Cornell breast cancer researchers discuss recent progress and technological advances. | Page 4

The Sun looks back at men’s basketball’s remarkable 200910 season. | Page 8

Cornell Sues Trump Admin Over H-1B Visa Restrictions

HIGH: 58º LOW: 49º

Sign of the times

Second time University files lawsuit over visas this year By MEGHNA MAHARISHI Sun Assistant Managing Editor

For the second time this year, Cornell has decided to sue the Trump administration over visa restrictions. Joining other universities like Stanford and the California Institute of Technology, Cornell filed a lawsuit Monday seeking to roll back the U.S. Department of Labor’s and Department of Homeland Security’s recent H-1B visa restrictions. The lawsuit was filed with the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. The lawsuit emphasizes how many higher education institutions across the country rely on

the H-1B visa program to fill vital research and teaching positions. For Cornell, the lawsuit cites how the University employs many H-1B workers as research scientists and doctors, describing how these workers are “integral components of teams working tirelessly to advance medical sciences, seeking betterment of the country as a whole.” The plaintiffs in the lawsuit request that the court vacate the DHS and DOL rules and issue a judgment that the restrictions were unlawful as well as “arbitrary, capricious and otherwise not in accordance with the law,” among other requests. The lawsuit comes as President Donald Trump’s administration

has repeatedly tried to curb the H-1B visa program during the past few months. Citing the coronavirus pandemic, the Trump administration first halted the issuance of temporary work visas, including the H-1B visa, in June. Earlier this month, a federal judge held that the ban overstepped the administration’s authority. The ban is currently being contested in several cases. H-1B visas are intended for high-skilled workers, allowing companies to temporarily sponsor employees from abroad. The program is capped at 85,000 visas a year. On Oct. 6, the DOL released a See LAWSUIT page 3

MICHELLE LI / SUN CONTRIBUTOR

Masked Ezra | The statue of Ezra Cornell on the Arts Quad dons an all-too-familiar COVID-19 mask.

MICHAEL SUGUITAN / SUN STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

March for justice | Students march from Ho Plaza to the IPD headquarters to protest police brutality last June.

Ithacans Call for Decrease in Police Dept. Funding By CONNOR GREENE Sun Contributor

Echoing anti-police sentiments resounding across the country, Ithacans are calling for decreased responsibility and funding of the Ithaca Police Department. In a letter addressed to Ithaca-area residents, Mayor Svante Myrick ’09, members of the Ithaca Common Council and representatives of a broad racial justice coalition — including organizations such as the Democratic Socialists of America and Tompkins County Showing up for Racial Justice — have outlined demands to reduce the Ithaca policing budget by 80 percent, enact an immediate Ithaca Police Department hiring freeze

and reallocate funds to support Tompkins County communities. “In a city with a population of roughly 30,000 people, the IPD has 64 officers and a budget of $12.7 million dollars,” the letter states. “Meanwhile, vital community programs have been slashed, rent and housing throughout the city remain unaffordable, and many residents face a deepening economic crisis exacerbated by COVID-19.” David Foote, chairman of Ithaca Democratic Socialists of America, wants to take money from the police and enact a more democratic budget-making process that involves more community members. Foote believes that paying officers to patrol the streets saps the city’s budget without offering

much benefit. “More than half of police resources are not spent on investigating crimes or preventing crimes, but just on patrolling people, on cruising through neighborhoods looking for people to harass,” Foote said. “That’s a huge amount of money that’s basically spent on nothing.” This concern reflects one of the biggest demands made in the letter, a budget cut of 80 percent, which would reduce the budget from $12.7 million to $2.5 million. The letter implores its readers to remember Ithaca’s history of racial bias and mistreatment, characterized by the same sort of inhumane misconduct that resulted in the deaths of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor.

“We cannot forget the killing of Shawn Greenwood and Keith Shumway by IPD officers in 2010 and 2011, nor the four teenagers of color held at gunpoint by an IPD sergeant in 2014, nor the brutality experienced by Rose DeGroat and Cadji Ferguson on the Commons last year, nor the police misconduct in the Nagee Green trial, nor the SWAT raids in West Village, nor the countless other accounts of daily dehumanization and punishment at the hands of police,” the letter reads. Veronica Pillar, member of Tompkins County Showing Up for Racial Justice, said that “no changes to the police department were made” after Cadji Ferguson was arrested — and later acquitted — on the Ithaca Commons, which Pillar said was “a pretty

glaring incident of racist police brutality right here in Ithaca.” Tompkins County Showing Up for Racial Justice is an advocacy organization that encourages “white people to act as part of a multiracial majority for justice with passion and accountability to people of color-led organizations locally and nationally,” according to its website. For Pillar, even if Ithaca approved of an IPD budget cut, the allocation of funds needs to be made by the right people. “Everything has to be grounded in what leaders of color are saying,” Pillar said. “And of course that’s complex because people are going to have different goals and perspectives.” See IPD page 2


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