Daily 49er, February 20, 2017

Page 1

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, LONG BEACH

VOL. LXVIII, ISSUE 66 | FEBRUARY 20, 2017 ACADEMIC SENATE

Faculty applaud new pay range agreement The agreement will speed up pay range elevation for CSU faculty. By Valerie Osier News Editor

16-year-old Blake Brown attempts a 360 flip on a damaged sidewalk on 7th Street Sunday.

Photos by Jose De Castro | Daily 49er

Wind, rain, broken terrain

O

n Feb. 16, Cal State Long Beach Chief of Police Fernando Solorzano issued a campus advisory for a strong storm that was expected to hit on Feb. 17., saying that the 2-3 inches of rain were expected to fall in the Los Angeles area and cautioning students against the inclement weather. This weekend, severe storm conditions throughout Southern California led to a number of structural damages, with the heaviest rain falling on Friday. While some damages, like fallen trees and downed electrical wires, proved to be problematic and hindersome to SoCal residents, some provided opportunities for thrill-seeking residents – such as the teenagers who turned a broken sidewalk on 7th Street into an impromptu skate ramp on Sunday. Rain is expected again throughout the day, though not on the scale of the last storm.

Students huddle around a bus stop near Brotman Hall during the storm Friday.

California Faculty Association Long Beach chapter president Doug Domingo-Foraste announced to the Academic Senate on Thursday that the CFA worked out an agreement with the California State University Chancellor’s office to fix the range-elevation pay scale for lecturers. Lecturers are hired into a salary range: A, B, C or D, that reflects their pay scale. For example, Range B is equivalent to an assistant professor pay scale, while Range C is equivalent to an associate professor pay scale. Domingo-Foraste said that, in the past, lecturers had to be in the CSU for six years and at the top of their range to move to the next, which included at least a 5 percent salary increase. But every time faculty got a general salary increase, all the ranges readjusted upward, so lecturers were getting trapped in their ranges despite being at the school for years. “We have lecturers who have been here for 15 years without moving up from lecturer B to lecturer C,” Domingo-Foraste said, to which many faculty concurred that they were in similar circumstances. The CSU came to an agreement with the CFA that, when a lecturer reaches six years of work, they’re automatically eligible for a range elevation. The

see PAY, page 3

IMMIGRATION

Thousands join pro-immigrant rights march LA’s Pershing Square hosted a rally that later ended up as a demonstration outside City Hall. By Hasham Nusrat Staff Writer

Thousands of people, holding posters and waving international flags gathered to march for immigrant rights at Pershing Square in downtown Los Angeles on Saturday. “The people are tired of the attacks and threats against our communities,” said Ron Gochez, one of the event organizers.

Gochez said marchers wanted to send a message to the rest of the nation and to President Donald Trump that they aren’t going to sit by while he implements his policies on immigrants, refugees, Muslims, the LGBT community and women. Marchers first gathered in Pershing Square at noon and marched through the streets of downtown to City Hall. Members of the Muslim, Latino, Hispanic, African-American and LGBT communities were given a chance to speak at the rally. “This is a reflection of American people from various diverse backgrounds coming together. The attack on one is an attack on all of us. We expect our elected representatives, the mayor and the state to respect and protect people, living in California,” said

Hussam Ayloush, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations in the greater Los Angeles area. Many of the marchers waved flags. Some were holding homemade banners, placards and posters. People were heard chanting slogans like, “No Ban, No Wall, Sanctuary for All.” “I am here today to stand in solidarity with the communities that need support right now,” said John Roane, a participant. Some of the organizations that supported and participated in the march included California for Progress, Immigrant Youth Coalition, Black Lives Matter Los Angeles and the Party for Socialism and Liberation.

see MARCH, page 2

Hasham Nusrat | Daily 49er

Protesters marched through the streets of downtown Los Angeles for immigrant rights in light of President Donald Trump’s executive orders.


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