free
THURSDAY
march 1, 2018 high 45°, low 32°
t h e i n de p e n de n t s t u de n t n e w s pa p e r of s y r a c u s e , n e w yor k |
N • Expressing support
Syracuse University student leaders said they are supportive of khristian kemp-delisser’s appointment as the LGBT Resource Center’s permanent director. Page 3
O• Lost in the sauce
Business columnist Scott Bingle explains how the Carrier Dome could take pointers from Mercedes-Benz Stadium’s Fan First Pricing concessions model. Page 5
dailyorange.com
P • Adventure startup
SU student Kevin Rieck is taking his travel film company to South by Southwest as one of eight finalists in the Student Startup Madness tournament. Page 9
S • Bump on the road
Syracuse men’s basketball fell 85-70 at Boston College on Wednesday night. SU’s fourth loss in five games further hinders its NCAA Tournament chances. Page 16
suny-esf
BUILDING
Governing body votes to remove executive
UP
By Haley Kim
digital copy chief
The Marshall, an eight-story, 287-unit apartment complex on South Crouse Avenue, is just one of many new luxury student housing projects that have popped up on University Hill in the past decade.
City councilors say luxury apartment development on the Hill must slow down
A Syracuse official said the city wants to encourage density in the East Genesee corridor, where the Theory apartment complex is under construction.
Story by Jordan Muller
SUNY-ESF’s Academic Governance has voted to remove the chair of its body, Klaus Döelle, according to an email obtained by The Daily Orange on Wednesday. Eig ht y-n ine percent of 102 faculty who casted ballots voted to remove Döelle immediately from his position, and 78 percent of DOËLLE faculty voted to rescind his status as past executive chair, for officer succession. The Academic Governance Executive Committee body received two complaints against Döelle on Feb. 16, one internal to the committee and one from an external faculty member, according to an email obtained by The D.O. see döelle page 4
asst. news editor
Photos by Madeline Foreman
university politics
staff photographer
C
ranes and construction vehicles on University Hill, in the last decade, have often marked the sites of future luxury apartment complexes. Developments with names such as Campus West, 505 on Walnut and Copper Beech Commons target the area’s student population. Per-bedroom rents can cost residents an upward of $1,500 a month, and more buildings are on the way. But as developers continue to build apartments on the Hill, new Syracuse Common Councilors representing neighborhoods near Syracuse University say future construction of similar projects needs to slow down. “I feel like we have enough,” said Latoya Allen, who was elected last November as Common Councilor of the 4th district to represent some of the university-area neighborhood and parts of SU. “Because right now, it seems as if we don’t even have the means to fill the ones they’re building right now.” The Marshall, an eight-story, 287-unit luxury student housing complex near Marshall Street, is expected to open in fall 2018. And another housing project, called Theory, is being built on East Genesee Street. Allen’s sentiment, shared by some of the city’s local leaders, marks a departure from Mayor Ben Walsh’s support for residential development projects near SU and Interstate 81. On the campaign trail, Walsh detailed his support for mixed-use residential and commercial projects similar to The Marshall, which combine retail, restaurant and residential spaces in the same building. “I revised the uniform tax exemption policy, for SIDA (Syracuse Industrial Development Agency), which allowed us to prioritize mixed-use development, mixed-income development,” Walsh said during a campaign event in late October. Walsh was not made available for an interview for this article.
see development page 8
1st press conference held for students By Sam Ogozalek news editor
A high-ranking Syracuse University official spoke to student media Wednesday as part of a new pilot press briefing program the university recently announced in an email to The Daily Orange and CitrusTV, among other outlets. Dolan Evanovich, the university’s senior vice president for enrollment and the student experience, provided updates on a major review of on-campus disability services Wednesday, among other topics. “This is a new concept, it’s not something we’ve done before,” said Sarah Scalese, associate vice president for university communications. “We encourage and welcome your feedback.” The briefing, which lasted about 30 minutes, was first announced in an email from Scalese on Monday see briefing page 6