November 4, 2021

Page 1

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2021 VOL. CXXXVII NO. 25

THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

Penn students report ‘quick, painless’ voting process on campus this Election Day

3 crimes, 0 alerts:

Nearly 400 ballots were cast at campus polling locations IMRAN SIDDIQUI & TORI SOUSA Staff Reporter & Senior Reporter

A LOOK INTO PENN’S CRIME REPORTING SYSTEM

timeline.” The new Five Guys location will replace Beijing Restaurant, which closed its Spruce Street location last year. Datz said a primary reason FRES pursued Five Guys is because Penn lost its on-campus burger restaurant two years ago when Bobby’s Burger Palace closed its Walnut Street location. Dig Inn is set to open on 36th Street in January or February 2022, Dig Inn Chief of Staff Ben Kopelman said, adding that the company is still working out final details about leasing. The location will replace Cosi, which declared bankruptcy in 2016. Dig Inn, a healthy fast-casual operation out of New York, will offer a range of build-your-own bowls, vegetables, and comfort food options. The company already runs a location in Rittenhouse and has several restaurants by college campuses in New York City and Boston, Kopelman said. Kopelman said that Dig Inn’s menu aims to serve “a student body as well as the student community,” and is committed to providing locally-sourced, vegetable-driven meals. “What makes it special is that we can serve so many different eats. If you’re a vegan, we’ve got you covered, and if you’re looking for a rainy day lunch to make you feel good, you can grab our Mac and Cheese bowl,” Kopelman said. “We’re not for a certain kind of customer or certain kind of mood, we are for everyone.” El Taco is set to open at 3716 Spruce St. within the next

Pennsylvania’s General Election Day ran smoothly at Penn, with nearly 400 ballots cast at campus polling locations after political groups’ voter mobilization efforts. Voters across the city headed to their respective polling places on Tuesday to elect a district attorney, city controller, and multiple judges, according to resources provided by the student-run, non-partisan political program Penn Leads the Vote. Many students on campus who are registered to vote in Pennsylvania were assigned to a polling location in Houston Hall’s Bodek Lounge or in room 108 of the ARCH Building, both of which remained open until 8 p.m. According to data provided by all but one voting division — division 19 in ARCH — over 380 individuals voted at Penn’s polling locations. There were 291 ballots cast from divisions 11, 18, 20, 21, and 22 in Houston Hall and 89 cast in division 3 in the ARCH Building. It is unclear how many people voted in division 19, but two poll workers at ARCH said there were about 30 voters who voted there throughout the day. Out of the six divisions with reported results, 345 people voted for Democratic candidate and incumbent Larry Krasner to be the city’s district attorney. Krasner’s race was called just past 11 p.m. on Tuesday night. With 96% of the vote counted as of 2 a.m. Wednesday morning, Krasner won nearly 70% of the vote — more than twice as many votes as Chuck Puerto, his Republican challenger. After facing no one in her primary or general election, Democratic City Controller Rebecca Rhynhart also won her second term last night. In an interview with The Daily Pennsylvanian, City Councilmember Helen Gym stressed the importance of Pennsylvania in national politics, and noted that many reforms college students care about are addressed at the local level. “On this very local level, this is a long ballot,” Gym said. “There are 46 different boxes that you have to check off, and this can often feel overwhelming for young voters, but many of the things Penn students may read about in terms of criminal justice don’t actually occur at the Supreme Court level. They start and are most directly impactful at the municipal level.” Students who voted on campus during Election Day were pleased with the voting process and political groups’ mobilization efforts, but they noticed lines were short. “I appreciate that Penn had a lot of different places set up where we were able to vote on campus, so it was a very easy process, and we had a lot of great resources for us to access, too,” College junior and former DP Copy staffer Emma Blum, who voted in Houston’s Bodek Lounge on Nov. 2, said. Blum said she used PLTV’s resources to help her navigate the voting process on campus, and added that as a Democrat, she found Penn Democrats’ guide on this year’s candidates to be particularly helpful in informing whom she selected on the ballot. Blum, a California native, said she changed her voting registration to Pennsylvania because she believes her vote is more impactful in Pennsylvania, which is considered a swing state. “California is always going to go Democrat,” Blum said. “I feel like my vote is more important here — it means a lot more.” Like Blum, College sophomore Ilana Jacobs also voted at Houston Hall’s Bodek Lounge at around 5 p.m. on Nov. 2, and she said the voting process was “quick and painless.” Jacobs, a Democrat originally from New Jersey, said she changed her voter registration because it was more convenient for her to vote at school, and also because, like Blum, she felt her vote would mean more in a swing state. She emphasized the importance of college students voting in local elections, noting that policies made at the local level have a large impact on those who are just graduating and entering the workforce. “I think that people tend to only care about very high-profile elections — presidential elections and such — but it is really a lot more important, I think, to vote in these local elections because that’s where the policies that are most likely to affect us are

SEE RESTAURANTS PAGE 2

SEE ELECTION PAGE 7

ALICE CHOI

The Clery Act of 1990 requires that universities send timely warnings to the campus community when a crime poses a serious or ongoing threat LINDSEY PERLMAN Senior Reporter

Sitting on her neighbor’s porch steps, College senior Diane Chernoff faced a man with a gun. The man pointed a gun at Chernoff and her friend sitting next to her, demanding that they hand over “everything [they] have,” Chernoff said. The robber fled after taking their phones, her friend’s wallet and keys, and Chernoff’s bag. Penn’s Division of Public Safety never issued an alert to the Penn community about the crime, which alarmed Chernoff. “I feel like it would only be appropriate to know that a person with a weapon who’s mugging people is out on the streets, and [that the police] don’t know where they are,” Chernoff said. Chernoff’s robbery is one of three crimes commit-

ted against Penn students this semester that The Daily Pennsylvanian has identified, none of which resulted in immediate arrests, and none of which prompted DPS to issue campus safety alerts. While there has not been a “big uptick in crimes against people” on campus, according to DPS, and the total number of violent and property crimes in Philadelphia has decreased slightly since 2015, these incidents have led some Penn community members to raise questions about how DPS issues alerts. These crimes also reveal longstanding problems with a federal law governing campus crime reporting that universities have for years struggled to understand and interpret, according to campus safety consultants. The Clery Act of 1990 requires that colleges and universities send timely warnings to the campus community when a Clery crime, like a sexual assault, robbery, or burglary, poses a “serious or ongoing threat,” Associate Executive Director of the Clery Center Abigail Boyer said. It also mandates that colleges and universities maintain a daily crime log of all reported crimes within their jurisdictions. The law was enacted after a Lehigh University student raped and murdered fellow student Jeanne Clery in a residence hall. Her family realized that Lehigh never publicly reported a number of prior violent crimes committed on

Five new restaurants to open near campus over the next year Dig Inn, Raising Cane’s, Five Guys, El Taco, and Amma’s South Indian Cuisine will be coming to University City ABBY BAGGINI & ECE YILDIRIM Contributing Reporter & Staff Reporter

University City is set to see a surge in its number of restaurants over the next year, creating more dining options for the Penn and West Philadelphia communities. Five restaurants — Dig Inn, Raising Cane’s, Five Guys, El Taco, and Amma’s South Indian Cuisine — will be opening new locations near Penn’s campus, coinciding with Philadelphia’s ongoing economic recovery after local businesses took a hit due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Dig Inn, Five Guys and El Taco will open under Penn’s Facilities and Real Estate Services, which operates as the landlord of several stores on and around campus. As a landlord, FRES manages leases and provides establishments with allowances to spend towards their opening. While FRES does choose retail offerings to cater to the

FOUNDED 1885

ANDRES CASTRO

Five Guys will be opening at 3714 Spruce St.

needs of students, it also hopes that the West Philadelphia community, as well as Penn faculty and staff, will benefit from the opening of these new locations, Penn’s Executive Director of Real Estate Ed Datz said. Five Guys is set to open before the fall semester ends or at the start of the spring semester, Datz said. Five Guys declined to comment on its opening timeline, stating in an email to The Daily Pennsylvanian that, “there are too many unknowns concerning permits to know a realistic

and around campus. How DPS decides to issue crime alerts DPS issues UPennAlerts — emergency notifications sent to all Penn students, staff, and faculty via text, email, and a posting on the DPS website — when reported crimes rise to the level of an “ongoing threat” to the campus community, Vice President for Public Safety and Superintendent of the Penn Police Department Maureen Rush said. Alerts are issued on a case-by-case basis after deliberation among 18 to 20 members of DPS, who will join a closed conference call at any hour of the day, according to Rush. This case-by-case method is typical of many universities, which weigh and consider factors such as the timeliness, severity, location, and the nature of an incident before sending out an alert, said Sue Riseling, the president and founder of The Riseling Group, a professional services firm specializing in campus safety and the Clery Act. “It’s anything but black and white,” Riseling said. “There’s a large group of people who often scratch their heads, trying to figure out what’s the right thing to do by SEE ALERTS PAGE 2

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November 4, 2021 by The Daily Pennsylvanian - Issuu