Observer the
FEBRUARY 9, 2017 VOLUME XXXVIII, ISSUE 2
www.fordhamobserver.com
Faculty Respond to Immigration Executive Order By STEPHAN KOZUB News Co-Editor
STEPHAN KOZUB/ THE OBSERVER
Members of the Faculty Senate put tape over their mouths in silent protest of the Administration’s violation of University Statutes.
Faculty Senate Protest Statute Violations By STEPHAN KOZUB News Co-Editor
Over 100 faculty members held a silent protest over violations of University Statutes on Feb. 2. The protest, taking place outside of the Board of Trustees meeting in the Bateman Room of the Fordham Law building, included faculty members placing white tape over their mouths as members of the Board of Trustees and the administration made their way to the room. In September 2016, the Fordham Faculty Senate filed grievances against the Board of Trustees and three senior officials of the university. The grievances, filed with the Hearing Committee of the Senate, came after the administration imposed a salary increase that was not approved by the Senate, violating the University Statutes. A Faculty Hearing Committee independently investigated the issue and confirmed that the administration had violated the statutes, according to emails reported on by the Fordham Ram. University
“ We’re going to continue to fight until governance is respected.” –
ANDREW H. CLARCK, PH.D,
Assoc. Chair of the Faculty Salary and Benefits Committee
Counsel Elaine Crosson said in an email on the results of the Committee that “since the Committee had no authority to act upon the grievances, the decisions of the Committee are not determinative.” “We felt that, with student clubs and other things going on campus, there’s an increasing disregard for the kinds of governance processes in place,” Andrew H. Clark, Ph.D., chair of the Faculty Salary and Benefits Committee and associate professor of French and Comparative Literature, said. “We think that is a significant danger and threat to the health and future of this institution.” Clark said that the first goal of the protest is “to remind faculty
that they are a strong, important voice that should be heard. It is to remind our interlocutors, the Board, the administration and other people that we take this seriously and we’re not so happy with the decision. We’re going to continue to fight until governance is respected.” “We’re not going to get a topdown driven institution where people make decisions based on what they believe are savings without the input and serious discussion with faculty and joint decisions,” he continued. At the protest, Clark also distributed red pins for faculty to wear to show their support for one another.
President of the Faculty Senate Anne Fernald, Ph.D., said that the goal of the protest was “to show the administration that all of us faculty members are united in our support for the faculty leadership, in our support of the statutes, in our hope and our expectation that we will come to a negotiation agreement on salary and benefits and our disappointment that we did not last year.” Some of the faculty members taking part in the protest later attended the Board of Trustees meeting. Fernald said, “We have encouraged them to do so because we want to continue to seek ways to collaborate.” She added that the protest was “not a strike” and that the participation in the protest was “an impressive show of strength from us, and I think we should be really proud of the way in which the faculty has united in support of the faculty governance.” Patricio I. Meneses, Ph.D., as-
Asst. News Co-Editor
Late in the afternoon of Jan. 30, the Fordham Lincoln Center (FLC) plaza was filled with nearly 100 students and a handful of faculty members, assembled against President Donald Trump’s recent executive order on immigration. Organized overnight by unapproved club Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) and members of Black Student Alliance (BSA), Muslim Students Association (MSA), Desi Chai, Student Organization of Latinos (SOL), Rainbow Alliance, Feminist Alliance, and the Student Solidar-
ity Network, the event’s speeches ranged from personal testimony about the executive order to a call for the administration to approve the SJP. Seen by many as a “Muslim ban” after aggressive campaign rhetoric by Trump promising to stop the entry of Muslim immigrants to the U.S., the Jan. 27 order entitled “Protecting the Nation From Foreign Terrorist Entry Into the United States,” barred from U.S. entry to virtually all people traveling on passports from Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Somalia and Yemen for 90 days and barred all refugees for 120 days. It has drawn ire and fear
from civil rights and immigration advocates across the country. After only one day a federal judge had issued a temporary stay suspending implementation, though there were reports that it had been disregarded by a number of airports. Fordham University President Joseph M. McShane, S.J., sent a statement out by email to the Fordham community on Jan. 29 revealing that at least seven students may be affected by the order, and that the university had reached out to them. He included a link to a university information page with resources for undocumented students eligible for the Deferred Action for Child-
see PETITION pg. 5
see FACULTY SENATE pg. 2
Students Protest Trump Immigration Order By ELIZABETH LANDRY
Mohammad Nejad, Ph.D., “could not have been happier in any other job” as an Assistant Professor of Marketing in the Gabelli School of Business. “I love my work, my colleagues and the teaching philosophy we have at Fordham,” he said. “I’m not an easy professor based on what many students say, but this is because I love my students and want them to succeed and I think they know that.” As a green card holder and dual citizen of Iran and Canada, Nejad lives in Westchester with his wife, a senior financial analyst who is also Iranian, and their son, who was born in the United States His parents and in-laws live abroad and are all in their late sixties and seventies. They made arrangements to annually meet up with one another in countries such as Canada, Italy, Germany and Iran. When Nejad and his wife first made plans a while back to visit his parents and in-laws in Canada this March, they did not anticipate the risk that they might not be let back into the United States. On the day that President Donald Trump’s executive order on immigration was issued, he received an email from the immigration attorney for Fordham University advising him not to travel abroad due to the risk of not being able to return for 90 days. Since then, there has been mixed information regarding whether green card holders and Canadian citizens are included in the travel ban. An appeals court, however, recently denied Trump’s request to reinstate the order after it was blocked by a Federal District Court in Seattle, but the legal battle is expected to continue. “My wife and I need to visit our parents and our son also needs to visit his grandparents and the changes may simply take that away from us,” he said. “Moreover, in the case of an emergency, we may need to travel abroad to be there for our parents.” “I know that the story of the refu-
hood Arrivals (DACA) program, to which Fordham adheres. “Please be assured that Fordham University stands with the tens of thousands of refugees and would-be immigrants affected by these laws,” he writes. “We have a long history as a University of and for immigrants, in a city and a nation built by immigrants.” “We must demand more than words from Fordham,” Sophia Dadap, Fordham College at Lincoln Center (FCLC) ’18, said during the rally. She presented the three demands the clubs had for the university, which comprised clear and see IMMIGRATION pg. 4
THE STUDENT VOICE OF FORDHAM LINCOLN CENTER
OPINIONS
Point-Counterpoint The future in Trump’s America Page 8 ARTS & CULTURE
Faculty Spotlight 2017 New exhibit in Gallery
Page 13 FEATURES
Adventures Abroad A semester in Spain
Page 16