9 25 13 cayuga collegian vol 60 issue 2 hr

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VOLUME 60 ISSUE 2 SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

Community and college come together to help fire displaced students

CayugaBriefs CCC’s Mens Soccer Player Jason Boxx is named NJCAA Region 3 Player-of-the week by Bryan Murray, Staff Writer Jason Boxx was named region III player of the week after his stellar defense and great footwork helped put the ball in the back of the net and help the Spartans earn another victory. The final score was 3-0 against Broome Community College #3 Jason Boxx which improved the great start the Spartans Chiswick, England are off to an impressive 4-0-1. Come out an cheer on your fellow classmates in their next home game on 9/28.

Here’s your chance to explore other cultures by Kelsey Mclean, Staff Writer Interested in Native American culture? Interested in Floridian culture? Or maybe just wanting to get away? Then the CCC course, INT239: Interdisciplinary Study in Native American Culture and Education, might be the course for you. The class is an online course with a one week trip to Florida’s Everglades planned at the very end. Explore the wild and dangerous swamps of the Everglades, meet the Seminoles on their natural reservation, and learn about their deep rooted ancient history along the way... plus get three credits notched under your belt. The trip is from January 4 to10, 2014 and the cost is $1,150.So make sure to save your pennies and check your calendar if you’re itching to go. Don’t wait! The deadline is October 7, 2013!

Ground broken for new performing arts center in Auburn One State Street in Downtown Auburn will soon be home to a new 300-seat theater. to be called the Schwartz Family Performing Arts Center Local dignitaries helped launch the project with a ceremonial groundbreaking at the site on Monday. In 2010, the College entered into a 25-year plan to develop and share a new $7.7 million performance and multi-use space with the Finger Lakes Musical Theatre Festival.

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Danielle Skowron Office Hours EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Mondays: Tuesdays: Wednesdays: Thursdays:

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EMAIL: cayugacollgian@gmail.com

by Danielle Skowron, Editor-in-chief

Students from the student-run CCC campus radio station WDWN at this fall’s activities fair on the Auburn campus. From left to right: Ashlee Saret, Troy Gronau, Steve Foulkrod, Jeffrey M. Szczesniak, Eric Nans, Mike D. Calhoun and LaRae Brooks.

CCC’s campus radio station earns national nomination World College Radio Day 2013 is October 1st! by Eric Nans, Staff Writer Cayuga Community College’s student-run campus radio station, WDWN, was nominated for Most Creative Programming for the 2nd year in a row by the CMJ College Radio Awards. CMJ is the largest college radio organization in North America. Last year, 585 student stations in 29 different countries came together and made history, for College Radio Day. Our college radio station was nominated in two categories in 2012: Most Creative Programming and Station Adviser of the Year. Our very own Jeffery Szczesniak won Adviser of the Year 2012, Jeff Szczesniak which made him one of this year’s College Music Journal Marathon panel moderators (these panels will focus on careers in radio and obtaining those

goals). The station did not win Most Creative Programming last year. All voting will take place on-site at College Music Journal Music Marathon. The winners will be announced at 4 p.m. on Thursday, October 17th, in New York City. This event was created to raise international awareness of college and high school radio stations. People believe that college radio is one of the last remaining bastions of creative radio programming, free from the constrictions of having to be commercially viable, and a place where those involved in its programming believe passionately in its mission. College radio is the only free live medium brave enough to play unsigned, local, and independent artists on a regular basis. Indeed, many famous and successful bands today owe their initial rise to fame from being played on college radio. College radio is an important part of the media landscape because of its unique and fearless programming.

BUDGETGATE: THE AFTERMATH Staff Disappointed But Surviving by Kelsey Mclean, Staff Writer While the nuclear fallout of CCC’s debt crisis has long since passed, the ripples of its aftermath can still be felt across the campus of CCC. Cayuga’s county legislature has recently approved the 20132014 budget for a slim $30.32 million, 6.2% lower than last year’s $32.35 million. While the budget looks conservative and mostly unassuming on paper, its effects on the community has been anything but. More alarmingly, the school has been placed in a state of fiscal exigency or, in layman’s terms, academic bankruptcy. A budget under a state of fiscal exigency can go under sudden cuts, including staff, something that has been a point of contention for many on campus. Most of the college’s financial woes can be traced back to its $1.5 million shortfall last year. To make up for it, many expenditures have been cut to make due. Furloughs, temporary unpaid leaves of the staff, have been called to make ends meet. Some staff members, mostly part-time, have had their hours cut, while others have been laid off out right. Many promised expenditures, like new equipment, new dorms, and a much needed new field for the athletic teams, have fallen to the wayside. Many people carry the blame of this stormy fumble, but none so much as President Daniel

Larson. Despite getting a vote of no confidence for his financial fumbling that have led to this crisis, he has opted not to bow out, stating that “...Although I understand the frustration of the faculty and staff with the difficult situation facing the College, I am confident that the College community – faculty, staff, and students – will work as partners to achieve these goals.” While the dust has mostly settled for now, with the budget now laid in place and staff cuts reduced to a minimum, a new, if not slightly more minor, crisis has popped up in the wake of the Lattimore fire. Plans have been recently been made for new dorms, something that some say is frivolous in the wake of the many, many, many staff cuts, but now that Lattimore has gone up in smoke, being the only dorm nearby for students too far away to commute, the need for new dorms has become far more urgent. With only so much money to spend and so much to be done, the question of who will get what has caused friction. It would be nice to say that the college’s troubles are behind them and that the path ahead is nothing but clear blue skies but, clearly, stormy times are still ahead. What the financial future holds for CCC, however, is anyone’s guess.

The Cayuga Community College students rendered homeless September 9th when a grease fire on the fifth floor of the student dorm, Lattimore Hall, activated fire suppression sprinklers and caused water damage to several floors, had to get used to a totally new routine last week. A total of 48 students were told to find alternative housing and are reportedly receiving help and advice from the college’s staff. In a statement shared via campus-wide email, it was reported that the owner of Lattimore Hall, Peter Cappuccilli, will charge the displaced students $290 for the first 11 days of September ($26.36/day and that each affected student will receive a 100% refund of their application fee, security deposit, activity fee, parking fee, and the remainder of any rent payments made for the semester. The email indicated that the hope was the students would have their accounts worked out by the end of the business day on Friday, September 13th. It has been reported that 21 freshman are being housed at a dorm at Wells College in Aurora. It was unknown at press time the means by which the students are getting back and forth from campus to campus. Eight of the 48 will be housed in additional rooms in an apartment in Lattimore Hall which houses the building’s Residence Director. Students were able to retrieve their personal items from the building with the help of chaperons. The college has indicated it may be more ‘flexible’ with its withdrawal policy for these students because of the unusual circumstances. CONTINUED PAGE TWO

CCC President says budget is conservative by Danielle Skowron, Editor-in-chief At the end of last semester, tensions were high among the staff and students of Cayuga Community College. It was buzzing around the campus that there was going to be layoffs and that the college was three million dollars in debt. As it progressed, there were student rallies supporting CCC President their teachers. Students were Dr. Daniel Larson willing to give up the dorms they were promised, just to save the teachers whose jobs were threatened by the newly proposed budget cuts. On Tuesday, July 23, 2013 the college declared financial exigency. Financial exigency is when existing funds are not enough to support the existing programs. Shortly after that, the staff voted No Confidence in CCC President Daniel Larson. How does this affect students today? According to President Larson, “The 2013­-14 budget is very conservative.” He says the budget this year does not have much wiggle room. Larson says “travel, equipment, materials, supplies, and the like no longer have the latitude as in prior budget years. We will spend in these areas this year only what is essential and required.” As for the dorm and stadium projects? They are on hold until the college budget is proved to be successful.


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