2016-05-05

Page 1

Weekly Summer Edition Ann Arbor, MI

inside NEWS

SACUA discusses new year agenda Members plan to cover mental health and tenure

MichiganDaily.com

One-Hundred-Twenty Five Years of Editorial Freedom

Thursday, May 5, 2016

Obama reaffirms federal support in visit to Flint

>> SEE PAGE 2

NEWS

2017 City Council budget passes >> SEE PAGE 2

OPINION

Privilege blooms for Bloomberg

By CAITLIN REEDY Daily Staff Reporter

Former mayor of New York City demonstrates lack of compassion >> SEE PAGE 4 MARINA ROSS/Daily

President Barack Obama speaks about the Flint Water Crisis at Flint Northwestern High School on Wednesday.

Aash Mehta talks EDM career University of Michigan student reflects on success in electronic music >> SEE PAGE 5

SPORTS

Chatman transfers Men’s basketball player Kam Chatman will transfer >> SEE PAGE 8

INDEX Vol. CXXVII, No. 114 | © 2016 The Michigan Daily michigandaily.com

NEWS .................................... 2 OPINION ...............................4 ARTS ......................................6 CLASSIFIEDS.........................8 SUDOKU................................ 2 SPORTS................................10

Teachers’ protests of budget cuts cause DPS shut down Sickouts over underfunding force closure of 94 school districts in Detroit

Residents raised concerns over new development

ARTS

DETROIT

Obama met with residents and local leaders to discuss the water crisis By LYDIA MURRAY, LARA MOEHLMAN and BRADLEY WHIPPLE Summer Managing News Editor, Summer Editor-in-Chief, and Summer Managing Editors

FLINT, Mich. — Standing before a crowd of more than 1,000 residents at Flint Northwestern High School on Wednesday afternoon, President Barack Obama reaffirmed federal support for the Flint community in the ongoing water crisis and eased mounting tensions surrounding the health of the city’s children and the safety of its drinking water. The president’s visit came in response to a letter written by 8-year-old Flint resident Mari Copeny, also known as “Little

Miss Flint,” for her work raising awareness of her community’s plight. Copeny requested to meet Obama while she was visiting Washington D.C. to attend a congressional hearing on the water crisis in April. Obama instead answered her letter by announcing last week that he would travel to Flint to meet with city residents and local and state leaders. The Flint water crisis began in April 2015 following the city’s cost-saving switch from Detroit city water to Flint River water. The water from the Flint River had a corrosive quality, which resulted in lead erosion in the city’s pipe system, tainting its water supply. In the weeks and months following the switch, residents reported adverse health effects, but their complaints were largely ignored by local officials until Oct. 2015, when the water was finally switched back. Despite the switch, traces of lead remains in the water due to the Flint’s already corroded pipes. In his remarks, Obama said the people of Flint have a right to be

angry, blaming the water crisis on poor decisions and neglect from state and local officials. “Even though the scope of response looks sort of like what we’re used to seeing after a natural disaster, that’s not what this was,” Obama said. “This was a manmade disaster. This was avoidable. This was preventable.” Obama also implicitly rebuked Governor Rick Snyder’s (R) administration, saying the crisis represents a systematic problem in which efforts to shrink government undermine essential environmental protection and municipal services. “It’s a mindset that says environmental rules designed to keep your water clean or your air clean are optional, or not that important, or, unnecessarily, burden businesses or taxpayers,” Obama said, charging that this small-government ideology undercuts the common good in favor of personal gain. “And this kind of thinking — See OBAMA, Page 3

A sickout planned by the Detroit Federation of Teachers in the Detroit Public Schools system closed 94 of 97 DPS schools on Monday. The teachers organized the sickout in protest of the announcement that teachers will not be paid past June 30 of this year unless the state legislature approves funding to the district. Judge Steven Rhodes, DPS’s state-appointed emergency manager, allegedly told the union on Saturday the state’s current budget does not allot nearly enough money for teachers’ salaries, summer school programs and special education services. The closure affected a majority of the approximately 46,000 students enrolled in DPS. The sickout follows a series of similar protests last held in January against thedilapidated condition of many school buildings. Schools have reported instances of rodents, cockroaches and leaking ceilings in many buildings due to the lack of sufficient funding to address building maintenace. State Rep. Stephanie Chang (D–Detroit) said she is cautiously optimistic that her colleagues will pass a bill to alleviate these issues. “DPS is in a financial crisis, See DPS, Page 3


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
2016-05-05 by The Michigan Daily - Issuu