ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-NINE YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM
Tuesday, April 7, 2020
Ann Arbor, Michigan
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College students frustrated with lack of benefits in $2 trillion federal stimulus bill Recent legislation intended to provide relief offers minimal aid to young adults SARAH PAYNE
Daily Staff Reporter
The recent coronavirus outbreak has sent the economy reeling, with fears of a looming recession and massive spikes in unemployment. The federal government has stepped in to provide relief for individuals and corporations through a series of economic stimulus packages over the past several weeks. At $2 trillion, the most recent bill is the largest stimulus bill in U.S. history. As part of the package, millions of people older than age 18 will receive $1,200 checks, with an additional $500 checks going to the parents of qualifying children under age 18. The legislation includes $377 billion to small businesses and boosts unemployment benefits by $600 per week. However, college students and young adults across the country are largely ineligible to receive benefits because they are claimed as dependents by their parents.
Design by Cara Jhang
DESIGN BY CARA JHANG
Students have struggled to deal with the economic toll of the virus, facing internship cancellations and the loss of on-campus jobs. Many students are also bound to pay rent
for 12-month leases in Ann Arbor while they are away, and many students have had trouble finding people to sublet their apartments over the summer.
Thomas Lyon, professor of sustainable science, technology and commerce at the University of Michigan, called the bill “enormous and complex,” noting
City approves $200k to stop evictions
Council unanimously passes resolution allocating funds to address housing insecurity ISABELLA PREISSLE Daily Staff Reporter
The Ann Arbor City Council met Monday evening via Zoom in a public livestream. Despite the meeting’s alternative format, the council kept its usual structure, including public comments via phone calls and speakers from various city government organizations, informing the public on issues such as zoning policy and the city budget. With people across the country as well as local tenants calling for a rent freeze, or the forgiveness of debt, council members took up the issue. Council members unanimously passed a resolution that extended eviction prevention for tenants of Ann Arbor Housing Commission properties. The resolution also allocated $200,000 in emergency assistance funds. Councilmember Zachary Ackerman, D-Ward 3, said the COVID-19 outbreak and the
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ALEC COHEN/Daily The Ann Arbor City Council votes via Zoom to provide funds to stop potential evictions caused by loss of income due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
necessary public health solutions, such as Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s “Stay Home, Stay Safe” Executive Order, have had major economic repercussions that impact Ann Arbor tenants. “We have a set of tenants who find themselves in a financial hole and, when the states release their hold on evictions, may face
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becoming homeless very quickly,” Ackerman said. “As a community and an affluent one, in fact the most affluent in the state, we can take it upon ourselves to fill that hole.” Councilmember Jack Eaton, D-Ward 4, said the council should strive to help the Ann Arbor community during this difficult time.
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“We are really going to have a horrible economy for the foreseeable future, and to the extent that we can help our residents, we should do that,” Eaton said. The council opened their meeting with comments from various council members to the public. Council members used this time to thank essential workers, citizens for 3D-printing protective equipment for health care workers and citizens doing their part by social distancing. Ann Arbor Mayor Christopher Taylor encouraged citizens to continue to practice social distancing. “Go outside, but do so in a matter that is safe,” Taylor said. “Your attention to detail will help a nurse on her shift or a doctor on her rounds. Your attention to detail will save lives, so please be careful at all times.”
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the importance of providing relief for everyday Americans. He said the bill would provide some help for students regarding loan payments. See LEGISLATION, Page 3
ACADEMICS
Collins talks evaluations for semester
Interim provost addresses SACUA on faculty feedback CELENE PHILIP For The Daily
The Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs held a meeting on Monday afternoon with Interim Provost Susan M. Collins as a guest to discuss current operations at the University of Michigan in light of the recent coronavirus pandemic. Collins talked about faculty and student mental health efforts, considerations of evaluations of remote instruction and alternate plans for graduate students involved in research that has been halted. The meeting took place virtually.
See SACUA, Page 3
NEWS.........................2 OPINION.....................4 Vol. CXXIX, No. 100 ©2020 The Michigan Daily A R T S . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 SPORTS...........................7
INDEX