THE
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@PPUGlobe August 30, 2017
IN THIS ISSUE: PAGE
5 PAGE 6 PAGE SINCE 1967 8
Features debuts “Pioneer Public” showcasing the campus community Opinions editors summarize a summer of President Trump Gabe Bubon opens up about starting basketball head coaching career ppuglobe.com
Celebrating 50 years of covering the world of Point Park University news
Issue 1
No confidence vote Full-time faculty union reach contract agreement passed against
university president
By Josh Croup and Alexander Popichak
Editor Emeritus and Editor-in-Chief
By Josh Croup Editor Emeritus
After 18 months of negotiation and 11 years’ worth of legal battles for recognition, Point Park University and its full-time faculty union voted Monday to accept the terms of their first collective bargaining agreement. Faculty members learned of a preliminary agreement prior to a pre-semester Faculty Assembly meeting last Wednesday. They met two days later and reviewed the preliminary terms of the contract agreed upon between the administration and the Newspaper Guild of Pittsburgh/ Communication Workers of America, the union representing the full-time faculty. The contract was ratified Monday in a 96-6 vote, according to Michael A. Fuoco, president of the Newspaper Guild of Pittsburgh. “It was a long process with a lot of blood, sweat and
Robert Berger| The Globe With an overwhelming majority, Point Park’s full-time faculty adopted its first-ever collective bargaining agreement Monday. Throughout the course of contract negotiations, union members showed support by hanging signs in their offices.
tears,” Fuoco told the Globe last week. “We’re very pleased that we reached an agreement. We didn’t receive everything we hoped for, but we did get a good foundation to build for the future.”
The new four-year contract running through 2021 includes increased salaries and more benefits for full-time faculty. It will be applied retroactively to last the academic year.
FACULTY page 2
Library turns page with renovation By Alexander Popichak Editor-in-Chief
Point Park’s library quietly began a new chapter when it debuted its addition this summer. The addition is accessed through the basement of the University Center and houses the library’s DVD collection, periodicals and extensive collection of musical scores. “We moved some stuff from the second and first floor and rearranged the basement to be more interactive area,” associate library director Brendon Wilson said. The space that used to house the plays will become a part of the new Pittsburgh Playhouse, and the space that once held the presentation room is now the entrance to the new library wing.
“We provided a lot of options for students to do anything and everything with the new space,” Wilson said. University Architect Elmer Burger said that while some space previously used by the library will be lost to the Playhouse, the library will have a net gain of space. The addition lies directly below the university television studio and Student Production Services. Burger explained that the University Center comprised of several buildings and the new wing once housed Kasons, a restaurant and bar that closed nearly 10 years ago. “We had to remove all the kitchen equipment and put a whole new floor in because it was substandard,” Burger said. The two end sections,
once housing the kitchen and dining areas, is now home to 16 collaborative spaces. Each nook is designed to allow three to five students to privately study or work on group projects. The rooms are equipped with a television screen, dry erase board and desk space. “In the old space we had two study spaces you could reserve and the presentation room. We now have 16 study spaces along with the presentation room.” At the end of one hallway is the presentation room, where students can record themselves giving a presentation “The major emphasis for library workspace expansion was the increased collaborative workspace,”Burger said. The addition also houses a part of a building that is part of the new Playhouse.
LIBRARY page 3
Gracey Evans | The Globe Additions to the library can be found in the basement of the University Center. Resources include new study spaces along with areas intended for collaborative group work.
A new re-count from last week’s vote of no confidence for university President Paul Hennigan revealed greater support for the motion than originally believed. Early results of a no confidence vote from Faculty Assembly members said the vote passed with 53 percent in favor of issuing the vote, 44 percent against and three percent abstaining. Faculty Assembly President Matt Pascal said Monday an error was made when the tellers counted the ballots. The final tally revealed 57 of the 89 faculty members present, or 64 percent, voted in favor of the resolution. 39 were against the vote, or 43 percent, with the same three abstentions. The vote now goes to the Point Park University Board of Trustees, which announced last week following the vote that an independent expert will be appointed “to thoroughly review this matter and report back to the Board.” “We recognize the need for continuous improvement and trust in building effective relationships between facul-
Nikole Kost | The Globe
President Paul Hennigan.
ty and administration,” said Joseph R. Greco Jr., chair of the Board of Trustees, in a statement. “We are committed to our goal of being one of the most dynamic, private urban universities with an intense focus on student success through distinctive, innovative and experiential learning.” Greco also said Hennigan and the administration have the full support of the Board of Trustees until the review is complete. The board has already conducted two “professionally administered faculty evaluations” of Hennigan that came back positive, according to Greco.
PRESIDENT page 2
USG swears in new cabinet members USG By Kayla Snyder
USG Beat Reporter
The executive cabinet of the student government was sworn in today during the United Student Government (USG) meeting. President Bobby Bertha swore in Zac Seymour as the parliamentarian, Shaniece Lawrence as recording secretary, Sabrina Bodon as press secretary and Josh Croup as treasurer. Seymour, Bodon and Croup also serve on the Globe staff as public relations coordinator, online editor and co-sports editor, respectively. Over the summer, USG worked extensively with Student Activity Involvement and Leadership (SAIL) to pinpoint different organization requests from USG. “We came to the conclusion that a lot of groups were requesting materials for bake sales,” Sabrina Bodon, press secretary of USG said. “We wanted to do that to create an autonomy for the student body with their holding accounts.” In addition, Bodon said USG meetings which are currently in the Student Center, will be moved to Lawrence Hall 200 to increase visibility. “The glass walls really cre-
ate a sense that we are within the student body and we are working with them,” Bodon said. There is no set date for the location change at the time of publication, but Bodon said it will happen when it is most efficient for the university to make the change. Visibility into the organization is something that the executive cabinet is heavily focusing on during this year. “This year we strive for an inclusive and active organization that is representative of everyone who attends Point Park University,” President Bobby Bertha said. To accomplish that goal, USG plans to fill all of the available positions within the organization. “We’re really looking to current students, graduate students and freshman students to be as full and representative of the student body as we possibly can,” Bodon said. As the organization stands, there are a total of 36 positions representing six positions from each school at the university and the graduate program. According to Bodon, the graduate students would serve at-large within the organiza-
USG page 2
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