IN THIS ISSUE
Student Debt
Transfer Students
President Biden extends pause on student debt, sparking controversy.
Transfer students speak to the experience of going to Sonoma State. PAGE 6.
Residential Housing Sonoma State ranked #1 CSU on campus housing. Does this hold up in 2022?
SINCE 1979
VOLUME 86 // ISSUE APRIL 12. 2022 - APRIL 18, 2022
THE UNIVERSITY’S STUDENT RUN NEWSPAPER
@SONOMASTATESTAR
Local group works to eradicate Native American public health disparities
WILLOW ORNELLAS STAFF WRITER
T
COURTESY // redbudresourcegroup.org Redbud Resource Group “helps non-Native organizations access new audiences, develop cultural competency, and build new alliances,” according to their website.
he Redbud Resource Group is a California native and Indigenous women-run public health non-profit. Founded in 2020, their mission is to eradicate public health disparities that exist in native American communities. “We don’t have an accurate understanding of what it means to be a native person, politically, economically or culturally. We’re pervasively missing from everywhere. We’re not in Public Health data. We’re not in politics. We’re not in art unless it’s appropriation. We’re definitely not represented in education in an accurate way and so we try to tackle those erasers in school settings by providing curriculum,” said Taylor Pennewell, one of the founders of Redbud Resource Group. The Redbud Resource Group offers a platform for Tribes to communicate their personal stories to educate non-native audiences on the importance of listening, learning, and adapting to the requests of Indigenous sovereign nations. To complete its mission, the group provides curriculum, cultural competency materials, education and teaching guides, organizational and program assessments, cultural consulting as well as academic research. The group was started by two Tyme Maidu women who are both now tribal members at Berry Creek, Taylor Pennewell and Madison Esposito. Also on staff are Rose Hammock, of Round Valley Indian Tribes as well as Tiffani Lopez and Trelasa (pronounced truh-lay-suh) Baratta, both of which are Indigenous SSU students. see REDBUD on pg. 4
Spring has sprung at SSU
NOAH CLARKE STAFF WRITER
T
he campus pools are busy, lawns are spread with students and members of the Sonoma State community exchange smiles and waves as they walk to work and class. Spring has reached Sonoma County and so has the warmer weather. Last week in Rohnert Park, temperatures reached a high of around 90 degrees fahrenheit, prompting many students to get outside and indulge in some nice weather. The on campus pools are typically a popular amenity for students to utilize during warm weather. There are two pools available on campus for student use. One located in the Zinfandel Village and another within the Beaujolais Village. Both pools are accessible 7 days a week with varying hours. Third year SSU student Mina Riveira, recently shared her thoughts on the campus pools, “During the school year, I usually only find myself using the hot tubs. But when it’s nice weather like we’ve had recently, I most definitely take advantage of the pool. It’s nice to have right here on campus around this time of the year.” see SUNNY IN SONOMA on pg. 4
COURTESY // admissions.sonoma.edu Biden extends freeze on student-loan repayments through August 31.
Biden delays student-loan repayments for seventh time JAKE MORRISSEY STAFF WRITER
E COURTESY // Khanh Dao Mariah Forster enjoys sunny days sitting by the pond, reading and sipping on iced coffee.
ach year, millions of young Americans face thousands of dollars of debt when receiving student-loans to attend college. When Joe Biden was elected president, part of his platform focused on student-loan forgiveness, those millions of young Americans had hoped that at least some of their debt would be erased. Now Biden has announced that he will be delaying the repayment of student-loans through Aug. 31, this is the seventh time that the repayment has been delayed or extended. This extension comes in the midst of a period marked by inf lation. Gas prices are currently at an all-time high in connection with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Still, the United States is faced with $1.7 trillion in student-loan debt, with no clear deadline for repayment, via USA Today. When announcing the delay, Biden released a statement on Twitter saying, “I know folks were hit hard by the pandemic. And although we’ve come a long way in the last year, we are still recovering from the economic crisis it caused.” see STUDENT-LOANS on pg. 4