March 14, 2019

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VOLUME 137, ISSUE 20 | THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019

ARC EXPANSION SET TO BE COMPLETE AFTER SPRING BREAK BY B OBBY JO HN sports@theaggie.org It’s almost done. Gym-goers have been teased for months by fresh squat racks and state of the art Olympic weightlifting platforms that can be seen through the windows but cannot be accessed when walking between the Pavilion and the ARC to get to the La Rue entrance. The $15.8 million construction project, funded from reserves and bonds, was slated for completion back in January, but a confluence of factors delayed the project, according to UC Davis Campus Recreation and Unions Director of Recreation Deb Johnson. Mother Nature halted construction for a period in November after smoke from the Camp Fire blanketed Davis. In December, many of the contractors and laborers working the project took some vacation time, which is typical of construction projects. Add to that required inspections with the added challenge of expanding from the core of the building to add the necessary electrical components for future equipment needs. The Boldt Company has finished renovating and adding around 20,000 square feet to the newly-designed ARC which will open for use on March 27. This won’t be the very end of renovation, however, as the ARC will also close its fourcourt basketball gym starting March 25 for re-flooring. This additional project is set to be done some time in April. Johnson gave The Aggie a tour of the new space near the end of its construction phase in early March. Some equipment was there, like the newly designed weightlifting platforms innovated

NEW 20,000 SQUARE FOOT SPACE OPENS MARCH 27

VENO OS M OS H AYE D I / AGGIE

by Matrix Fitness and Eleiko, which will be incorporated into 15 Matrix squat racks and six standalones. Eleiko makes platforms designed to dampen the noise when dropping weights. Johnson says that in most college gyms across the country, you aren’t allowed to drop your weights due to noise and damage. “I asked Matrix to partner with Eleiko,” Johnson said, noting that this is the first time two companies in the equipment industry have collaborated for a project. “For the first time ever, we’ve got two companies working together.”

Users will now be allowed to drop their weights when using this equipment without worrying about damage or excessive noise. Still, this on its own does little to address one of the community’s most common complaints, which is that the wait for the squat racks during peak hours is too long. “It’s really frustrating especially when you have to get somewhere,” said third-year neurobiology, physiology and behavior major Jessica Wong. While waiting in line to use a squat rack, Wong explained that at times she has had to end her workout earlier than

ASUCD CREATES NEW COMMITTEE TO COMBAT HOUSING DISCRIMINATION IN DAVIS

Davis Housing Discrimination Committee created in response to student concerns over unfair treatment of student renters

planned to get ready for class. Johnson says one of the overarching goals of the expansion was to reduce work out waiting times. ARC employees and fourth year students, Erica Rubio and Claudio Carillo, explained how staff currently deal with the overcrowded gym floor. “When the line get super long and goes all the way out the door, it’s stressful to us because we have that pressure,” Carillo said, calling attention to the fact that staff try to encourage people to work in pairs to help the line move faster. This strategy works for some people, but for others, they just

want to work independently, said Carillo. “At the end of day, some people actually make friends,” Carillo said. “That’s nice to see.” “It’s not healthy to stand in line, your body and muscles get cold,” Johnson said. “Our patrons are unique here, they’re waiting to wait in line for a long time for a rack and willing to stay in that rack for kind of as long as they want to.” Johnson says that when gathering feedback from gym users, squat racks, benches, more cardio machines and natural lighting topped the wish list.

With a combination of LED daylight harvesting lights and ceiling fans, the workout spaces throughout the gym will add a refreshed feeling In addition, crossfit enthusiasts can expect a new station stocked with supplies like TRX bands and a jungle gym. Anyone who felt left out because they train in the strongman style will find a new outdoor area that can accomodate this basic yet punishing and body-taxing activity of carrying atlas stones, pulling sleds and flipping tires. But until the outdoor temperature allows the surface to be laid properly, strongman enthusiasts will have to wait until later in Spring Quarter The project has been nearly two years in the making, from gaining approval from former Chancellor Linda Katehi to then getting the green light and beginning construction under then-Interim Chancellor Ralph Hexler. This expansion is just one part of UC Davis’ many growth initiatives. A West Village expansion that will add approximately 3,300 beds is expected to be fully completed in 2021. Nishi would add 2,200 beds, and Lincoln40 adds 130 units with two to five bedrooms per unit. The UC Davis Long Range Development Plan aims to house 18,600 students on campus by 2030, which represents a 9,050 increase in students currently housed on campus. While this ARC expansion may free up some traffic on the gym floor and adds new fitness features, the housing and following student body expansion will test its capacity. The ARC will close from March 25 to 26 to move the equipment and will reopen the main entrance March 27.

FUTURE OF UC DAVIS SET IN MOTION AS ACCEPTANCES, WAITLISTS, REJECTIONS SENT OUT Undergraduate Admissions released freshman decisions on March 8

DA N IEL L E MOF FAT / AGG IE

C AIT LY N SA M P L E Y / AGGI E

BY SA BRI N A HA B C H I are a college town, we want to make sure that we protect our campus@theaggie.org students and our student tenThe Davis Housing Dis- ants,” Wali-Ali said. “Many of crimination Committee, a the students don’t really know new ASUCD committee, was what to do if they’re facing disrecently formed as the result of crimination — they may just a bill authored by Nayzak Wa- swallow it and continue.” li-Ali, a first-year political sciLandlords might tell stuence major and chairperson of dent tenants to leave if they the ASUCD External Affairs express any frustration or unCommission. happiness with specific housStudents have expressed ing arrangements and, addiconcerns about being discrimi- tionally, students of color find nated against in their off-cam- it particularly difficult to find pus housing experiences. housing, Wali-Ali said. WaWali-Ali will primarily serve li-Ali also mentioned hearing marginalized student commu- reports that landlords refused nities, which often experience to change or fix items in stuthe most housing discrimina- dents’ apartments or are partion. ticularly hostile for no reason. The committee aims to ed“The main goal with this is ucate students on housing dis- that it is a safe space for stucrimination so they are aware dents to come to these people of their rights and to generate who will be knowledgeable in awareness on this type of dis- what is going on, telling them crimination and ensure that that no, this is not normal,” students feel safe — “making Wali-Ali said. sure that students understand Edgar Masias-Malagon, the that a form of discrimination ASUCD External Affairs vice being enacted against them is president and a fourth-year not normal,” Wali-Ali said. global disease biology major, “Housing discrimination discussed the ramifications of is an issue and, because we the City of Davis’ extremely

low vacancy rate and its impact on student renters. “Given that we have a 0.2 percent vacancy rate, we decided that we wanted to address [housing discrimination] because there’s only so many units there, and people are not willing or wanting to lease these units to students based on how they identify, or their race,” Masias-Malagon said. “[This discrimination] really sets them up to live somewhere that’s not as nice, overly priced or poorly managed.” Francois Kappealin, the public engagement director for the Office of the External Affairs Vice President and a second-year chemical engineering major, also spoke on the issue. “A normal vacancy rate would be like three to five percent,” Kappealin said. “We don’t have any housing, the rents are going up and people are being forced to cram into these family-sized homes — people are sleeping living rooms and garages because they have nowhere else to go. A

HOUSING on 11

BY O LIVIA LU CH INI features@theaggie.org Located across from the Mondavi Center, the Welcome Center, home to Undergraduate Admissions, is on the outskirts of the central campus. Unless they become tour guides or take a class there, many students don’t return to the Welcome after their initial campus tours. Within the building, however, professional staff and student public advisors have been in a whirlwind since March 8 — when decisions were released to all freshman applicants, the class of 2023. Brenda Fudge Jensen, associate director of public advising and admissions advising, spoke to the amount of effort needed by the office in the weeks after decisions are released. Just on Monday alone, the back office of Undergraduate Admissions was ablaze with calls as five student public advisors manned phones with queues racking up left and right. They answered calls to give students their MyAdmissions ID num-

Cheese March Madness

ber, but they also answered calls consoling students who were rejected from school they had dreamed of attending. “Everybody pulls together to answer questions either on the phone or on the field,” Fudge Jensen said. “Everyone is available to answer questions. We all pitch in as one big team to help anyone who is confused or has questions about what the next step is.” With rejections and students who are now confronted with questions about financial aid and their ability to invest in an education, the office’s stresses pile up easily. “There aren’t enough hours in the day for the amount of work and for all of us,” Fudge Jensen said. “We are all working hard, reading applications, advising people out front, advising people on the phone... there just aren’t enough hours in the day.” According the Fudge Jensen, the year looked like a lot of other years —similar application numbers and all. The admit rate, however, was lower. “It was just super competi-

tive [this year],” Fudge Jensen said. Fudge Jensen and her coworkers started reading applications for freshmen in mid-December, then moving onto transfer applications in mid-to-late-January. Months of effort went into this moment on March 8, and it acts as a catalyst for the workload for the rest of the year. Along with Fudge Jensen, student public advisors work to keep the stresses of applicants at bay via phone lines or sitting at the front desk to offer drop-in advising. “The most stressful part of being an advisor during admissions season is having conversations with students who weren’t admitted,” said Jessica Boensch, a fourth-year political science and communication major who serves as a public advisor. “Admission to UC Davis gets more competitive every year, and we receive so many applications that there are some very qualified students who aren’t admitted

ADMISSIONS on 11

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March 14, 2019 by The California Aggie - Issuu