FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA
@THECALIFORNIAAGGIE
SERVING THE UC DAVIS CAMPUS AND COMMUNITY SINCE 1915
THE CALIFORNIA AGGIE
THEAGGIE.ORG
@CALIFORNIAAGGIE
@CALIFORNIAAGGIE
VOLUME 138, ISSUE 18 | THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020
UC DAVIS GRADUATE STUDENTS TAKE UP FIGHT FOR COST OF LIVING ADJUSTMENTS COLA movement, which began and continues at UCSC, spreads UC-wide, makes national headlines Davis for Bernie is one of many political groups can be found tabling in the Quad at UC Davis. (Photo by Quinn Spooner / Aggie)
ACROSS THE AISLE: CLUB LEADERS DISCUSS ELECTIONS, PREDICTIONS FOR PRIMARIES On-campus voting for state
primaries will take place March 3
in the Garrison Room, from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.
BY SOP HI E DEWEES features@theaggie.org
recent tragic unintentional shooting in Davis last week of one of our high schoolers,” Ault said. “Our hearts go out to the family, friends and school community of the victim, to the first responders on the case and our community at large.” Moms Demand Action member Jill Crowley explained the mission of their group, which was established in Yolo County in September 2018. “We are a grassroots movement of Americans fighting to keep guns out of the hands of dangerous people and create a culture of responsible gun ownership,” Crowley said. Dixon, which is nine miles from Davis, held a firearm show on Feb. 15 and 16. At the firearm show, Solano County Deputy Sheriff Joseph Pinder ran a booth explaining the application process for a concealed carry permit. Pinder described his view on civilians carrying firearms. “It gives you the option to protect yourself, because law enforcement isn’t always available,” Pinder said. John Arabia, a Vacaville resident and owner of the Dixon Gun Show, echoed similar sentiments about the protection that firearms can offer. “While I grew up, my parents owned firearms,” Arabia said. “I was in law enforcement. I like firearms and in law enforcement, I think they’re a tool.” Davis Mayor Brett Lee called for increased education on firearm safety at the Feb. 11 council meeting.
With the escalating race for the Democratic nomination and the upcoming Democratic primaries in California, students who registered Democratic face the task of sorting through campaign advertisements and biased and unbiased news sources to make an informed decision when voting. This is no easy task, according to Brooke Pritchard, a third-year political science major and president of Davis College Democrats (DCD). “I just think the most important thing in voting is making sure [of ] the information you get,” Pritchard said. “Every news [source], no matter how factual you think it is, everything has a bias. I just want people to crosscut those ideologies, [...] things that have historically been a binary and try to deconstruct that.” Even if students do not vote in the primaries, the fluctuating popularity of the Democratic candidates and the states of the two major political parties is of interest to many Davis students. This includes Noah Dickman, a fourth-year economics and political science double major and president of Davis College Republicans (DCR). “I have never seen a political party try so hard to lose an election,” Dickman said, referring to the Democrats. Politics as usual? A large portion of politically-inclined individuals feel that the two major political parties are becoming more polarized, each moving further away from a moderate agenda. DCD and its members reflect the changing views of the Democratic party, according to Pritchard. “This has been an organization that’s lasted over a decade,” Pritchard said. “Definitely at the start, they were more moderate, and now we’re transitioning to leaning further left. I feel like Bernie Sanders has really changed the scope of that and exciting more of the electorate. Not only have we [become] less moderate and more progressive, but also more diversified.” In regards to the primaries, Pritchard said her ideal candidate would solve past problems for the party, such as changing DNC requirements. “I’m definitely happy that there [have] been long-term ailments of the Democratic party that [are] finally being seen and brought to light,” Pritchard said. “I’m hoping that whoever gets elected is going to be able to cure that.” To Dickman, not just the Democratic party but American politics in general seem to be changing as a whole. “I think that we’re kind of in a stage [of ] celebrity politics,” Dickman said. “I think we’re going to see a lot more people running as personalities [and] policies are not going to matter so much in the future.” With all due respect... On a liberal-leaning college campus, Dickman said it can be difficult to feel comfortable discussing his political views. “[A] college campus is supposed to be about learning how to confront different ideas, especially how to process things you disagree with,” Dickman said. “To me, the worst thing you can do is try to make the thing you disagree with disappear. Throughout history, [...] all of the worst ideas have come from [...] someone trying to suppress a message.” According to Dickman, DCR tries to encourage differing opinions among Republican students at Davis.
GUNSIMPLICATIONS on 11
POLITICS on 11
Supporters of UCD 4 COLA rally inside the SCC, where UC regents were touring the centers. (Photo by Janelle Salanga / Aggie)
BY JA N EL L E M A R I E SAL ANGA campus@theaggie.org UC Davis graduate students have joined the now UC system-wide fight for a cost of living adjustment (COLA). The movement that initially started during Fall Quarter 2019 at UC Santa Cruz has now expanded to include graduate students from UC Merced, UC Berkeley, UCLA, UC Santa Barbara, UC San Diego, UC Riverside and UC Irvine — all of whom have organized their own COLA movements. The COLA movement aims to secure higher wages for graduate students in the face of increasing housing costs. At least 85 UC Santa Cruz graduate students are withholding over 12,000 Fall Quarter grades and refusing to teach or research. Several publications have covered the movement, including NPR, Teen Vogue, The Guardian and The New York Times. Thousands of supporters rallied across the nine UCs on Feb. 21. At UC Davis, hundreds gathered by the MU flagpole at noon to march to Mrak Hall, following actions on Feb. 9, Feb. 11 and Feb. 20. After the main march, a smaller group went to the Student Community Center
(SRRC) where UC regents were visiting. Their march was motivated by a Feb. 14 letter from UC President Janet Napolitano asking teaching assistants at UCSC to submit grades by 11:59 p.m. on Feb. 21 or face “consequences, up to and including the termination of existing employment at the university.” Doctoral student Beshara Kehdi called the Feb. 21 rally “momentous” and “historic.” “Today is the day that UCSC told their graduate students that this is a retaliation day for them going on strike,” Kehdi said. “If you continue, the threats about losing your position — today is the day that would happen. No. The UC has no right to terrorize its graduate students.” One demand presented on Feb. 21 was a cost of living adjustment for Davis graduate students, who — like all other UC graduate students — make $2,400 a month under their current contract, negotiated by United Auto Workers (UAW) Local 2865 and the UC Office of the President (UCOP). The statement said a report from UAW Local 2865 states that UC Davis academic student employees (ASEs) need a COLA of $1,553.20 per month to be relieved of rent burden. A person is
considered rent-burdened if they spend over 30% of their monthly salary on rent. The median rent in Davis is $1,003, according to a 2019 UC Davis vacancy survey, an almost $50 increase from 2018. According to PayScale, Davis’s cost of living is 46% higher than the national average. To live sustainably in Davis, one needs to earn $50,000 a year. Those statistics motivated Davis graduate students to start their own COLA movement — beyond simply acting in solidarity with Santa Cruz. UC Davis actions began on Dec. 10, with a rally held in front of the MU flagpole in solidarity with UCSC. Several other UCs held rallies for the same purpose that day. In an interview with the Daily Nexus, Emily Rich, an English doctoral student, said the UC Davis COLA movement began when graduate students wanted to support the UCSC students. “We pretty quickly [...] were realizing that we have a lot of similar problems that Santa Cruz is having,” she said. “So we used that first event as a jumping off point.” A statement provided to The California Aggie
COLA on 11
AFTER SHOOTING OF DAVIS TEENAGER, CITY CONFRONTS GUN CONTROL CLIMATE
In the two weeks after unintentional shooting death, Moms Demand Action presents in Davis, Dixon hosts gun show
A firearm show was held in nearby Dixon 10 days after a 19-year-old Davis High School student was shot and killed. (Photo by Eden Winniford / Aggie)
BY E D EN W I N N I FO R D city@theaggie.org On Feb. 6, 19-year-old Jerred Vargas was shot and killed, presumably in an unintentional shooting by his older brother. Davis Police Lieutenant Paul Doroshov provided details of the case. “Based on the initial comments, it was suspected to be an accident,” Doroshov said. “But we would investigate something like that just as seriously as anybody else who lost their lives to a gun-
shot, so the overall investigation is still ongoing.” The weapon was a semi-automatic handgun, according to Doroshov. At this time, it is unknown if the brother, who is in his 20s, owned the weapon. Less than a week after this tragedy, gun safety advocacy group Moms Demand Action gave a pre-planned presentation to the Davis City Council at the Feb. 11 meeting. Co-lead Emily Ault referenced Vargas’ death. “I’d like to take a moment to acknowledge the
DAVIS FOOD CO-OP TEACHING KITCHEN Learn some easy recipes! You will be provided with bare bone recipes that can be easily manipulated to fit what produce and products you have available. Every third Thursday of the month from 5:30-7:30pm. Sign up for some classes on https://forms.gle/Vnd4w2pjvR2LvYr48 OPEN DAILY 7AM—10PM
620 G ST, DAVIS
(530) 758-2667
WWW.DAVISFOOD.COOP
@DAVISFOODCOOP