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VOLUME 147, ISSUE 7 | THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2023
UC Davis Police Department reported assault incidents and vandalism at Davis College Republicans event on Nov. 3
Riley Gaines was the featured speaker at the event, which urged around 100 community members to protest outside of the building where she spoke BY LILY FREEMAN campus@theaggie.org On Nov. 3, the Davis College Republicans (DCR) hosted a speaker event featuring Riley Gaines, a former competitive swimmer. Gaines spoke on “the importance of protecting women’s sports” at the event, according to the Davis College Republicans’ Instagram. The event raised a response among Davis community members, where posters were hung across campus prior to the event in protest of Gaines speaking. The posters’ header said, in all caps, “Transphobia isn’t welcome in Davis.” “On November 3rd, Davis College Republicans will be bringing Riley Gaines, a notorious transphobe who cited bomb threats towards the Davis Public library, to speak at UC Davis,” the poster read. “We will not stand for that bullshit.” The protest started on Nov. 3 around 5:30 p.m., an hour and a half prior to the time that Gaines spoke.
Around 100 protesters convened outside of the UC Davis Conference Center, which is where the DCR event took place, according to a statement from UC Davis News and Media Relations. There was also a smaller group of counter-protesters who stood outside of the premises. The UC Davis Police Department reported two incidents of assault at the protest, according to the statement, and no one requested medical attention. “Police also fielded a separate report of vandalism,” the statement read. “Protesters broke the glass on doors and a window on a campus building a short distance from the event. Graffiti was painted on one building and Egghead statues.” No one from the protest or event was arrested. The statement concluded with the university’s position on both the DCR event and the protest. “As a public university, UC Davis is dedicated to the First Amendment and the pursuit of knowledge through the free, open and non-violent exchange of ideas,” the statement concluded. “Allowing registered student groups to use campus facilities does not constitute an endorsement by the university of the event, the speaker or the views expressed.”
“A flyer for a speaker event, hosted by Davis College Republicans, hangs on a lecture hall bulletin board.” (Aggie File)
Off-campus students speak on the Students For Davis housing crisis, price jacks, Justice in Palestine ant attacks and outdated shacks host walkout and Good and fair-priced off-campus housing is hard to come by according to statistics and students BY FAITH DEMEULENAERE
The walkout on the Wellman lawn was dedicated toward protesting the conflict in Gaza and Palestine and the rally was aimed at calling out administration
LUNA SU / AGGIE
features@theaggie.org Navigating the realm of off-campus housing poses a lot of challenges for the majority of students, packed with an array of hurdles. These obstacles encompass complex financial considerations, perplexing regulatory constraints and even potential legal transgressions, casting an unsurprising shadow over the experiences of first-time renters. This issue is particularly salient among students whose eagerness to secure proximity to campus makes them susceptible to occasional exploitation. According to the UC Davis Housing Vacancy Report of 2021, “... the average rental rate for all units was $2,034 per month. This represents a 4.7 percent increase over 2020, when the average rental rate for unit-leased apartments was $1,943. This rental rate increase is above the 2.2 percent increase recorded between 2019 and 2020, but is comparable to historical annual rent increases, which range from four to nine percent per year.” The article also stated per person, rent averaged around just under $1,100 a month. This does not account for anything besides rent, such as utilities, parking, gardening services or WiFi charges. It is estimated that these
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rally on Oct. 25
BY KAYA DO-KHANH campus@theaggie.org
additional charges can cost anywhere from $50 to $150 per month per person. According to the Vacancy Report shown above, four plus bedroom units are the most likely to be vacant in Davis by a large lead. According to most housing websites provided by the Most Affordable Housing in Davis page from the localwiki, four plus bedrooms units seem to be the cheapest in singular and shared bedroom types. Even upon looking at the current rates from one of the various apartment complexes from that list, the cheapest option for a shared bedroom, meaning two people occupying one room, is $884. According to the UC Davis Housing Vacancy Report of 2010, a student could get an entire studio apartment for an average of $787. Since the cheapest option of 2023 was roughly $884 for a shared bedroom in a house of more than four people, when compared to 2010, a student would be paying only about $283 for the same thing. In a span of a little over 10 years, what a student could once afford with the same amount of money has shrunk drastically. With this drastic price change, have any of the housing options gotten better? Better yet, have most of them even been refurbished since 2010? “My maintenance man had to come
to fix my heater and openly told me it was from the 70s,” Jessica Young, a fifth-year political science major, said. “I pay a little under $1,800 for a studio apartment. [...] I’ve had friends who haven’t had a stove, oven, no free laundry or parking spaces, bug infestations, you name it. They are all still paying over a grand every month.” Anna Bronstein, a third-year psychology major, brings safety into question when considering certain housing options in Davis, “We had someone going door to door, trying to unlock every door and break in. They [landlords] didn’t even install any sort of safety features or cameras for a while. When they did, it was a singular camera pointing at, like, one spot out of the entire [apartment] complex.” Many students could agree that the high pricing of off-campus housing does not always guarantee safety or a number of amenities. With that in mind, when students are considering renting they should always know their renter’s rights, research the property management or landlords, always alot room in budgeting outside of rent for amenities and have a mental list of what they value as a renter. Which, according to Young, can sometimes come down to valuing having a dishwasher over having your own bedroom: “You just have to pick your battles.”
On Wednesday Oct. 25 at 12 p.m., the Students For Justice in Palestine (SJP) club at UC Davis hosted a walkout and rally on the Wellman lawn to protest the recent siege on Gaza. The walk out was dedicated toward protesting the conflict in Gaza and Palestine as a whole. According to a post on SJP’s Instagram, the rally was held to “call our administration for their complicity in the genocide.” Draped with the black-and-white Palestinian keffiyeh scarves over their faces, a number of students walked out onto the Wellman lawn carrying signs that read “Free Palestine” and “No Justice No Peace.” Another sign read, “This law student doesn’t want to work for people that turn a blind eye to genocide.” Before the rally started, a member of SJP told the crowd to grab the free lunch that was provided which included lentils and water from tables set up at the front of the lawn. They were also handing out free masks as he told the people gathered on the lawn, “I really recommend covering your face because we are being surveillanced by UC Davis
organizations and police.” A group of students hung a large banner from the front balcony of the second floor of Wellman Hall with a drawing of the Palestinian flag along with writing that read “Free Palestine End The Occupation.” At 12:30 p.m., a speaker from SJP went to the front of the lawn with a bullhorn, gave a speech and led a series of chants, such as “Free, Free Palestine, Israel, Israel go to hell. Colonizers we don’t need them, what we want is total freedom.” People were waving the Palestinian flag and beating a drum. The students also chanted, “Up, up with liberation, down, down with occupation. Biden, Biden you can’t hide, we charge you with genocide [..] “Gary May, you can’t hide, we charge you with genocide.” There were flyers posted outside of Wellman Hall that had a picture of Chancellor Gary May that read in print, “Gary May sits on the board of Leidos, a defense company that works with the Israeli Ministry of Defense and the Israel Airport Authority [...] Next time Gary says he rejects violence and hate, ask him if that includes all the refugees he’s helped murder.” WALKOUT on 2
The Students for Justice in Palestine club at UC Davis hosted a walk-out and rally on the Wellman lawn to protest the recent events in Gaza. (Kaya Do-Khanh / Aggie)