January 9 2020

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VOLUME 138, ISSUE 11 | THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 2020

THEAGGIE.ORG

STUDENT SERVICES AND JOBS THREATENED UNLESS STUDENTS VOTE TO PASS ASUCD FEE REFERENDUM

KAT HERIN E F RA N KS / AG GIE

Proposed fee would be $34 per quarter, the first increase to fee since 1979 BY CLAIRE DO DD & RE B E CCA B IH N-WALLACE campus@theaggie.org Facing a roughly $500,000 deficit, the Associated Students of the University of California, Davis (ASUCD), is proposing the first increase to its student base fee in more than 40 years. According to ASUCD Controller Kevin Rotenkolber, who supports the proposed base fee increase, this deficit is due to many years of “mismanagement at the very top of the Association from previous executive teams” and “forces beyond the control [of ] anyone within the Association.” ASUCD officials hope that the Basic Needs and Services Referendum, the name of the vote to increase the base fee which is set for the ballot this winter, will help solve the budget crisis. The current base fee — a quarterly rate that students pay to support the organization — sits at $8 per quarter, or $24 per year, unchanged since 1979. Before that, it was $7 per quarter, changing minimally since the organization’s inception in 1915. According to projections, the referendum would raise the 2020–21 base fee from $8 to $34 per quarter, then increase by roughly $8 each subsequent year after in an attempt to sustain the many functions of ASUCD. Among other things, the referendum would finance The Pantry, the Mental Health Initiative (MHI), Housing Advising for Undergraduate Students (HAUS) and many other student-led organizations. It would also ideally account for other ASUCD-provided events, services and programs. Rotenkolber explained in a 2020 financial report the challenges the association faces as well as potential solutions. The document describes the “financial freefall” ASUCD has experienced in recent years, and concludes with an in-depth look at the Basic Needs and Services Referendum. He said that one of the biggest obstacles that hinders the success of the Basic Needs and Services Referendum is voter apathy, demonstrated by the historically low voter turnout in previous elections. For the referendum to pass successfully, two different thresholds must be met: At least 20% of the undergraduate student body must vote and 60% of voters must vote “yes.” ASUCD hopes that the voter turnout will be comparable to last year’s Unitrans Referendum, when around 10,000 undergraduates voted “yes.” By comparison, in the past 100-plus years, the minimum wage in California has been adjusted 31 times due to rising living costs. This has put a significant strain on the association, which employs approximately 1,200 students. While costs continue to soar, the ASUCD base fee has remained stagnant, largely contributing to the deficit. It is also notably the lowest student government base fee as compared to other UC campuses — UC Berkeley students, for example, pay $112 annually, while UC Santa Barbara students pay $630. The upcoming ASUCD fee referendum will determine ASUCD’s future and the ability for its units to continue to function. (Kevin Rotenkolber / Courtesy)

FEEREFERENDUM on 10

SPRING COMMENCEMENT SPEAKERS INCLUDE CA SURGEON GENERAL, COLLEGE DISTRICT CHANCELLOR, NASA ASTRONAUT

Distinguished alumni announced as speakers

Confetti falls on graduating students during commencement from a previous year. UC Davis has announced the three commencement speakers for this upcoming Spring. (UC Davis / Courtesy)

BY G RASC HEL L E FAR I ÑAS H IPO L I TO campus@theaggie.org Among the many distinguished UC Davis alumni, three were announced as speakers for the campus’ undergraduate commencements in June. Nadine Burke Harris, California’s first surgeon general; Francisco Rodriguez, chancellor of the

Los Angeles Community College District and Tracy Caldwell Dyson, a NASA astronaut, will speak to the thousands of graduates and guests at the UC Davis Health Stadium on June 12, 13 and 14 respectively. Traditionally, seven commencement ceremonies were held each year at UC Davis: three for the College of Letters and Science, two for the College of Agricultural and Environmental

Sciences, one each for the College of Biological Sciences and for the College of Engineering. The seven commencements have been condensed into three – with the distinguished speakers each speaking at one – and majors from each of the four colleges will be represented at each of the ceremonies. The selection and invitation of these prominent speakers are among the university’s changes to spring undergraduate commencement announced in April to celebrate UC Davis as a whole as a leading public university. “A committee of students, faculty and staff made recommendations to the chancellor based on the suggestions that came from a variety of sources,” said Julia Ann Easley, a news and media relations specialist for UC Davis. “The chancellor then made a final decision based on the top recommendations.” The selected speakers have made strides in the fields of public health, education and engineering. Burke Harris earned her medical degree from UC Davis in 2001 and was appointed Surgeon General of California in Jan. 2019 by Governor Gavin Newsom. As a clinician, researcher and author, Burke Harris advocates for educating people on how Adverse Childhood Experiences, or ACEs, negatively impact patients’ health. In 2018, she released her first book The Deepest Well: Healing the Long-Term Effects of Childhood Adversity.

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DAVIS POLICE DEPARTMENT WEIGHS POSSIBILITY OF PUBLIC SECURITY CAMERAS, PLATE READERS TO COMBAT THEFT

Police are considering installing surveillance equipment around city to ward off future property crimes

BY TI M LALONDE city@theaggie.org The Davis Police Department said it is considering installing security cameras and license plate readers in public areas around the city in response to a recent uptick in property crimes. Police Chief Darren Pytel introduced the possibility of public security cameras in a City Council meeting on Dec. 3. He began by outlining crime statistics in the city over the past five years, noting that crime levels in Davis have remained relatively stable. Reported violent crimes in the city — including aggravated assault, homicide and rape — have decreased over the five year period, according to Pytel. Certain property crimes, such as larceny and theft, show a minor increase in the statistics, however. “We have seen an increase in theft or larceny in the past year,” Pytel said. “We’ve been trying to figure that out [and] study it more.” Particularly concerning, Pytel said, was the series of armed robberies that occurred in Davis during fall 2019. “The series we’ve had recently is different,” Pytel said. “We haven’t had carjackings in over five years, and just over the past month or so we’ve had two — and they’ve been involving armed suspects, and our UC students have been the victims.” Pytel said that some arrests had been made in connection with the robberies, and investigations are ongoing. Some of the crimes have been connected to “renewed gang activity” and violent crime centered around Woodland and West Sacramento, according to Pytel. Pytel also pointed to the string of “very brazen” laptop robberies in downtown coffee shops that occurred in late 2018 and early 2019. The Davis Enterprise reported a recent strong-arm laptop theft at Philz Coffee on Dec. 29, 2019. The Davis PD put forward two proposals to the council for increased crime prevention. First, Pytel suggested that the police enroll in an online crime-mapping and data analysis tool called Accurint Virtual Crime Center, which would allow Davis police to share crime data with other law enforcement in the Greater Sacramento region. The second proposal was a “Remote Public Safety Camera System” (RPSCS), a series of surveillance cameras placed in public parking lots and potentially some roadways and intersections that police hope will act as a crime deterrent and a tool to assist investigations. Davis already has two such cameras, according to a staff report, but with some technological limitations. “The two existing cameras can be used for relatively short periods of time because of their limited storage and power capacity; they are not designed for long-term use at a single location,” the report read. Pytel said that the cameras could help compensate for what he believed was an understaffed local police department. He acknowledged the city’s budgetary concerns and said that the RPSCS offered a less expensive alternative to hiring more police officers. “I’m not here asking for more cops tonight,” Pytel said. “But I do think that some of the conversations with the Remote Public Safety Camera system have to include that this is a new, emerging way to use technology to increase our eyes in the sky and to monitor areas where we simply don’t have the personnel to do it.” The RPSCS does not include face

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