May 14 2020

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VOLUME 138, ISSUE 27 | THURSDAY, MAY 14, 2020

THEAGGIE.ORG

THIRD-YEAR UC DAVIS STUDENT FILES LAWSUIT AGAINST UC DEMANDING PRO-RATA FEE REFUND

RA B IDA / AGG IE

UC, CSU systems sued

TESTING OF COVID-19 SKIN PATCH VACCINE BEGUN BY VERNDARI INC. IN COLLABORATION WITH UC DAVIS

UC Davis Mouse Biology Program collaborates with biopharma-

ceutical company by conducting animal trials

BY MI CHELLE WONG science@theaggie.org

Mrak Hall at UC Davis. The UC and CSU systems are currently facing a class action lawsuit over refusing to refund any tuition and fees. (Photo by Justin Han / Aggie)

BY AL EX W E I N ST E I N campus@theaggie.org Disclaimer: The refunds demanded from this lawsuit would directly impact The California Aggie. Campus News Reporter Alex Weinstein is a volunteer writer and does not receive a stipend. Two lawsuits were filed on April 27 alleging that the UC and California State University (CSU) systems breached contract in closing campuses and not rendering certain services. The plaintiffs call for students to be reimbursed. This may be a challenge, however, as the university is currently facing a major financial crisis. In a recent letter to Gov. Gavin Newsom, UC President Janet Napolitano claims that “direct assistance that UC campuses will receive through the CARES Act will not be sufficient to cover even the first month of [the UC’s] COVID-19 response.” The plaintiff named in the case against the UC, Claire Brandmeyer, claims that despite these losses, students should still be paid back. Brandmeyer is a third-year student at UC Davis majoring in psychology with a minor in gender studies. “I feel like they’re doing the bare minimum,” she said about the university’s response. “I feel like they have the money.” The claims in the lawsuit detail certain fees and expenses that students pay toward the uni-

versity. Plaintiffs claim that some of these services are not being rendered. For Spring Quarter 2020, the total campus-based fees amount to $641.74, according to the UC Davis Finances website, and the student services fee was $376. Many fees listed in the suit, however are still partially being used: the ASUCD fee is still going toward paying senators, administrators and funding other online programs, The California Aggie fee is still going toward staff salaries, the campus expansion initiative fee continues as construction is ongoing, the 24-Hour room remains open, counseling and tutoring services are offered online and professors continue to commute to campus to record or broadcast lectures. When asked about a partial refund for some of these fees, Brandmeyer and counsel gave conflicting answers. “I am looking for a full refund,” Brandmeyer said. Noel Garcia, an associate attorney at Cowper Law, PC, one of the three groups representing Brandemeyer and her class, said the refund was considered a pro-rata, or proportional, refund of fees paid for the entire year. “However, it’s a full refund for the spring quarter fees,” Garcia said. An answer from the plaintiff, however, differed from that given by the counsel. After being informed of some of these ongoing programs, Brandmeyer said, “all the fees that we are paying

for, what we are not using is the money that I think should be returned.” The total of fees, according to Garcia, is $1,100 averaged across all UC campuses — a combination of campus-based and student services fees. The UC as a whole, however, is at over a $310 million loss for Spring Quarter 2020. Garcia said CSUs and UCs have multi-million or multi-billion dollar endowments to sustain them. “Not only was it admitted that they have money in reserves, but that they’re not willing to use it to bail themselves out right now because they want to get those monies from people in the future,” Garcia said. ”So instead of using the money they have, they’re tapping into money that’s already been paid by the students, and essentially pushing those losses off on the students.” She referenced a recent panel of higher education leaders that spoke about endowments. Many endowments are donated for a specific cause. Donors stipulate that these funds need to go toward a specific project or type of program. This panel also discussed the existence of unrestricted endowments — those with no direction on where the funds are allocated. “This seems like precisely the time to use the vast unrestricted endowments available to the UC System,” Garcia said via email.

CLASSACTION on 11

CORONAVIRUS SPARKS INCREASE IN ANTI-ASIAN HATE CRIMES ACROSS U.S. Asians, Asian-Americans have been targets of racial discrimination due to paranoia, misinformation MA R IO R ODR IGU EZ / AGGIE

BY JE L E N A L A P U Z city@theaggie.org Since news of the coronavirus pandemic became public, Asians and Asian Americans have become the recent targets of racial discrimination. Asians and Asian Americans are blamed nationally for the cause and spread of COVID-19, resulting in a significant increase in anti-Asian hate crimes. These hate crimes include derogatory remarks, verbal attacks replete with racial slurs, racist vandalism and, in some cases, physical assault. Ayanna Yonemura, a professor of Asian American Studies at UC Davis and lecturer at Sacramento State University, admitted that she was saddened but not surprised.

“If we look back at U.S. history, we do see issues of discrimination and scapegoating against Asian Americans,” Yonemura said. It goes hand-in-hand with the long-existing myths that Asians are dirty and unhygienic, Yonemura further explained, and pre-existing stereotypes about Asians and Asian Americans. Yonemura viewed this situation as a rude or abrupt awakening of the fact that the nation has more to work on. She emphasized the importance of finding ways to support various Asian advocates and civil rights organizations, as well as taking this opportunity to work with those who do not necessarily identify as Asian or Asian American. “I want to take this opportunity to express my concern and my empathy for people who are feeling targeted and people who are feeling afraid,”

Yonemura said. “It’s enough of a burden for any human being right now to be afraid for the health of themselves and their loved ones.” Davis Mayor Brett Lee, who is Asian American, explained that discrimination against Asians and Asian Americans has always existed, but now it has become more visible. “This current COVID-19 situation has not created racism where it did not exist,” Lee said. “It sort of opened the door for people to express underlying racist views.” Lee said the City of Davis does not support the blaming of people’s race in any way, and condemns discrimination and xenophobia in all forms. While Lee was not familiar with any hate crimes that occurred specifically within the City of Davis, he assured that the Davis Police Department would take any reported incidents very seriously. “I think this has really shown what racism is — at some level — all about, which is trying to find an easy ‘other’ to blame,” Lee said. “As a society, we can do better, and we absolutely should do better.” Stacey Salinas, a senior historian of the Bulosan Center for Filipino Studies, had more to say on how Americans can help fight anti-Asian discrimination with knowledge and awareness instead of ignorance and prejudice. “We must reorganize and rethink what our federal government’s cultural beliefs are,” Salinas said. “It would fall on us to continue building an Asian platform.” Salinas also emphasized that taking action against this issue is simpler than one might think. “Just remember that you matter,” Salinas said. “As long as you’re present — you don’t have to be the person driving the movement, you can be the person sitting in the backseat or even be in the passenger seat — because as long as you’re part of being present, then that’s another thing to add to the movement of being recognized and having a voice.”

Imagine being able to receive a vaccine through the mail in the form of a transdermal patch instead of an injection at the doctor’s office. Verndari Inc., a biopharmaceutical company dedicated to modernizing vaccine development and delivery, is currently making advances toward this possibility with the help of UC Davis facilities. The company recently announced that they will begin testing their patch delivery system in collaboration with UC Davis’ Mouse Biology Program in the first steps of developing a potential COVID-19 vaccine. Daniel Henderson, the chief executive of Verndari Inc., initially began testing his designs for the Verndari’s VaxiPatch, a skin patch vaccine delivery system. The skin patch vaccine, for the flu, was a collaboration with UC Davis’ Department of Bioengineering in 2016. “We hope it can really transform the way we think about vaccines because if we could make them room temperature stable, we could ship them all over the world,” Henderson said. “If we make it something that is easy to apply, [it’s] potentially something we could self-apply.” After developing flu vaccines to apply to the microneedles on the patch, preclinical testing began with the Mouse Biology Program. This led to promising results in early December of 2019. As COVID-19 became a more prominent threat, the company switched its focus from developing a flu vaccine to addressing the pandemic issue at hand. The Mouse Biology Program’s role in this preclinical testing consists of looking at the vaccine’s ability to move from the transdermal patch into the body, according to Kristin Grimsrud, the associate director of vivaria and veterinary care at the Mouse Biology Program. In addition, they will be making sure the body can recognize the antigens part of the vaccine and build antibodies against it. They hope to optimize the technology of this patch vaccine in order to achieve the same, if not better, results compared to an injectable vaccine. Grimsrud explained that the FDA requires these animal trials prior to human clinical trials in order to show the vaccine’s safety and efficacy. In other words, animal models are a tool used to make sure there are no adverse effects associated with the vaccine and that humans will be able to benefit from it. “Before you move [the vaccine] into the human, [...] you need to work in multiple animal models, which takes time, to show that not only were you able to show that it’s safe, but that in the event that that individual got infected, it stopped the infection from causing a clinical disease or at least reduced the clinical symptoms,” Grimsrud said. Once the rat models prove the vaccine’s safety and efficacy, larger animal models, such as non-human primate (NHP) models, will be used to demonstrate the vaccine’s ability to prevent severe diseases. The California National Primate Research Center (CNPRC) helps with providing these NHP models. “Vaccine immunogenicity and efficacy outcomes in NHPs are more likely to predict outcomes in humans relative to small animal models, making the NHP model a very powerful model for studies centered around COVID-19,” said Smita Iyer, an assistant professor and core scientist at the infectious disease unit at the CNPRC, via email. The CNPRC has the rhesus macaque, or NHP, model of COVID-19 along with the animal approval protocols in place and ready to start testing once Verndari Inc. is satisfied with the results of the rat studies, according to Iyer. In the meantime, the Mouse Biology Program is taking an active role in collaborating with Verndari Inc. by brainstorming prototypes and offering intellectual insight rather than solely conducting tests, stated Grimsrud. “We really like that nice partnership and friendship we’ve built with [Verndari Inc.] over the years, and we’re just really proud of the work they’ve achieved,” Grimsrud said. “Often we don’t get to talk about what we do in animal research and so it’s exciting that we actually do get to talk a little bit about what we do and have others know about it as well so they can value the animals that have contributed to the research as well.”


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