01-24-2018

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Wednesday, Jan. 24 - Tuesday, Jan. 30, 2018 Weekly Print Edition

Vol. 104, Issue 20 www.thedailyaztec.com

San Diego State University’s Independent Student Newspaper Since 1913

Tens of thousands rally for women’s rights in age of Trump March coincided with one year anniversary of inauguration by Bella Ross STAFF WRITER

Exactly a year after President Donald Trump’s presidential inauguration, thousands took to the streets of San Diego to voice their distaste for the current political environment and rally support for an array of social justice issues. “Hear our vote!” chanted some of the 37,000 people who marched Saturday in the second annual Women’s March in downtown San Diego. The marchers walked in solidarity with groups across the country and around the world, in places as near as San Marcos and as far as Australia. “I guess I’m glad that Trump is in the White House, because he reminds us of the work we need to do each and every day,” state Assemblymember Shirley Weber, D-San Diego, told the crowd in downtown’s Waterfront Park. “The hatred and discrimination never take a vacation. We have to work 25 hours a day.” With midterm elections quickly approaching, San Diego elected officials rallied marchers for increased political participation. There were even voter registration tents set up at the park where the march began. “Congressional seats are up for possible displacement,” said Trish Hyde, an international business sophomore and the political affairs officer for Planned Parenthood Generation Action at San Diego State. “The (Democratic Party) is trying to make 2018 ‘The Year of the Woman’ and trying to take those seats and flip the House and flip the Senate.” With both houses of Congress currently dominated by the Republican Party, Democrats are hoping to shift the majority in their favor through the upcoming midterm elections. For many supporters at the Women’s March, this mission also entails electing more women to public office. Barbara Bry, a San Diego councilmember and founder of

Photo by Andrew Dyer

More than 37,000 people took to the streets of San Diego to participate in the 2018 Women’s March on Saturday, Jan. 20.

the organization Run Women Run, said she believes more women should be running for office. Run Women Run supports and trains pro-choice women to be put in office, according to their website. “When women run, they win,” Bry said. “And, when women win, we make a huge difference for our communities. We build communities that are better for everyone.” The scope of issues addressed by the Women’s March went far beyond political representation. Julia Goldberg, communications junior and president of SDSU’s Women’s Outreach Association, said she believes the need for feminist activism is not new. “Even if Trump wasn’t in office, I think the mission of the Women’s March would still be extremely relevant,” Goldberg said. “These social justice issues have been in our institutions for decades and beyond.” Theatre arts sophomore and director of SDSU’s production of “The Vagina Monologues” Kate Coughlin said she believes SEE WOMEN’S MARCH, PAGE 2

Photo by Jocelyn Moran

Two children embrace as they march for women’s rights and their future.

Maintenance workers protest unfair pay, backlog of repairs by David Santillan SOCIAL MEDIA EDITOR

Maintenance workers at San Diego State held a demonstration on campus Tuesday, protesting what they say is a lack of staffing and unfair pay from the university. Workers gathered in front of Hepner Hall and handed out fliers describing various issues they say they are encountering in maintaining the campus. The demonstrators’ fliers claimed that the California State University system has more than $2.6 billion worth of outstanding maintenance and repairs. SDSU Skilled Trades Director Hector Fernandez who was at the demonstration, said he believes SDSU has close to $600 million of deferred maintenance. “We’re concerned about the fact that they’re understaffing us at San Diego State, so the deferred maintenance continues to increase instead of going down,” Fernandez said. Fernandez said the university currently staffs close to 70 maintenance workers to keep up the roughly 500 millionsquare-foot campus. He said the workers’ concerns have been communicated with university officials who say they are limited on funds from the state but are doing the most they can to address the situation. “It’s a larger issue than what’s happening at SDSU’s campus,” SDSU spokesperson Jill Esterbrooks said via telephone. Meanwhile, the university continues to expand and add more buildings to its campus. SDSU opened the $90 million Engineering and Interdisciplinary Sciences Complex last week. “We have increased close to 23 percent in square footage in the last 10 years and yet our staffing SEE MAINTENANCE WORKERS PROTEST, PAGE 3

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Applications to San Diego State are up for fall 2018, university officials say.

Estudiantes se unieron con la comunidad para defender los derechos de las mujeres.

The hit MTV series “Catfish: The TV Show” is looking for applicants at SDSU.

Senior guard McKynzie Fort has her sights set on the WNBA.

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