May 19, 2015

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MAY 19, 2015

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UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA ANCHORAGE

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Seawolves No. 2 in GNAC Championships

UAA’s senior leaders take furloughs this summer By George Hyde

gchyde@thenorthernlight.org

PHOTO BY ADAM EBERHARDT

Distance Runner Nathan Kipchumba races in the men’s 800-meter preliminary during the GNAC Outdoor Track & Field Championships at McArthur Field in Monmouth, Oregon, on May 8.

By Nolin Ainsworth

sports@thenorthernlight.org

The UAA men’s and women’s outdoor track and field teams each placed second at the Great Northwest Athletic Conference Championships hosted by Western Oregon University earlier this month. A podium sweep in the men’s 10,000 and 5,000-meter races, three meetrecord performances on the women’s side and a 220-foot javelin throw by one senior were several highlights for the Seawolves in the GNAC championships May 8-9. Western Washington University squeezed out the men’s championship, bettering the Green and Gold by 2 points, which translates to a fraction of a second in this sport. “It came to the very last 20 meters of the men’s 4x (400-meter relay). I mean, we lost by 0.08 seconds. If we’d have won that we would have been tied,” said head coach Matt Friess of the last race of the meet. “We knew it was going to be really close all along and we edged Western Washington by a few points indoors, they edged us by a few points outdoors.” Both Franz Burghagen and Elliot Bauer, both seniors, repeated as champions in their respective events of javelin toss and 400-meter hurdles. The three-headed monster of junior Victor Samoei, freshman Henry Cheseto and junior Dominik Notz finished 1-2-3 in the men’s 10,000-meter race. The following

day, senior Dylan Anthony got in on the action, teaming up with Cheseto and Notz to complete another podium sweep — this time in the 5000-meter Anthony, who ran for Kodiak High School, won the event in a blistering 14:39.17 seconds. On the women’s side, Seattle Pacific was victorious over the rest of the competition with 183 points and enjoyed a much more comfortable margin of victory of 29 points. Coach Friess was proud of his female bunch, which did not have a deep roster to begin with. “It is a pretty amazing crew really,” said Friess, “We had ... 13 or 14 athletes compared to, you know, 24 or 25 athletes on the other teams.” The “amazing crew” included sophomore sprinter Jamie Ashcroft and senior hurdler Hayleigh Lloyd. Both left conference championships with new meet-records to their name. Ashcroft won the 100-meter and 200-meter titles. She ran the fastest GNAC Championships 100-meter in the preliminaries on Friday before going on to win the final heat the next day. Ashcroft set the meet-record in the 200-meter dash on Saturday with a time of 24.45 seconds. Lloyd was victorious in the 400-meter hurdles, setting the meet-record in 1:00.29. Her fellow hurdler Rosie Smith didn’t do too bad either. She beat out the rest of the competition in the 100-meter

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hurdles. It was Smith’s first time winning the title in that event. Last but not least, junior Karolin Anders took home both the long jump and heptathlon individual titles. A heptathlon is a multi-sport event that includes the 100-meter, 200-meter, shot put, javelin, high jump, long jump and 800-meter. The Seawolves will send seven women and four men for the NCAA Championships this weekend in the Allendale, Michigan. Anders, Ashcroft, Lloyd, Beatrice Decker, Amy Johnston, Caroline Kurgat and Jessica Pahkala will be lacing it up for the UAA women. The men will be represented by two throwers and two runners. Both Notz and Cheseto are looking to make a splash in the 5,000-meter Burghagen and Cody Parker will provide each other some friendly competition in the javelin throw. The meet kicks off on Thursday and runs until Saturday.

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University of Alaska Anchorage leadership will take furloughs this July, according to a recent statement from UAA. Across the University of Alaska system, 167 employees will be affected — 69 of which work at UAA. These furloughs will last anywhere from five to 10 days, depending on the position. They will save the system about $600,000, and they will save UAA in particular $270,000. “This is the first of many painful decisions UAA will have to make,” said UAA Chancellor Tom Case in a press statement. “By starting with furloughs at the top, we hope to avoid pay reductions for those who can least afford it.” UAA also plans to announce additional plans to reduce spending, including layoffs, reduced work assignments and position eliminations ­— the majority of which are in the university’s administrative offices. For academics, this also includes increased teaching hours for faculty, increasing class sizes and reduced hires. According to Ronald Kamahele, director of Human Resources at UAA, the furloughs, at the moment, will not affect lower positions, and they will ultimately help the system. “The leadership furlough is a reasonable step to take in order to help address the reduction in state support for the University expected in Fiscal Year 2016,” said Kamahele. These furloughs come off the heels of budget cuts from Governor Bill Walker and the legislature. UA’s operating budget was reduced from the last fiscal year by a margin of 8.1 percent, or $29.88 million. This has led to speculation among students and faculty of possible cut programs and layoffs, but the furloughs appear to be an attempt to reduce those kinds of risks. However, Kamahele said that the attempt might not be enough. “(The furlough,) by no means, addresses the full budget cut expected in Fiscal Year 2016. The announcement states ‘further cost reduction measures will be announced,’ but those cost reduction measures will be unique to each university campus,” said Kamahele. Kamahele also reassured that the furloughs are temporary, and that it will not extend beyond senior leadership. “Furloughs are temporary in nature,” said Kamahele. “It is unknown at this time if at this time a furlough will be extended to Fiscal Year 2017.” As tough as the situation may seem, Chancellor Tom Case seemed hopeful in the press release. “I know this news seems grim, but we all know that UAA is an amazing university with truly outstanding faculty, staff and students,” said Case in the release. “Difficult times promote creative thinking, and I am confident our community will come together to use this situation to become an even better and stronger university.”

This is a developing story, as details on further cost-cutting measures have yet to come to light. For further future information on the situation go to http://thenorthernlight.org.

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