Vol. 105 Issue 117
@thepittnews
Pittnews.com
Thursday, February 19, 2015
Maternity and millennials
BOOM CLAP
Aubrey Cofield For The Pitt News
David Throckmorton, drummer for the Thoth Trio, jams out in Nordy’s Place. Christine Lim | Staff Photographer
Board makes progress on new website, students react Abbey Reighard and Marjorie Tolsdorf The Pitt News Staff The Student Government Board is rolling out their new website, which they say will have less virtual clutter and more room for comment. SGB President Graeme Meyer said he expects to finish the new website this weekend. Meyer started thinking about many of the ideas for the new site when he was a Board member last term, but added that the website content has been a collaborative effort between all of the current Board members. The new site will be more clear
and student-friendly than the previous SGB site, according to Meyer. “It has the same features in terms of [listing] office hours, but we kind of broke it up and made it easier to find tabs for students,” Meyer said. One of the additions to the new website is a feature Meyer called the “What To Fix” page, where students can leave questions, comments or concerns for Board members. Meyer said he saw “WTF” pages on other Student Government sites from other universities, such as Penn State. Cody Siegfried, a senior majoring in finance and marketing, said he doesn’t think he’ll be visiting the website. Sieg-
fried said that, in theory, the comments section is an important addition, but in practice, he doubts many Pitt students will utilize it, because he said it seems unlikely a student comment will have the power to cause change. “I would probably not use it. In my four years here, I have never heard of one thing [SGB] has done that has directly affected my life,” Siegfried said. Meyer also said he intends to include an online breakdown of the Student Activities Fund, so students can see where the money they pay in the Student Activities Fee goes.
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As a senior, the last thing on Natalie Marfisi’s mind is whether or not she should have a kid — rather, she’s worrying about finding a job post-graduation. She’s not alone in her line of concerns, and millennials across the board are foregoing childbirth in favor of their education and careers. According to a 2009 study on delayed childbearing by the NCHS, the national average age of women at the time of their first birth increased from 21.4 years in 1970 to 25 years in 2009. Birth rates decline as the battle for new mothers to keep their jobs serves as a deterrent from childbirth. According to a 2013 study commissioned by Helena Morrissey, chief executive of Newton Investment Management, more than 80 percent of women fear that having a child will harm their careers. Marfisi, a 21-year-old senior majoring in political science, decided to wait to have kids in order to pursue her career goals. “I want to wait, I have career ambitions and things I would like to do with my life before I’m lugging around some kid,” Marfisi said. “Also, kids are mad expensive.” For women, the cost of having a kid cuts deeper into their wallet’s than it would for the father. Michelle Budig, a sociologist at the University of Massachusetts, found in a 2013 study that the earnings of American women decrease by four percent for each child she has. In contrast, for each child a man has, their earnings increase by six percent. Hefty childcare costs also play a role in family planning. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in 2013, roughly 63 percent
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