2011-03-17.pdf

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THE TUFTS DAILY

VOLUME LXI, NUMBER 34

Where You Read It First Est. 1980 TUFTSDAILY.COM

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Somerville schools, Tufts respond to bullying laws

In fundraising effort, BUILD keeps midterm studiers awake

by

Corinne Segal

Daily Editorial Board

Justin McCallum/Tufts Daily

Student members of Building Understanding through International Learning and Development (BUILD) last night delivered coffee to late-night studier sophomore Weilin Mun. All this week, the group is distributing coffee and tea ordered via Facebook as a fundraiser to support its trips to Guatemala and India this summer.

Continued anti-bullying efforts on the part of Somerville public schools and the Tufts community are coinciding with hearings led by Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley to review the state’s new anti-bullying law. Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick (D) last May signed into effect the bill titled “An Act Relative to Bullying in Schools,” which requires Massachusetts primary and secondary schools to develop bullying prevention plans and offer curricula on bullying. The two hearings last month contributed to the aims of a commission chaired by Coakley that is charged with reviewing the existing laws and deciding whether additional legislation is

needed for them to be effective. Massachusetts schools were required to submit their plans to combat bullying under the new law to the state this December for approval, according to Somerville Public Schools’ Director of Student Services Richard Melillo. Approximately 98 percent of school districts met the state criteria, he said. “Everyone’s bullying plan is probably a little different, probably a little tweaked to their community, but it has to fall in line with the state mandates,” Melillo said. The new legislation, he said, was spurred by several incidents in which young Massachusetts students, most famously 11-yearold Carl Walker-Hoover of Springfield in 2009 and 15-yearsee CYBER BULLYING, page 2

Somerville laborers, residents protest nonunion worksite by

Brent Yarnell

Daily Editorial Board

Somerville union workers and residents engaged in a contracting dispute with a private realty company have over the past few weeks picketed and rallied at the construction site of a proposed housing complex about a mile east of Davis Square, claiming that the company has violated promises to the city of Somerville that they would hire local union workers. The dispute started late last year, when KSS Realty Partners awarded the contract to develop the first condominiums on the site, the former location of a MaxPak paper factory, to a nonunion contractor. Somerville resident and union organizer Rand Wilson said that in doing so, KSS violated an agreement it signed with Somerville Mayor Joseph Curtatone in 2007 that said the city would “encourage” the Boston-based developer to hire union workers. City of Somerville Spokesperson Michael Meehan said KSS is in full compliance with the covenant, despite selling

a portion of the project to a nonunion contractor, because that stipulation is not legally binding. “‘Encouraged’ means ‘encouraged,’” he said. “It is, by definition, nonbinding.” Somerville Board of Aldermen President Rebekah Gewirtz told the Daily that the aldermen nevertheless expect KSS to respect the 2007 agreement. “The members of the board feel really strongly that when there’s this kind of language in the covenant, it should be honored,” she said. “There’s a certain level of frustration that an acceptable outcome hasn’t been met.” KSS Realty will on Friday meet with the Boston Building Trades union, one of the unions involved in the dispute, KSS Director of Acquisitions Ted Tobin told the Daily. Wilson said the campaign against KSS would continue until Tobin signs a project labor agreement guaranteeing that the company would hire union workers and establish universal-standards labor hiring see MAXPAK, page 2

UEP thesis student doubles as secondyoungest Mass. state representative by

Marie Schow

Contributing Writer

State Rep. Ryan Fattman (R-Worcester), who is also a Tufts graduate student in the Urban Environmental Policy and Planning (UEP) program, is at age 24 serving as the second-youngest representative in the Massachusetts House of Representatives. Fattman in January was sworn in to the House as a Republican representative for the 18th Worcester District after in November beating four-term Democratic incumbent Jennifer Callahan. He now represents residents of the Bellingham, Millville and Blackstone communities,

along with parts of Sutton and Uxbridge. Justin Hollander, Fattman’s advisor and an assistant professor at UEP, praised his ability to balance his work in both the academic and political realms. “He has a real strength working in teams,” Hollander said. “Ryan was a strong student and a gifted leader.” Fattman lists promoting lower taxes for the disabled and working mothers among his goals in the House, he said. “You can really make a difference if you choose to get involved,” Fattman said. Fattman added that he is aiming to see FATTMAN, page 2

Inside this issue

courtesy the office of Sen. John Kerry

Participants of Somerville-headquartered YouthBuild pose with Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.), who has long supported the national program.

Somerville-based YouthBuild gets $1.1-million grant by

Gabrielle Hernandez Daily Staff Writer

YouthBuild USA, a national nonprofit headquartered in Somerville, was last month the recipient of a $1.1 million grant that will allow it to double the number of young people benefiting from its Postsecondary Education Initiative. YouthBuild helps low-income youth who have dropped out of the education system to pass their General Education Development (GED) exams and develop marketable job skills through construction of low-income housing. The national philanthropy fund New Profit selected YouthBuild to receive the money through the Social Innovation Fund of the federal Corporation for National and Community Service.

The grant, along with funding from democracy-promotion organization Open Society Foundations, will help YouthBuild expand its efforts through its education initiative, which attempts to funnel participants toward college completion, YouthBuild Vice President for Asset Development Charles Clark told the Daily. The money will increase the number of YouthBuild participants to over 1,000 participants nationwide from its current 500 and boost the number of local branches of the initiative. Peter Levine, research director of the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Citizenship and Public Service, said YouthBuild’s efforts at promoting postsee YOUTHBUILD, page 2

Today’s Sections

Take advantage of Boston’s roots and celebrate St. Patrick’s Day with a hearty dose of Irish spirit.

Using household trash, B.E.A.T.s ironically keeps Tufts’ music scene fresh.

see FEATURES, page 3

see ARTS, page 5

News Features Comics Weekender

1 3 4 5

Editorial | Letters Op-Ed Classifieds Sports

8 9 10 Back


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