THE
INDEPENDENT
STUDENT
N E W S PA P E R
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TUFTS
UNIVERSITY
E S T. 1 9 8 0
T HE T UFTS DAILY
VOLUME LXXXIII, ISSUE 31
tuftsdaily.com
Monday, March 14, 2022
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
Working Group on TUPD Arming to announce recommendations by end of semester by Rebecca Barker News Editor
Tufts’ Working Group on TUPD Arming anticipates releasing new recommendations regarding TUPD’s arming status this semester, Executive Vice President Mike Howard confirmed in an email to the Daily. The working group was formed following the release of the university’s Campus Safety and Policing Workstream final report in February 2021, which recommended creating a working group focused on addressing and potentially reforming TUPD’s arming status. The report estimated that if implemented, “this group’s work could take approximately 12 months and would include a lengthier and more comprehensive communication and engagement effort than the [Working Group on Campus Safety and Policing].” While the Working Group on TUPD Arming seems to be on track to follow a timeline similar to the one proposed in last year’s final report, some commu-
nity members do not feel that the working group has communicated in a transparent and effective way regarding its recommendation process. The Student Prison Education and Abolition Coalition, an umbrella organization for groups at Tufts that engage with carceral justice work including the Tufts University Prison Initiative of Tisch College, Tufts Petey Greene and Tufts for a Racially Equitable Endowment, launched a letter-writing campaign in December calling for the WGTA to release the results of its arming survey. The survey, released to the Tufts community in September, asked participants — including undergraduates students, graduate students, faculty and staff — to select how comfortable they would feel with TUPD, local police departments or mental health professionals responding to various safety threats with varying levels of arming. According to Tatum Schutt, a SPEAC organizer, little was done to communicate that survey results were made public.
NATALIE BROWNSELL / THE TUFTS DAILY
TUPD vehicles are pictured in the lower level of the Dowling Hall garage. “While the results are now available online, the WGTA did little to publicize their release of this information, let alone directly contact anybody who expressed interest via email,” Schutt, a sophomore, wrote in an
email to the Daily. “As a result, the data is only accessible to those who go out of their way to search for it … When they knew the student interest was there, why couldn’t they have announced that the data was available?”
While she appreciates that the results are available publicly, Schutt added that for the university to truly embody its mission to become an anti-racist institusee ARMING, page 2
Tufts Climate Action calls on Tufts administration to completely divest from fossil fuels by Olivia Field
Assistant News Editor
Tufts Climate Action staged a protest outside of Ballou Hall on Friday, calling for the university’s complete divestment from fossil fuel holdings. The protest complements the work TCA has been doing since its founding in 2012.
According to junior Julia Silberman, one of the protest’s organizers, the main goal of the demonstration was to encourage the Tufts administration to divest completely from the fossil fuel industry and raise awareness around climate action. “The climate crisis demands urgent action and we can’t just keep waiting around for
COURTESY JULIA SILBERMAN
Students march to protest Tufts’ investment in fossil fuels on March 11.
bureaucracy to make the decisions that are very important in the fight for climate justice,” Silberman said. Student organizing in support of fossil fuel divestment is not a new occurrence on Tufts’ campus. Students submitted a proposal that the university divest from fossil fuels in February 2013 and in response, University President Anthony Monaco formed the Tufts Divestment Working Group which, at the time, advised against divestment. TCA again rallied for divestment in February 2020. Members of the organization participated in the Responsible Investment Advisory Group which, in February 2021, recommended that Tufts ban direct investment in “120 coal and tar sands companies with the largest reserves.” TCA continues to advocate for full, as opposed to partial, divestment. Helen Cedzidlo, another organizer of the event, emphasized the importance of holding protests in person. “This [protest] is really helping to bring a lot of awareness to our club because for most of the 2020–21 academic year, we
were limited in what we could do,” Cedzidlo, a sophomore, said. “Bringing this event in person to the forefront, where you can’t avoid it or click away from it, is really bringing awareness to our cause.” Protesting in front of Ballou Hall was a strategic choice by TCA to try and directly engage with the administration. The protest aimed to put pressure on Tufts administration to follow other universities in the Greater Boston area that have started to divest from the fossil fuel industry. “Earlier this year, Harvard and BU divested … Tufts is definitely behind the curve on this,” Silberman said. Not only does TCA believe that Tufts is falling behind in its sustainability efforts but also that the administration’s past decision to divest from coal and tar sands is not a strong enough action. “Even though this decision was kind of advertised as being really progressive … they have about 80 million [dollars] still in the fossil fuel industry through indirect investments,” Abigail Harrison, another organizer of the event, said.
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TCA does not believe that the administration has followed through on its public commitments to sustainability. Though there have been some instances where the administration has responded positively to TCA activism, they stress that they continue to struggle to make their voices heard. “In the fall of 2019, we rallied outside Ballou every single week for about six weeks,” Silberman said. “Eventually, [we] were successful in getting the attention of the administration, which led to the origin of the Responsible Investment Advisory Group.” Despite the progress made with the Responsible Investment Advisory Group, TCA still believes that the Tufts administration doesn’t live up to its sustainability standards. “When it actually comes to the practicality of activism, they don’t really support it,” Silberman said. “They like to pretend that they’ve always been on board with these activist movements, because it helps to support their image, so they see CLIMATE, page 2 NEWS
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