The Tufts Daily - Monday, December 10, 2018

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Students discuss experiences of racism, discrimination in interactions with faculty see FEATURES / PAGE 6

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL

Jumbos extend unbeaten run to eight games

‘Roma,’ ‘A Star is Born,’ ‘Black Panther’ among the Daily’s top 10 movies this year see ARTS&LIVING / PAGE 9

SEE SPORTS / BACK PAGE

THE

INDEPENDENT

STUDENT

N E W S PA P E R

OF

TUFTS

UNIVERSITY

E S T. 1 9 8 0

T HE T UFTS DAILY

VOLUME LXXVI, ISSUE 60

tuftsdaily.com

Monday, December 10, 2018

MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.

Tufts janitors allege unjust firing, racist treatment by C&W Services supervisors by Catherine Perloff and Kenia French News Editor and Features Editor

Content warning: This article discusses mental health. Editor’s note: This article contains the alleged use of the N-word by a C&W Services employee. In addition, quotes from several janitors were translated from Spanish to English by the reporters of this article. When Victoria Guerra started her new job as a janitorial supervisor at Tufts University in February 2017, she was looking for something more convenient and closer to her home and kids. Instead, she experienced one of the most trying years of her life, culminating in her firing in September by C&W Services, the company with which Tufts contracts its custodial labor. The problem started when Guerra objected to her supervisor, C&W Services Account Manager Shawn Amaral, making comments toward other employees that she perceived as racist. After Guerra reported Amaral’s

racist comments to C&W Services Human Resources (HR), he made her job especially difficult by undermining her authority in front of other janitors and framing her for mistakes she did not make, among other issues. Eventually, Guerra received a four-day suspension in August and was fired one month later for insubordination and unauthorized recording of her interactions with Amaral. Guerra told the Daily in an interview that she felt depressed and had been visiting a psychologist because of the hostile work environment created by her superiors and C&W Services HR. “It was like I was nothing to [C&W Services],” Guerra said. Amaral did not reply to multiple requests for comment. Guerra’s story is emblematic of a workplace environment that over half a dozen janitors at Tufts have described as hostile. Tufts janitors approved a contract with C&W Services in November 2016, but the contract has not prevented a further deterioration in working conditions. An April 2017 petition signed by almost 100 janitors on the Medford/ Somerville campus leveled five demands at

Tufts and C&W Services to improve custodial working conditions. Former janitor Anita Posadas said in November 2017 that she did not receive adequate compensation from C&W Services for her workplace injury partially arising from a heavy workload. Patrick Collins, Tufts’ executive director of public relations, said that the university is not involved in these matters. “We appreciate the work of C&W custodians and their contributions to the maintenance of the spaces we work and learn in. Issues related to the C&W workplace environment are properly addressed by the custodians’ employer, C&W, and the custodians’ union,” Collins told the Daily in an email. Tufts will decide whether to continue working with C&W Services when the university’s contract with the company expires in August 2019, according to Collins. C&W Services spokesperson Christine Wickes said the company does not comment on specific personnel matters. “We strive to ensure C&W Services is a fair, safe, and equitable workplace for every employee,” Wickes told the Daily in an email. “We can’t comment on specific

personnel matters, but we investigate every employee’s concerns fully. The outcomes of our investigations are confidential for the protection of all employees involved.” Guerra was working for C&W Services at another location from 2014–2017. She described the working conditions as good, her bosses as respectful and expected the same when she moved to Tufts. Things were good for the first few months. Guerra said things changed when Amaral made a comment about four months after she moved to Tufts about how a black employee could not clean a certain area. She was surprised by the answer she received. “It was a shock when [Amaral] told me, ‘Oh because maybe she’s a negra lazy,’” Guerra said. Guerra added that Amaral claimed to be repeating the racial epithet “negra lazy” that he heard Tufts’ Director of Campus Services Gary Hill use previously. Amaral did not respond to multiple requests for comment. Hill, whose responsibility includes managing Tufts’ contract with C&W Services, said he see JANITORS, page 2

Tufts adds solar array to Lewis Hall, grows solar program by Rachael Meyer Staff Writer

Tufts is pursuing the widespread installation of solar panels across the Medford/Somerville campus that could, if fully implemented, bring Tufts toward its goal of being carbon-neutral by 2050. An array of solar panels was recently installed on the roof of Lewis Hall, Tufts Director of Engineering for Facilities Services and Office of Sustainability Council Member Dariusz Raczkowski told the Daily in an email. The array consists of 216 solar panels and will produce about 100,000 kilowatt hours of energy each year according to data provided by Director of Capital Programs Gretchen Von Grossmann. This will save the university an estimated $118,000 over a 20-year period, Ruth Bennett, director of strategic capital programs at Tufts, told the Daily in an email. Although the installation is finished, the metering infrastructure still needs to be installed before the array will go online, according to Raczkowski. Lewis Hall is not the first building at Tufts to receive solar panels. According to Raczkowski, in 1998 and 1999, a stu-

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dent-driven effort resulted in the installation of two solar thermal panels and a photovoltaic (PV) panel on the Schmalz House, where the French language house is currently located. “Tufts Climate Initiative was trying to lean on the university to start reducing carbon emissions,” Ann Rappaport, co-chair of the Sustainability Council and former co-director of the Tufts Climate Initiative, said. The project also included the addition of new boilers, lighting, insulation and controls, according to Raczkowski. “The point for me that was so exciting is it’s a house just like all the others on the street. It’s a way to demonstrate to the community how easy it is,” Rappaport, who is also a senior lecturer in the Department of Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning (UEP), said. Tina Woolston, the sustainability program director at the university, told the Daily in an email that Tufts does not have a budget allocated towards renewable energy infrastructure. In recent years, Tufts has instead been able to install solar arrays free of charge through Power Purchase see SOLAR PANELS, page 3

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EVAN SLACK / THE TUFTS DAILY

The solar panels on the roof of Lewis Hall are pictured on Dec. 5.

Contact Us P.O. Box 53018,  Medford, MA 02155 daily@tuftsdaily.com

NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................6 ARTS & LIVING.......................9

FUN & GAMES.......................10 OPINION....................................11 SPORTS............................ BACK


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