The Tufts Daily - Tuesday, March 2, 2021

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T HE T UFTS DAILY

VOLUME LXXXI, ISSUE 15

MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.

tuftsdaily.com

Tuesday, March 2, 2021

Campus Safety and Policing workstream highlights possibilities for TUPD reform, arming status to be revisited by Rebecca Barker and Alex Viveros News Editors

University President Anthony Monaco presented the findings from the Campus Safety and Policing workstream, including the recommendation to form a working group regarding the arming status of Tufts University Police Department officers, in a Feb. 17 email to the Tufts community. The Campus Safety and Policing workstream, which was one of five workstreams formed in July as a part of Monaco’s “Tufts as an Anti-Racist Institution” initiative, was tasked with reviewing the existing model of the TUPD. Twenty-four members including administrators, professors and students contributed to the workstream, and have met frequently over a period of several months. Its findings were presented as a final report to President Monaco and the administration. see POLICING, page 3

SOPHIE DOLAN / THE TUFTS DAILY

The Tufts University Police Department’s sign is pictured on Jan 23, 2018.

Act On Mass proposes amendments to increase transparency in Massachusetts State House

VIA WIKIMEDIA COMMONS

The Massachusetts State House is pictured. by Zoe Kava zation, Act On Mass, on Feb. Assistant News Editor 24. The amendment, filed by Rep. Erika Uyterhoeven of The Massachusetts State Somerville, was voted down, House voted on this session’s but would have ensured comlegislative rules, including an mittee votes and testimony be amendment pushed forward made public. The results of the by progressive political organi- vote came as a disappointment

for Act On Mass, who had been pushing for three amendments to State House rules, including this one. In a statement released following the vote, Ryan Daulton, campaign manager with Act On Mass, shared his perspective.

“It’s shocking that many of the arguments against the amendment blamed constituents for our lack of understanding of how the State House functions when that’s precisely what we are asking for: to stop being shut out of the legislative process. This vote was a blatant signal that representatives care more about power than their constituents,” Ryan Daulton said, according to the statement. In November, Act On Mass launched its “Transparency is Power” campaign, which has advocated for three amendments to State House rules. The amendments include requiring that votes held in committees be publicly disclosed; bills be made public and open to review for 72 hours prior to a final vote; and the threshold for a vote be publicly recorded to be reduced from 16 votes to eight votes. Since its launch, the “Transparency is Power” campaign has gained the support of 19 state representatives, as well as a number of grassroots and political advocacy organizations, including Sunrise Movement Boston. Ella McDonald, communications director for the

FEATURES / page 4

ARTS / page 6

SPORTS / back

A look into Hosea Ballou’s life, impact on Tufts

Slowthai’s “Tyron” is an outstanding sophomore effort

Athletes Unlimited continues growth of women’s lacrosse

Transparency is Power campaign, said that Act On Mass launched its campaign because it noticed that important progressive policies were dying in the state legislature. “We were seeing this recurring problem in the State House where really critical progressive legislation just gets lost in committees and we have no idea what’s happened to it,” McDonald said. “The problem that we are really addressing with this campaign is the lack of transparency and accountability [in the State House]” McDonald, a junior, is also involved in other activism groups including Sunrise Movement Boston and Sunrise Movement Tufts. She cited the lack of transparency in the Massachusetts State House as a reason for failed legislation. She also compared the Massachusetts State House to that of other states, and said that the Massachusetts State House is consistently ranked as one of the least transparent State Houses in the country. “It’s really, really difficult in our State House to know how our representatives vote. We see TRANSPARENCY, page 2 NEWS

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FEATURES

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ARTS & POP CULTURE

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FUN & GAMES

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OPINION

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