THE HIGHLANDER
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, RIVERSIDE
FOR THE WEEK OF TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2020
VOL. 68, ISSUE 18
est. 1954
Senate unable to pass any legislation or allocate funds after not meeting quorum
AMANI MAHMOUD Senior Staff Writer
With only eight senators in attendance, quorum was not met at last Wednesday’s ASUCR meeting causing all legislation and allocations to be postponed.
LLOYD KAO / HIGHLANDER
Construction on new art sculpture is completed
LIZBETH MARQUEZ TORRES Contributing Writer
The construction of UCR’s first art sculpture has officially been completed. The sculpture, titled “a circular sculpture about usefulness amongst other things,” was designed by San Diego-based artist Roy McMakin. The McMakin piece, which is composed of tall yellow poles that display the words “Things Change” and “Change Things,” is meant to highlight the use of multiple mediums in order to engage the campus community to interact with art culturally, physically and visually, according to Jason Espinoza, a project manager with the Office of Planning Design and Construction. The transformative reuse of landscape into an interactive art exhibit is an attempt to exemplify the university’s commitment to the city of Riverside’s concept of arts and innovation, said Espinoza. Espinoza also stated that UCR’s Department of Art had the intention to include artwork in front of the Arts Building. The installation was intended to capture a dynamic visual that interconnected the commuter and pedestrian campus experience. The intention of the piece was to enhance the students’ experience by exposing them to creative expressions of diverse perspectives. The goal was also to encourage the campus community to interact with public spaces uniquely. ► SEE ART PAGE 4
On Wednesday, Feb.12, ASUCR held their sixth meeting of the quarter. Executive Vice President (EVP) Abigail Cortes was not in attendance, which meant that President Pro Tempore Miguel Ramirez filled in for the EVP. ASUCR meetings are set to begin at 6:45 p.m. but only eight senators, including Ramirez, were in attendance. Senators began making remarks that they did not meet quorum and therefore could not discuss or pass any minutes approval, agenda approval, policy items or action items. This prompted GSOE Senator Evelyn Castaneda to leave before the meeting was called to order. Castaneda told
► SEE ASUCR PAGE 4
The UCSC wildcat strike is a fight againt an antiworker UC system
ORLANDO CABALO Contributing Writer
ISURU KARUNATILLAKA / HIGHLANDER
her fellow senators in attendance to just count her as absent for the meeting. The meeting was called to order at 6:50 p.m. Roll Call was conducted. CHASS Senators Angelica Garcia, Angel Cuevas, Adam Gutierrez, Miguel Ramirez, CNAS Senators Luv Amin, Natalie Hernandez, Danielle Velarde and SPP Senator Emily Thomas were present. According to Ramirez, CHASS Senators Yoseline Gutierrez De La Torre, Nelson Huerta, Tiffany Menendez, Matt Nguyen and CNAS Senators Ky Nguyen and Jaime Perez all had excused absences. CHASS Senators Isaiah Kim, GSOE Senator Evelyn Castaneda and BCOE Senators Maurice Armstrong and Leo Ngo all had unexcused absences.
Treating workers with respect, dignity and fairness is something that is completely foreign in many nations, especially in the United States. Although there was a massive labor movement that won many concessions in the way of collective bargaining and unity for workers, today over half of the states are blatantly anti-union. This pervasive anti-worker attitude from the government has crept into the University of California (UC) system as well. From resisting negotiations of a fair contract for the service workers of the UC, to the wildcat strike in UC Santa Cruz (UCSC), the administration loves waging war against labor. Despite the fact that American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees local 3299 (AFSCME 3299) new contract solidified a
victory for service workers, the fight for all workers to be treated with fairness and dignity doesn’t seem to be ending any time soon. One would think that, after finally giving AFSCME 3299 a contract, the UC would at last bargain with unions in good faith, but that wasn’t in the cards. In fact, UCSC graduate students facing an astronomical cost of living have gone on strike to demand better pay. The UCs inability to cooperate with workers is insulting. Unions in the UC system have only asked for basic workplace rights like job security and a living wage. To make matters worse, even though workers have demanded the bare minimum from their employers, UC administrators have stalled and dragged their feet in negotiations. A glaring example of this worker exploitation is the UCSC graduate students. ► SEE UCSC IN OPINIONS, PAGE 10
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