Issue 17 - Volume 134

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The Vermont Cynic JANUARY 23, 2018

VOL. 134 – ISSUE 17

VTCYNIC.COM

Shutdown puts aid and grants at risk Lindsay Freed Senior Staff Writer UVM will feel the impact of the federal government shutdown if it is not resolved within the next few days. The shutdown began at midnight Jan. 20 after the U.S. Senate was unable to pass a short-term spending bill, said Wendy Koenig, UVM director of federal and state relations. This means federal agencies and functions will be closed until new budget legislation can be passed, Koenig said. “There is never a good time for a shutdown, but this isn’t the worst time,” she said. “Most student aid has already been received.” The two main areas that could be affected by the shutdown are financial aid and research, Koenig stated in a Jan. 20 email to the UVM community. In addition, alloted research grants are distributed automatically, Koenig said. There is greater concern if the shutdown lasts for a longer period of time, which could then affect applications for new loans and grants, Koenig said. “There are contingencies for if that happens, but we’re hopeful the work happening [in Washington] over the weekend will make the shutdown

GENEVIEVE WINN

short-lived,” she said. SGA President Chris Petrillo said there are no benefits to the University from the federal government’s inaction. “Students should not have to worry about government dysfunction during their studies,” he said. “It is disheartening to see the federal government

setting an example of gridlock.” Petrillo said that UVM still has a functioning government in the SGA. The SGA will continue operations to support the wellbeing of the UVM community, he said. Essential personnel — the heads of federal departments

and agencies and their immediate support staffs — will remain working through the shutdown, Koenig said. UVM employees will continue to work through the shutdown. The House of Representatives initially passed a shortterm spending bill, which

would have continued funding the government until a later date, according to a Jan. 20 Washington Post article. The Senate was unable to compromise on immigration spending in their version of the legislation, according to the Jan. 20 Congressional Record. “I am very disappointed that the Republicans chose to shutdown the government,” Bernie Sanders’ office stated in a Jan. 21 email to the Cynic. Sanders stated that Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky, insisted on going forward with the resolution rather than negotiating a serious agreement with the Democrats and Republicans that opposed him. “I hope, based on this vote, that [McConnell] now changes his mind and begins to negotiate seriously,” Sanders stated. “We must reopen the government as soon as possible.” The Senate is scheduled to vote on the resolution at noon Jan. 22, according to the Washington Post. The last government shutdown was in October 2013, when Republican leaders sought to rollback provisions of the Affordable Care Act, according to a Jan. 19 New York Times article. The 2013 shutdown lasted for 16 days, according to the article.

University decries anti-immigrant MLK Day posters Brandon Arcari Assistant Breaking News Editor The University denounced several posters encouraging the deportation of people of color, which were posted on Waterman green. The posters, which read “stop importing problems, start exporting solutions,” had photos of three people of color with crimes listed next to their faces. No Names for Justice, a student advocacy group, wrote a statement on the back of one of the flyers and delivered it to the executive offices in Waterman. “Found this posted on the door of Waterman,” they wrote on the back of a poster. “Thought you should know this is happening. “Prime example of the failure of this community and institution to disempower white supremacy. Happy MLK day.” The posters do not align with the University’s values, said Enrique Corredera, executive director of university communications. “These posters appear to have a clear racial and ethnic bias, with disturbing negative connotations,” Corredera said. “We condemn in the strongest possible terms the discriminatory sentiment associated with these posters.”

BRANDON ARCARI/The Vermont Cynic

Unsigned posters with anti-immigration messages were found on campus the morning of Jan. 15. After a student group brought copies of the signs to the Waterman building, administration denounced the message of the posters in an email to campus the next day.

These posters follow another set of signs hung around campus on Nov. 7 of last year. Those signs, also posted anonymously, read It’s okay to be white. Those posters were seen at college campuses across the country, including Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana and Harvard University

in Cambridge, Massachusetts, according to a Nov. 3 Washington Post article. There is no evidence that the latest posters were related to the “It’s okay to be white” signs. University President Tom Sullivan sent an email on Jan. 16 to students about the flyers, calling them an assault on

UVM’s institutional values. “We condemn these flyers unequivocally and in the strongest possible terms,” Sullivan stated. “Our University strives to maintain a welcoming environment for all members of our community.” Police Services is investigating the posters. The University referred the posters to

the Affirmative Action/Equal Employment Opportunity and Bias Response teams, he stated. “Let us be clear, respect and civility are core values expected of all members of the University community and visitors to our campus,” Sullivan stated in the email. Junior Rachel Frankenfield said she wished for a different response from administration, but was impressed with his message. “I thought it was really strongly based on the Common Ground, which I think is a little bit of a cop-out from just saying how wrong it is from a moral standpoint,” junior Rachel Frankenfield said. Frankenfield said that despite this, the fact that Our Common Ground is relevant in these situations consistently makes her proud of UVM’s mission statement as a whole. Sullivan’s response to the posters was sent on Jan 16, while the posters were first seen on Jan 15. “Tom Sullivan’s response was more timely than the response to any other bias incident that I’ve [seen] on our campus in the past couple of years,” Frankenfield said. “I’m really impressed with his strong, clear message against what happened.”


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Issue 17 - Volume 134 by Vermont Cynic - Issuu