Yale Daily News — Week of Oct. 23

Page 1

T H E O L D E ST C O L L E G E DA I LY · FO U N D E D 1 8 7 8

NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2020 · VOL. CXLIII, NO. 8 · yaledailynews.com

SigEp to disaffiliate from nationals, go co-ed BY EMILY TIAN STAFF REPORTER Yale’s chapter of Sigma Phi Epsilon will be no longer— and the organization that will take its place will neither carry Greek letters nor strictly be a brotherhood. The seventy-odd members of the fraternity chapter voted confidentially this September to disaffiliate from its national organization and voted again in October in favor of opening membership to all genders. “There has been growing discomfort in our relationship with the national organization over recent years, and I feel as though our community has been distant from the national fraternity network for quite some time, both in our involvement and values,” wrote Nathan Somerville ’22, SigEp’s current president, in a statement to the News. “As such, we have taken this chance to build an independent social organization without the limitations once imposed.”

According to Somerville, of the 55 members who voted on Sept. 9, a near unanimous bloc — 98 percent — voted in favor of disaffiliation, which exceeded by around 10 votes the simple majority agreed upon by the chapter to move the decision forward. Members are still deliberating on the name of the new organization. Internal discussions about the prospect of disaffiliation have been ongoing for years, but the COVID19 pandemic has produced new reasons and more latitude to advance the process now. The pandemic has forced Greek organizations to either rethink how to appropriately socialize or risk creating hotspots of viral transmission. And fraught conversations about racism and sexism on college campuses have sharpened calls to ban Greek life altogether. 31 High St. Earlier this summer, SigEp nationals sold the Yale chapter’s High Street house to a private owner, which chapter mem-

Virtual outreach increases contact with HS students

bers say partially motivated their disaffiliation vote. Property records show that the fraternity’s house on 31 High St. was sold by SigEp Housing of Connecticut Delta to Robin Sunrise LLC on Aug. 6 this year. According to Heather Kirk, chief communication officer of the SigEp national headquarters, the selling price of $1,525,000 was above current market value but sold at a loss on the overall property debt. The house has been owned by SigEp since 2006, when it was purchased for $1.1 million. A representative of Robin Sunrise LLC did not respond to a request for comment. According to Kirk, the house was sold because no chapter members committed to signing a lease for the upcoming academic year. “SigEp Housing of Connecticut Delta has long supported the chapter at Yale, and even when maintaining the house meant taking a financial loss, if the chapter was committed to signing leases and filling the home’s occupancy, we were willing to help,”

LUCAS HOLTER/SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER

SigEp nationals sold the Yale chapter’s house on 31 High St. to a private owner earlier this summer. Kirk wrote. “With no lease commitments, the sale was necessary.” Fraternity brothers told a different story: The property was an unprofitable investment, increasingly unjustified as national Greek organizations contend with the economic crisis that has put many in financial straits.

BY NATALIE KAINZ STAFF REPORTER A bloom of tulips may soon become one New Haven neighborhood’s final stand against the city’s decision to turn their park into a construction site. At Monday’s Board of Alders meeting, a majority of alders voted in favor of a plan to trade Kensington Playground — a park in the Dwight neighborhood — for 15 units of affordable housing. It was the final approval meet-

ing required for the construction project, which has been a topic of debate for more than a year. Next week, Mayor Justin Elicker will sign an order to put the $30 million project in motion. In the meantime, he’ll have to answer to a group of Dwight residents who are considering civil disobedience as a final recourse of their disapproval. “We’ve been talking about planting tulip bulbs in Kensington Park right now because [they] will bloom and blossom when the park will be destroyed,” Dwight resi-

ANASTASIA SHILOV/ILLUSTRATIONS EDITOR

As Yale College application deadlines approach, the admissions office is connecting with more prospective students than ever before through their new virtual outreach programs.

According to Mark Dunn, director of outreach and recruitment and associate director at the Office of Undergraduate Admissions, statistics show that more prospective students are engaging with Yale’s outreach programs than they SEE OUTREACH PAGE 4

SEE SIGEP PAGE 4

FOKP consider Kensington protest

More high school students are participating in Yale Admissions events this year thanks to their online nature. BY AMELIA DAVIDSON STAFF REPORTER

Past occupants of the house paid rent to SigEp Housing of Connecticut Delta, which used to run and maintain the property. Under the new ownership, both members and non-members of the fra-

LILY DORSTEWITZ/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Alders gave final approval to an affordable housing project to replace Kensington Playground on Monday.

dent Nia Campinha-Bacote DIV ’21 told the News. Any planting of flowers would be illegal pursuant to Section 19-5 of the New Haven Code of Ordinances. “It would be a symbolic act to show that life is abundant here and [the park] has the capacity to do that,” she said. Campinha-Bacote is a member of Friends of Kensington Playground or FOKP — a group that formed several months ago in opposition to the housing deal. According to FOKP member Patricia Wallace, the organization has requested a meeting with Elicker for mediation on the decision. In addition to planting tulips, FOKP has discussed singing songs about growth and holding hands around the park as the January 2021 construction date approaches. Campinha-Bacote said these acts are intended to show the city that Dwight residents still care about what happens to their neighborhood. According to a profile conducted by the Dwight Community Management Team this January, more than half of the residents living in the area are low-income. Over 60 percent of the neighborhood’s 4,000 inhabitants are people of color. SEE KENSINGTON PAGE 5

DeLauro faces opposition in upcoming Congressional election BY SAI RAYALA CONTRIBUTING REPORTER The congressional race for New Haven’s 3rd district is heating up as the incumbent, 15-term House representative Rosa DeLauro, faces opposition from Republican opponent Margaret Streicker. New Haven Congresswoman and Democrat Rosa DeLauro is running for her 16th term in Congress. DeLauro, who has been in Congress for nearly 30 years, is a familiar face in the district and has faced little opposition in past elections. Political analyses such as the Cook Political Report have stated that DeLauro is favored to win this election as well. However, Streicker, her GOP challenger and a wealthy real estate developer, is putting up a solid opposition. “Unlike the incumbent, I have spent my entire career in the real world,” Streicker said. “I have not been in a place in government

where money somehow magically appears. Like most of this district, I go out and I earn money.” Streicker, a new face to the political scene with no prior experience in office, told the News that she sees the opportunity as a service to the country. She called DeLauro’s record “30 years of failed policy,” claiming that DeLauro’s time in office had led to lost jobs and a struggling economy. Streicker’s agenda is focused on creating jobs, improving the economy, supporting local law enforcement — she earned the endorsement of the Connecticut Fraternal Order of Police — and providing accessible and affordable health care for all. Streicker said that her background in business has given her the experience needed to tackle these problems. DeLauro, for her part, has criticized the business background of her opponent. “Her knowledge and her business is about being a slumlord

in New York and being fined by the Attorney General of New York of over a million dollars for harassing and abusing tenants,” DeLauro said. According to the New York Times, in 2015, Streicker’s former real estate firm, Newcastle Realty Services, was ordered to pay $1.5 million in fines and legal fees for inducing tenants to vacate a building through illegal buyout agreements. The firm did not admit any wrongdoing. Despite her many terms in Congress, DeLauro told the News there is still much she is excited to do if she were to win reelection, including passing legislation on equal wages for women, national paid sick days and paid family and medical leave. She also said she plans to focus on the child care industry — which she said has become particularly important during the pandemic. As chair of the Labor, Health SEE DELAURO PAGE 5

CROSS CAMPUS

INSIDE THE NEWS

THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY, 1970.

COLLECTIVE

The New Haven Women's Liberation movement pickets Mory's in protest of its men-only membership policy. The demonstrators report that their efforts convinced several patrons of the club to eat elsewhere, but they also faced harassment from diners. Membership to Mory's was opened to women in 1974.

The Neo Collective — Yale’s first Black arts collective — held its first welcome event for Yale students and New Haven community members via Zoom. Page 6 ARTS

EARTH

WIKIMEDIA COMMONS

DeLauro, who has been in Congress for nearly 30 years, is a familiar face in the district and has faced little opposition in past elections.

A study found that the projected human population of 10 billion in 2050 could live on the planet at a decent standard of living with 40 percent of today’s emissions. Page 8 SCITECH

DIVESTMENT

On Thursday, University President Peter Salovey created a committee to offer new investment practices for fossil fuels. Page 11 UNIVERSITY

SCIENTISTS

Yale scientists and coaches weigh in on the feasibility of restarting athletic competition in the spring amid COVID-19. Page 14 SPORTS


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.