Kimberly Bonifacio started the job of internal vice president with a lot of ideas. She’s leaving the job with a somewhat finished to-do list and the same vague understanding of her role on council as when she started. Read more...
Kimberly Bonifacio started the job of internal vice president with a lot of ideas. She’s leaving the job with a somewhat finished to-do list and the same vague understanding of her role on council as when she started. Read more...
Naomi Riley came into the Academic Affairs Commission with big goals. She achieved most of them and managed to pick up a few more along the way. Read more...
The role of the Campus Events Commission is unique from other offices within the USAC – it’s apolitical. It’s a programming office, far removed from the toxicity of a partisan council. Read more...
This post was updated May 3 at 3:55 p.m. Shahamah Tariq received an almost perfect score because she was an almost perfect officer. And in USAC, being almost perfect is far from an easy feat. Put simply, Tariq not only led, but created, one of the most actionable offices in USAC this year. Read more...
Lily Shaw came into office with ambitious goals to improve infrastructure accessibility and sustainability on campus, and she has managed to live up to them. Although a few of her biggest projects were slated to launch in spring quarter, it is clear Shaw has proactively worked throughout the year to lay the foundational groundwork for those projects. For example, one of her biggest and loftiest platforms was implementing a reusable container system in dining halls on the Hill. Read more...
This post was updated May 5 at 1:13 p.m. Robert Watson promised affordability, accessibility and acceptance. More or less, that’s exactly what students got. Watson’s affordability initiative reduced laundry fees on the hill and allocated $15,000 toward providing students free blue books and Scantron answer sheets. Read more...
This post was updated April 22 at 11:57 a.m. Student representatives are supposed to focus their offices’ firepower on students’ problems, not on one another. But recently, the voice of the student body has largely been composed of Twitter rants and screenshot exposes. Read more...