Posts Tagged ‘Minutes’

GSC meeting 2008-12-03

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008

Proceedings of the December 3rd 2008 GSC meeting


Agenda

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Shane!)

2) 6:00 Welcome with introductions and Announcements (Polina)
i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.
ii. Approve minutes from the last meeting (11/19/08)
iii. There will be a website update session next Tuesday, 12/9, at 6pm in the GCC. Food will be provided, but please bring your laptop. RSVP to Polina (polina@stanford.edu).
iv. Please remember to send Nanna items for the Winter 2009 GSC Bulletin by Wednesday, December 3, at 11:59pm. This is mandatory, especially if you have received individual instructions.

4) 6:05 Funding (Addy)
i. Romanian Student Association
ii. Nigerian Students Association
iii. Mexican Student Association

5) 6:10 ASSU Update (Jonny and Fagan)

6) 6:15 Senate Report (Justin and Ryan)

7) 6:20 Programming (Justin and Adam S.)

8) 6:25 Elections Commission (Etosha)

9) 6:30 Housing (Rodger Whitney, Sue Nunan, Jessica Engelson)

10) 7:00 Diversity Committee (Shane)

11) 7:05 Funding request ($1500) for comedy show (Melahn)

12) 7:15 Rec Swim Update (Nanna)

13) 7:20 Thanksgiving Dinner Update (George)

14) 7:25 Funding Policy Discussion (Polina)

15) 7:55 New Business (Polina)

Attendance

Voting members present:
At large 2: Adam Beberg
At large 3: Nanna Notthoff
At large 4: Ryan Peacock
At large 5: Mary Van der Hoven
Earth Sciences: Justin Brown
Education: Shane Moise
Engineering 1: Polina Segalova
Engineering 2: Addy Satija
Humanities: George Bloom
Law: Andrew Park
Medicine: Sean Young (proxy Maria Spletter present)
Social Sciences: Hanna Muenke

Voting members not present:
At large 1: Aleksandra Korolova
Business: Rick Thielke
Natural Sciences: Fen Zhao

Other people present: Zeng Fan, Fagan Harris (Exec), Jonny Dorsey (Exec), Daisy Chen (Daily), Pablo Garcia Del Real (Mexican Student Association), Daniel Lopez (Mexican Student Association), David Gobaud, Matt McLaughlin (Financial Manager), Andrew Danowitz, Shelley Gao (Undergrad Senate), Simone Manganelli, Sohan Dharmaraja, Etosha Cave, Clinton Buie

Minutes

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Shane!)

2) 6:04 Welcome with introductions and Announcements (Polina)

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i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.
ii. Approved minutes from the last meeting (11/19/08) by consensus.
iii. There will be a website update session next Tuesday, 12/9, at 6pm in the GCC. Food will be provided, but please bring your laptop. RSVP to Polina (polina@stanford.edu).
iv. Please remember to send Nanna items for the Winter 2009 GSC Bulletin by Wednesday, December 3, at 11:59pm. This is mandatory, especially if you have received individual instructions.
v. Holiday cards going around for people we work with in the University.
vi. Grad Announce going out soon, send Polina email ASAP.

4) 6:08 Funding (Addy)

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i. Nigerian Students Association – not here
ii. Mexican Student Association – Presenting winter and spring quarter budget for various cultural and academic events, similar to those that they held last year. Increasing connections with Mexican Consulate to have more political speakers. Cultural events include Posada (Christmas celebration) among others. Recommended $2845. Giving $2845 passes by consensus.
iii. Romanian Student Association – Romanian National Day is Dec 1st, similar in importance to our 4th of July. Having a party with Romanian food this Friday, Dec 5th. Recommended $400. Giving $400 passes by consensus.

5) 6:13 Undergrad Senate Report (Ryan)

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Talked about campaign financing for ASSU elections. There have also been separate meetings about this issues, which Polina and Etosha have been attending.
They also talked about 5-SURE again, which doesn’t seem in immediate danger.
Considered the possibility of co-sponsorship money as we have been doing in the GSC.

Another big topic was University Budget cuts, which Jonny and Fagan talk more about.

6) 6:15 ASSU Update (Jonny and Fagan)

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We need to be proactive about budget cuts that the University is facing. All departments have been asked to make proposed budgets with decreases of 5/7/10%, so we will be impacted by this as well. We need to think about what we find particularly important and advocate for that. Want to have a joint meeting on Friday to make sure both Undergrads and Grads have appropriate input into figuring out priorities.

Based on Senate discussion, Ryan thinks it would be appropriate for us to propose a joint list of guidelines, rather than listing specific programs, because we probably can’t be exhaustive enough to meet cuts. Also, need to keep in mind that this is just year one of a 3-year rolling average endowment payout, so this is not a one-time cut, and thus having a strategy rather than specific programs will allow us to apply it again in future years if necessary.

7) 6:22 Programming (Justin and Adam S.)
No updates.

8) 6:23 Elections Commission (Etosha)

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Have gotten applications for the positions they’re trying to fill (Undergrad Assistant and Media Director). Working on campaign finance reform.

9) 6:24 Housing (Rodger Whitney, Sue Nunan, Jessica Engelson)

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Demand for fall housing is high and has gone up for single student housing, increasing by 100 people in each of the last two years, which is more than the increase in number of students. Right now they don’t meet the demand of all students who initially apply for on-campus housing for fall quarter. By the time they get to the third round of assignments at the start of fall, there aren’t as many unassigned people because many people have made other plans and taken themselves off the list.

Munger will be a net gain of 365 new spaces, which should allow them to meet most of the current need, especially for people who stick with the process.

We get handouts with listed first-choice housing preferences of applicants based on type and price of housing. Cost does not seem to drive people’s choices overall, based on the handout, with studios being very popular despite their higher cost.

Polina asks what the assignment mechanism is. They guarantee housing for new students who apply by the first deadline and accept any assignment, so they have higher priority than returning students in the lottery. However, returning students can resign full-year leases if staying put (avoid lottery), and also get some priority for staying within the same type of housing even if they enter the lottery. When assigning rooms based on the lottery, Housing goes through applicants in order of lottery number and assigns them their highest preferenced room-type that is still available. If not, move onto their second choice type of housing and so on.

In terms of ranking choices, the difference between selecting “put me anywhere I am eligible” or not does not impact initial odds of being assigned to a preferred space, given the assignment process as listed above, which just goes in order of lottery number and assigns the space that the person has ranked highest that is available. However, someone with a poor lottery number who does indicate “put me anywhere” will get assigned to an unranked choice if all ranked options are already full, while another person with the same listed preferences who does not choose “put me anywhere” will instead remain on the waiting list, but may then later get assigned to those preferred spaces if something opens up, because people who may have been ahead of that student in the lottery who selected “put me anywhere” have already been assigned elsewhere.

Disability process goes through in April, prior to general assignment, but is also done via lottery, so the students are given special accommodations if they are accepted to on-campus housing, but there aren’t guarantees of that (though can appeal that point if on-campus living is very important for mobility reasons). There are fewer requests for disability accommodations for grads than undergrads, given that Grad housing generally has more space and privacy per person than the Undergrad dorms. They have about 40 people who apply for this each year, including some rolling requests which they try to fill as they go.

Right now on-campus housing is completely full in fall and winter, expect to have 100 vacancies in spring, at about 70% capacity over summer. People who are unhappy with their current assignment have the best chance of switching in the spring, and can then resign that new location for the following fall rather than entering the lottery.

There are some small number of people who may have unusual enrollment pattern, such as starting over the summer or doing a part of the program somewhere else which means they aren’t technically new students based on Housing’s priority listings, even though they may be new to campus. Housing works with these cases individually.

Etosha asks about what the cost of Munger will be. It will be at a premium compared to others, but rates are not set yet. There seems to be some desire for nicer places despite the higher price, based on interest in studios. Factoring in furnishings and utilities, think it will still be below marked for the quality and location. Each bedroom has private bath, and 4-bedrooms have extra bathroom in the common space.

Housing is currently redoing Blackwelder into two-bedroom efficiencies, where they convert the original one-bedroom apartments (for couples) into two-bedrooms without a living room. Converting 126 apartments, which will then fit 252 people, comparable to the current 225 spaces in CroMem, and will be at similar price points.

Ryan thinks Rains is overpriced for what it is, and that especially for four-bedrooms it’s cheaper and nicer to live in an off-campus house with a group. Rains is on the Capital Improvement list, hopefully within the next 3-4 years. They’re also considering changing the price points a bit, increasing the 2-bedroom and lowering the 4-year, since they do need to keep their overall income the same.

Housing not sure yet what’s happening with off-campus rental market. While the economy is down, it could also be that more people are looking to rent than buy, which would increase demand. Next year’s on-campus rates won’t increase as much as they have the last two years, but this is more a reflection of their current costs, rather than expectations of the rental market directly, as they need to maintain their revenue neutral budget.

Nanna asks about the Crothers to Munger transition for students currently living in Crothers. It’s pretty well on its way. They also gave students in Crothers the option to move into open spaces elsewhere on-campus (and did need about 50 people in Crothers to choose somewhere other than Munger, based on available space), which worked out well. Most people who wanted to try Munger got it for now. They did room assignment already as well.

Question about the off-campus subsidized program and the likelihood of it continuing. President and Provost supported it for awhile, but the plan is to end it next fall, with the idea that Munger can meet the need. If there’s a lot of excess demand for housing, they could potentially extend the program (and Housing would be supportive of this extension), but it does depend on funding from the University, difficult in current budget situation.

Polina looking at some of the numbers of assignments to housing. At end, 93% of students who apply get on-campus, though there are a number of students not assigned for awhile, suggesting there is still some need for the off-campus program. Right now there are 130 off-campus spots in use. Polina thinks that some off-campus people right now will try to come back to live in nicer Munger, and thus there might be higher demand for on-campus housing than they’re expecting, in which case Munger might not meet the current waitlist needs, which the off-campus program could continue to help with.

Started off-campus program during dotcom boom, when you literally couldn’t get off-campus housing at any price, which is why Stanford getting leases helped. At that point had 1000 students in it.

Last year had 5.25% increase across the board on on-campus housing prices. Off-campus market increased more than that in the same time. Increase based on debt-service for studios, new housing, services, maintenance, facilities staff, utilities, etc. What it takes to run the system drives the rate increase because Housing is a revenue neutral operation.

Housing does actively look at rental listings from Mountain View to Redwood City, and do think they offer a good deal.

10) 7:05 Diversity Committee (Shane)

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Finalizing questions for student survey, zeroing in on mentorship questions. Having a hard time with their budget for the year, trying to prioritize. Working on Townhall meeting. Diversity Week will have the same format as last year, will ask VPGE for money. Things are moving along.

11) 7:07 Funding request ($1500) for comedy show (Sohan)

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Asking us for $1500 for end-of-quarter show which will take place this Friday. Will have three comedians and a hypnotist. It’s the second time the hypnotist has been here.

Show will be at Kresge starting at 7pm, going till 9pm or so.

Reasons Sohan thinks we should fund this: We did fund this last year, there are 1500 students on Comedy Club mailing list, indicating potentially high interest, and there is money from other sources, also suggesting appeal to a sufficiently broad audience.

Nanna thinks request is somewhat last minute given that this is their big event. Wonders why they didn’t put this in their full year request and reduce some of the weekly shows instead. Sohan thinks demand is there for the big show.

Event will cost $5400-$5500 total. Have $1500 each from speakers bureau, Execs and Undergrad Senate, so at $4500 so far, need another $1000.

Justin thinks this event is more undergrad attended.

Mary saw posters advertising the performers will be “uncensored”, which doesn’t give her confidence that it will be particularly appropriate.

Undergrads give $120 per weekly show apparently, while we give about $220.
Ryan thinks it’s not a good argument that we gave money to this event in the past. Obviously relevant to other groups as well, especially since money is getting tighter, not a good assumption that it will continue to be available.

Reached VSO cap for $8000, and already got other co-sponsorship money.

Daisy thinks it’s a lot of money for one event, and notes that despite her general involvement in on-campus life she had not heard of this event yet.

George asks about content of the show. Sohan says that last year was pretty raunchy, but they’ve requested a cleaner show this time, which the hypnotist does say he can do.

Polina thinks they should have budgeted for this event in their yearly budget, especially since this is not a new event, which is generally what we use discretionary money for.

Brief discussion on possibility of doing a budget mod to use their existing money (originally approved for the weekly shows) for this instead. This would need to go through Funding Committee chair.

There are objections to giving additional money for this event, so moving to roll call vote.

0 yes, 9 no, 2 abstaining. Does not pass.

12) 7:20 Rec Swim Update (Nanna)

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Had another meeting with the Recreation folks involved in running the pool (Rebecca and Eric), which Shelley also attended. Rebecca and Eric agree to bring this up next Tuesday at their senior staff meeting. Asked students to collect data, have some of it from the survey, trying to get more.

Even with some of the proposed increases in swim hours or amount of space available, still wouldn’t be at the level of other schools.

Pool management has not been forthcoming in costs, but did say that it costs $60,000 a month to heat one pool, and would be $120,000 year for additional staffing for the proposed increase in availability, which is fairly neglible in comparison to the already set maintenance costs which don’t change much based on recreational use.

Nanna and Alex have been trying to get publicity going in the Daily, have been frustrated in that attempt.

May run a survey to try to get more information before the meeting.

13) 7:24 Thanksgiving Dinner Update (George)

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Had 1500 people total, which was about 890 grad students and their friends and family. Everything went smoothly, no lines, good food. Thank to Matt for website, Karukas for collaboration in catering. For next year, think the tent isn’t quite the way to do it, given that it is outdoors, and splits the group in two. They in the past held it at dining halls which were big enough to accommodate everyone, but then needed to go through dining for the food. Decorations were bland (=non-existent), and would like to improve on that for future years.

Adam didn’t think the food was that great, especially the bread-type items.

Vegetarian options were lacking.

14) 7:30 Funding Policy Discussion (Polina)

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Want to talk about Big Event Item and co-sponsorship item.

There’s been some lack of clarify about Big Event money. Last year, we had two groups ask us for money beyond FC, one of which we gave one of which we didn’t. So, we tried to write down what it was about the two requests that was different.

Currently, the Big Event fund is $10,000 per year, in place for two years, this being the first. Money comes straight from reserves.

In the past, we did sometimes give extra GSC money to particular things, but without writing down why it is that we went one way or another. This is what we trying to alleviate by writing it down, but it doesn’t seem to have helped clarify the situation, and we’ve seen increases in requests from groups beyond what we had given out before trying to write the policy down.

Justin thinks we could just go back to the way things were, where we just separately considered ideas that we really like that don’t fit other models of funding that are already in place.

Nanna points out that Grad Challenge is coming up, so some new events will be able to get money from there.

If we go back to the way we were, groups above their VSO cap or individuals with good ideas could apply to Programming Discretionary or Grad Challenge in order to get funding for their events.

Matt thinks we’re better off as a five-year plan of overspending a particular line-item out of General Fee (such as programming discretionary), which avoids each time trying to think about Reserves versus other sources. In the end, it’s all the same money anyway.

No objections to take away this separate special category of money for ‘Big Events’. We will use Programming Discretionary instead, with agreement to overdraw it for ideas we like.

Matt gives a presentation about the reserves and what strategy he thinks we should take to overspend GSO partition (from GSGF money).

GSGF gave 95K to Funding Committee to distribute to VSOs, which we’ve already spent more than. We’ve also put in 50K from reserves to get a total of 145K for VSOs. Of that, 135K is given under normal caps for VSOs, and 10K is the co-sponsorship (multiple VSO groups) money.

So far, 110K have been allocated of 145K. Based on last year’s spending for winter (16K) and spring (24K), at this rate, we’ll spend 150K total. Allocating 160K will probably actually get us to about 145K that groups actually use.

Recommendations:
Increase the Multiple Group (co-sponsorship) funding bucket by 10K
Develop a 5-year-plan for spending down the reserves to an adequate level.
Tighten-up GSC bylaws surround reserve expenditures.

Thinks getting Reserves to about the same amount as the yearly GSGF intake would be good.

Mary thinks we could do something larger with the money, but some of the big things like buildings are too big and would just wipe out. Generally, others have paid for some necessary big things, like the GCC.

Undergrad Senate did go bankrupt recently, so Matt as FO encourages us to gradually spend money slowly rather than investing in something too large that would be too much responsibility later when we wouldn’t have the reserves anymore

We’d like to increase the amount that we can allocate for the multiple groups by $10,000, which is not new money from reserves but rather just shifting the accounting to allocate more, with the goal that the end about actually used will not be higher.

Justin concerned that particular groups with connections might jump on available money. That’s why the GSC is ultimately responsible for checking.

Adam thinks writing down the specific policy has unnecessarily increased requests from groups, rather than them working particular events within the 8K VSO cap, or finding outside sources of funding.

Right now, Funding Chair recommends whether something goes through co-sponsorship or not, or whether individual groups should get the money under the standard VSO cap. GSC approves at end anyway, so we do monitor how money is spent.

15) 8:02 New Business (Polina)

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i. Need to approve nominees to NomCom committees. Justin wants to confirm that everyone is a student and Grad/Undergrad appropriate when that is designated for a particular position. This is Joint Association Bill 4. Approving those students as members of NomCom committees passes by consensus.

ii. January 21st will be our dinner with Greg Boardman.

GSC meeting 2008-11-19

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

Proceedings of the November 19th, 2008 GSC meeting


Agenda

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Shane!)

2) 6:00 Introductions and Announcements (George)
i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.
ii. Approve minutes from the last meeting (11/12/08)

3) 6:05 Funding (Addy)
i. Russian Student Association
ii. Comedy Club

4) 6:15 Proposal to allocate more money for co-sponsorship (Addy)

5) 6:20 ASSU Update (Jonny/Fagan)

6) 6:25 Elections Committee Update (Etosha)

7) 6:30 Public Safety (Chief Laura Wilson)

8) 6:50 Undergrad Senate Update (Justin/Ryan/Shelley)

9) 6:55 Programming (Justin/Adam S.)

10) 7:00 Faculty Senate Update (Adam B.)

11) 7:05 Funding Request ($400) for Grad Diversity Leaders Dinner (Justin)

12) 7:10 New Business (George)

Attendance

Voting members present:
At large 1: Aleksandra Korolova
At large 2: Adam Beberg
At large 3: Nanna Notthoff
At large 4: Ryan Peacock
At large 5: Mary Van der Hoven
Earth Sciences: Justin Brown
Education: Shane Moise
Engineering 1: Polina Segalova
Engineering 2: Addy Satija (proxy Andrew Danowitz present)
Humanities: George Bloom
Law: Andrew Park
Medicine: Sean Young (proxy Maria Spletter present)
Social Sciences: Hanna Muenke

Voting members not present:
Business: Rick Thielke
Natural Sciences: Fen Zhao

Other people present: Ping Li (Funding Committee), Melahn Parker (Comedy Club), Sohan Dharmaroya (Comedy Club), Simone Manganelli, Matt McLaughlin, Daisy Chen (Daily), Daniel Change, Matt Turk, Alex Naxlobin (Russian Student Association), Adam Sciambi, Irene Chu, David Gobaud, Alex Ene, Etosha Cave, Lan Wei (Funding Committee)

Minutes

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Shane!)

2) 6:06 Introductions and Announcements (George)

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i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.
ii. Approved minutes from the last meeting (11/12/08) by consensus.

3) 6:10 Funding (Lan)

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i. Russian Student Association – Requesting money for two events. First is a Dec 6 welcome back party with $550 requested for that. Second event is Orthodox New Year on 19th of January, with $600 requested. For one other event they wanted to do, they missed the deadline for advertising, so could not get funding for that. Total recommended is $1150. Giving $1150 passes by consensus.

ii. Comedy Club – Two applications. First for three events in winter quarter. BGSA, Stanford Indian Students and Muslim Students Awareness Network would like to work with Comedy Club to put on co-sponsored events. First two in early February. Are also getting money from Undergrads and Speakers Bureau. Each event will be a comedy show, with comics potentially reflecting some of the experiences and cultures of those groups. Comedy Club has already hit their group limit, so this money would come from co-sponsorship. $3250 is currently left in that account. Each show costs about $1000, asking us for half of the total amount, $1500. Have one comic in mind already, think they could get other good ones as well. Plan to rent out a larger space on campus that can hold a larger crowd than the 750. All the groups are predominantly grad students, so this should be reflected in attendance at the event. Giving $1500 passes by consensus.

Also requesting $3000 from us for a big event, which would come from the Big Event fund. Plan to have it Dec 5th at Kresge, which can hold 600 people. Expecting $6000 cost total. It will be a similar Hypnotist/Comedy Show as they’ve held in the past. Last time, they got good attendance in MemAud.

Reminder of how our funding works.

About $95K from GSGF, we added $50K from our reserves to that, for $145K total for funding for events. $135K is for VSOs (with line-item caps and $8000 limit), $10K for co-sponsorship (VSOs working together). We later approved $10K from the reserves for big events.

Matt McLaughlin thinks we should overdraw co-sponsorship if anything, so money could come from anything left out of the $135K at the end of the year, rather than taking from reserves directly.

Adam B. thinks that Comedy Club is requesting too much money overall (hit their $8000 cap, now requesting $1500 for co-sponsored events and $3000 for big event for $12500 total), and that although they fall within the guidelines for co-sponsorship and Big Event, it’s still a lot of money overall which is then not going to other student groups. Some others agree.

Ryan thinks we should have a discussion about what we would like to do with co-sponsorship before we overdraw it. For example, perhaps agreeing ahead of time on a higher firm limit, rather than just agreeing that $10,000 may be too low.

Alex would like to see us be more clear how we treat requests from other VSOs with overlapping populations (given the goal of using the money to reach as many students as possible), for example, Chinese Students overall, and Chinese Women’s collective.

Adam B. says they used to have a cap of $30 per student actually in the group (not just on the mailing list), but we’ve used different systems lately, perhaps not working terrifically either.

George reminds us that the point of co-sponsorships is to get more and different students involved.

Representative of Comedy Club thinks that this is a good chance to get new students involved, for example, some of the students in those cultural groups might not feel comfortable in bar scene (where weekly comedy nights are held), so it’s nice to give them a chance to attend a show in a different setting.

Nanna asks what else they have considered for funding, especially since they do have this trouble every year with wanting to put on more events than their caps allow. For the Big Event, Speakers Bureau is giving $1000, Execs giving $1000-$1500, and Undergrads are giving $1000.

Polina thinks we should table this discussion about the request in particular in order to come up with clearer expectations about how each of the pools of money should be distributed in general.

However, the event is coming up soon, and there’s no meeting over Thanksgiving, so they cannot wait for us to have a separate discussion.

Matt reports that we have about 60K left for the remainder of the year, having already allocated more than half of our budget in the first quarter alone.

Melahn says that this Comedy Show/Hypnotist was a successful event in the past, and was then seen as a good chance to get away from the weekly events. Requests that we consider $2000 instead of $3000, and they could ask the other sources for more money.

Objections to giving $2000 from Big Event fund, so move to roll-call vote.

5 for, 7 opposed, 1 abstaining. Fails.

4) 6:37 Proposal to allocate more money for co-sponsorship (Lan)
Tabling this.

5) 6:37 Public Safety (Chief Laura Wilson)

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Sent out the latest safety report in October via email to all students, and now has paper copies of it for us.

Chief Wilson is a 1991 Stanford alum, Human Biology Major. Stayed in Police Work because she likes managing big events, liked the chance to do training and impact how the police interact with students.

Some of the units: Patrols, Traffic/Parking (can’t arrest, but can cite), Event management (ranging from our parties to visiting dignitaries, about 400 per year).

One thing they’re working on is reaching out to International Students, who may not understand the policies of the US or are afraid of approaching the police.

The police put on workshops for groups, which include Identity Theft, Gun removal, and Safety techniques. A group can get in touch with them to request these.

Winter quarter offer Police Academy, meets 1 night a week, get some experience about parts of the police job, like driving the car, responding to threats, etc.

Polina asks about the sexual assault numbers, which have increased over time. Polina wonders whether this is due to underreporting or actual increasing. Chief Wilson thinks that the increase is more about reporting. Polina asks about Grad/Undergrad split for the documented instances. Chief Wilson thinks it’s 70% undergrad, 30% grads, with instances reported by undergrads more likely to be fueled by alcohol and those reported by grads more about relationships.

David asks about 5-SURE and it’s role. Chief Wilson not sure how much it decreases incidences of sexual assault, given that many assaults occur between two people who know each other.

At their recent meeting, the Undergrad Senate discussed use of 5-SURE, wondering what the most effective way of allocating money is to prevent assaults, and whether awareness programs might have more impact.

Mary asks about the increase in liquor and drug offenses and arrests- much of this is a change in the classification of violations.

Nanna asks about their work with other units on campus. For example, students who were concerned about safety in lower levels of buildings asked for suggestions from Police, but it seemed difficult to coordinate with housing the costs of recommendations.

Justin asks about response to large scale emergencies. They do have prioritization of buildings, with student residences high on the list. Have set up a system of Campus Safety Partners, who work in buildings around campus and might be able to help. Self-sufficiency always important though.

Adam wonders about impact of economy, given that they will have fewer resources and crime tends to increase in downturns. They do outreach, working with communities to help them protect themselves (such as trying to spread the message among Undergrads that it’s important to lock doors). With the downturn, they have seen increases in bike thefts mirroring unemployment, and thieves now also doing things like taking copper plating from old buildings. We can always give the police a call if we see instances.

Matt would like to see more information in the brochure about how students can get help if necessary in order to respond to citations.

George asks about how they plan for budget cuts. They’ve been running about 7 people behind already, and low economy is a good chance to get good candidates, which the University seems to be aware of. They may cut out a lieutenant position, and may not fill new positions for 1.5 they were considering. They haven’t really increased their staff since 1970, but we can see how much campus has changed and law enforcement has changed.

They currently have 33 sworn officers, 6 community officers, and 10 focused on parking enforcement. The rest are civilians who work on risk management issues among others. Also have casual employees who work for particular events.

6) 7:04 Elections Committee Update (Etosha)

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Having meetings coming up, including Thursday 8pm in ASSU office in Old Union, about campaign finance reform. Hope to have a bill by the beginning of next quarter that we can vote on. Execs have spent up to $7000 on campaigning; students without those financial resources might then not choose to run.

It is Maria’s birthday, so we take a break to sing.

8) 7:06 Undergrad Senate Update (Justin/Ryan)

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Undergrads discussed 5-SURE, which started as discussing about whether they wanted to pass a resolution supporting it. It was started to prevent forcible rape, question of how much it does so, many rapes are by people known to assailant. There are likely to be budget cuts, so they had a discussion about how money should be allocated.
Also discussion on the use of teddy bears and how they’re treated prior to Big Game. Pointed out that there are probably better ways to use bears, such as donating them. Perhaps have students buy two bears, one to keep and one to give away. This year there doesn’t seem to have been a mass selling of teddy bears, though it ahs happened in the past.

Undergrad Senate is doing survey about fostering relationship between ASSU and Undergrads.

9) 7:13 Programming (Justin/Adam S.)

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Tailgate happened, was fun.

5) 7:14 ASSU Update (George for Jonny/Fagan)

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Put in request for busses to Big Game this weekend, have already put down a deposit, but don’t know total cost, because athletics departments have varied deadlines about ticket sales so they don’t know how many tickets are being sold and thus how many students will be able to go to Berkeley for the game.

They think at least 50 grad students have signed up so far for the busses. Asking us for $500. Each student pays $10 for their ticket on top of the money from other sources to help meet costs. Think total amount of bus cost will be about $30,000.

No objections, giving $500 from programming discretionary passes by consensus.

Hanna requests that the Execs be reminded about our policies about submitting requests for money ahead of time. They had a hard time working with athletics, which probably explains the delay in this case.

ASSU may well be running shuttle busses to the airport in winter, but there seems to be general consensus that we don’t wish to support this anymore.

10) 7:18 Faculty Senate Update (Adam B.)

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They talked about libraries, and they’ve now made a committee to talk more about this issue. Due to budget constraints, libraries being taken down or rebuilt is unlikely to happen soon. However, they are still working on moving books to off campus storage facilities. Their plan is to digitize at least the cover and table of contents of all books that are moved. Would be tough for people in humanities who use books a lot, and also general trouble with the technology for searching that will need to be improved.

11) 7:20 Funding Request ($400) for Grad Diversity Leaders Dinner (Justin)

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On Jan 14th in Havana Room, Justin would like to gather a group of targeted student group leaders over dinner to talk about how to throw good large scale events and how the GSC can support these efforts. It’s good timing in that February is Black History Month, and there are various VSOs that might want to do something, so they could get together to plan something larger. Plan on having about 30 leaders, inviting representatives of about 20 groups, which is the approximate number of large student groups.

Aleksandra asks whether email with the appropriate info might be effective. Justin thinks the OSA doesn’t disseminate knowledge well, thinks this will be a good investment to help other groups to do their funding effectively.

Giving $400 from Programming Discretionary passes by consensus.

12) 7:26 New Business (George)

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Are having a GSC website party Monday evening, 6pm, there will be some food. Want volunteers to come and start putting together the new website, giving feedback about what aspects are most important. Nanna, Justin, Lan, Mary, Andrew volunteer to show up. Matt has given us all accounts in the past in order to get into the current website and make changes, but people haven’t taken the initiative to update, perhaps too complicated for us. Plan to make a flatter website that will hopefully provide more incentive and be easier to add updates.

GSC meeting 2008-11-05

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

Proceedings of the November 5th, 2008 GSC meeting


Agenda

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Sean!)

2) 6:00 Welcome, introductions and announcements (George)
i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.
ii. Approve minutes from the last meeting (10/29/08) with the following correction:
We have $26,000, not $2,600 available in co-sponsorship.
iii. Happy Birthday to George and Fen!

3) 6:05 Funding (Addy)
i. The Science Bus
ii. Vision and Ophthalmology Interest Group
iii. Stanford Solar & Wind Energy Projects
iv. Asian American Graduate Student Association
v. Stanford India Association

4) 6:15 ASSU Update (Jonny and Fagan)

5) 6:19 Undergrad Senate Report (Ryan and Justin)

6) 6:23 Programming (Justin and Adam S.)

7) 6:27 Faculty Senate Report (Adam B.)

8) 6:30 Stanford Dining (Eric and Michael)

9) 6:50 Stanford Dance Marathon (Diana and Jessie)

10) 7:00 GSC Food Czar Replacement (Nanna)

11) 7:05 Rec Swim Hours Update (Nanna)

12) 7:10 NomCom Supplementary Funding Request of $500 (Eric Osborne)

13) 7:15 GSPB Magician Supplementary Funding Request of $256 (Nanna)

14) 7:20 Votes to fill At-Large seats (George)

15) 7:40 Publicity (Zeng and Ivette)

16) 7:50 New Business (George)

Attendance

Voting members present:
At large 1: Aleksandra Korolova
At large 2: Adam Beberg
At large 3: Nanna Notthoff
Business: Rick Thielke
Earth Sciences: Justin Brown
Education: Shane Moise
Engineering 1: Polina Segalova
Engineering 2: Addy Satija
Humanities: George Bloom
Law: Andrew Park
Natural Sciences: Fen Zhao
Medicine: Sean Young (proxy Maria Spletter present)

Voting members not present:
At large 4: Not filled
At large 5: Not filled
Social Sciences: Hanna Muenke

Other people present: Peng Shu, Shelley Gao (UG Senator), Dan Stringer, Varun Mittal, Ping Li (Funding Committee), Wenxiu Ma (ACSSS Funding), Mary Van der Hoven, Alex Sugarbaker (Science Bus), Simone Manganelli, Matt Turk, Andrew Danowitz, Daisy Chen (Stanford Daily), Maskall Bennett, Diane Lee, Dan Chang, Lakshmi Mohan, Melahn Parker, Jason Lang, Matt McLaughlin, Ryan Peacock

Minutes

Many many thanks to Nanna for taking minutes this week. Slight edits made by Hanna afterwards.

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Nanna!)

2) 6:03 Welcome, introductions and announcements (George)

Listen to this segment

i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.
ii. Approved minutes from the last meeting (10/29/08) by consensus with the following correction:
We have $26,000, not $2,600 available in co-sponsorship.
iii. Happy Birthday, Fen and George! There is cake.

3) 6:06 Funding (Addy)

Listen to this segment

Listen to this segment

i. Chinese Student Organization (6:06)
Chinese New Year: Organized in January, at Alumni Center, 500 grad students expected, whole budget is about $12,000 ($7,500 from ASSU), requesting $4,500 total from GSC ($300 for honoraria, $1,200 for programming, $2,100 for food, $1,000 for something I did not catch). Co-hosting with Hong Kong student association. [Projector problem again, move on, come back to this later, so remaining audio separated.]
Back at 6:20pm. Originally requested $11,750, but line items are above cap, and this is more than we give for co-sponsored events. Asked them to look for other sources as well.

Fen asks if $4,000 comes out of $8,000 max per VSO? No, it’s from pot ($10,000) set aside for groups who are co-sponsoring events. More than 500 grad students expected. After this, only $500 would be left in that pot because other organizations also had cosponsored events.

Fen asks: Did group submit yearly budget? Addy: Not yet, but this doesn’t count for $8,000 cap.

Justin asks: Does ratio of money from undergrad senate to undergrad attendance match ratio of money from GSC to grad student attendance? Yes, same ratio.

Giving $4,500 passes by consensus. [finish this item at 6:25]

ii. The Science Bus (6:25pm)
Science bus is community service organization, meeting twice a week, go to East Palo Alto charter school to teach science to second through fifth graders. Request total of $2,600 for member recruitment BBQs, and lesson supplies ($1,000 for food, $1,500 programming, $100 marketing). This is a community service group, so no caps.

Question about how many grad students participate.
Maybe 25-50 grads total. For each lesson, about 5-10 grads.

Giving $2,600 passes by consensus.

iii. Asian American Graduate Student Association (6:27)
Social support network for Asian and Asian American community and supporters. Expanding programming by adding workshops. Requesting $450 for food. Funding committee recommends $450.

Mission: Community, identity, professional activities. Asian American issues: History, mental health, relationships. Create a space for Asian Americans to discuss these issues. Only offered for undergrads so far by A3C, want to create such an opportunity for grads. In 2006-07 two incidents that caused Asian Americans to come together (suicide of one female Asian grad student at Stanford, Virginia tech incident (Korean student)).

Giving $450 passes by consensus.

iv. Asha (6:31)
Community service group, raise funds for education in India and monitor the funds and activities. 2 big fundraisers per year, one is Holi, other is V concert. Funding request today is for V concert. Requesting $3,441.31 (broken down for janitorial services, programming, equipment, honoraria, events and labor). This will be in Kresge Nov 13 or 15 (didn’t catch the date), 7pm. Music, Indian comedian. Last year, event was in Oak Lounge, but need bigger venue this year as it was too crowded. This is not a joint VSO.

Recommended $3419.51 (request changed by the organization, Funding Committee recommends all – this is a community service group, no caps).

Fen asks: Do they have 8,000 cap? Addy: No. But yes to caps for line items. First time they are coming this year.

Melahn asks: Do they plan to request funding for second event (Holi)? Yes, around $3,000-$4,000. (3000 people expected for that).Will end up requesting about $7,000 from GSC for the whole year.

Giving $3419.51 passes by consensus.

v. Other groups not here:
Stanford India Association, Sarvodaya, Vision and Ophthalmology Interest Group, Stanford Solar & Wind Energy Projects

4) 6:08 ASSU Update (Jonny and Fagan)
Not here

5) 6:08 Undergrad Senate Report (Ryan and Justin)
Shelley said this was a pretty quick meeting. Justin and Ryan were unable to go.

6) 6:08 Programming (Justin and Adam S.)

Listen to this segment

Elections party in 750 yesterday (November 4) was well-attended, lots of fun.

Next big event will be Stanford vs. USC tailgate, will be at Ford Plaza, in front of ACSR, Saturday, November 15, starts at noon. Help appreciated starting at 9am. Talk to Justin, if you can help.

Grad Formal scheduled for Saturday April 25, 2009.

7) 6:10 Faculty Senate Report (Adam B.)

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Everyone should have gotten a letter from president and provost about budget cuts, mainly affects humanities because money comes from endowment and general fees payout. Engineering should not be too affected.

8) 6:11 GSC Food Czar Replacement (Nanna)

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Nanna reports that Sean is the GSC food czar, but has been off-campus since summer. Thanking Sean for still keeping up with the ordering of the food while he is gone. But there are some other tasks that are part of being the food czar, such as set-up, clean-up, receiving delivery, making sure we have a supply of drinks and cutlery (purchasing those, if necessary), etc. Fine for others to help with that, but those tasks that require local presence have had to be completely taken over by others in Sean’s absence. Today, Nanna ordered the food, since Sean is out of the country and didn’t know if he would have access to a computer. Given that it currently seems to be difficult for Sean to fulfill his responsibilities as Food Czar, Nanna suggests finding a replacement, at least until he returns. There is a stipend for the position.

Shane volunteers to fill the position, starting next week.

9) 6:12 Rec Swim Hours Update (Nanna)

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Meeting today with Eric Stein (Senior Associate Athletic Director, Physical Education, Recreation, and Wellness) and Rebecca Carpenter (Avery Aquatic Manager), attended by Alex Hirsch (he started the petition), Nanna (representing the GSC), Matt Winterbourne (undergrad, lobbied for extended library hours). A UG Senate rep was supposed to attend, but didn’t show.

Alex gives brief update: 965 signatures on petition, as of today, thanks Rec sports people for having 7am-9am morning swim at Roble (but adds that response might not have been that great because of Roble’s small size and not so great location), 10am-2pm swim at Avery hard for many people to make (may be ok for undergrads, but hard for grads, post-docs, staff, faculty, who were a large group responding to the petition).

Alex thinks we need more “off-business” hours, before 9am, after 5pm or 6pm. Proposes to have evening swim 5-8pm or 6-9pm, morning 6-9am, keep afternoon slot, perhaps add some time at Roble to prevent over-crowding. Alex thinks overcrowding mostly a problem in fall and spring. Says that different schedules for different days would be ok, but Rebecca says it’s easier to keep things consistent, especially for communication with the coaches. Rebecca started doing head counts and can come back with data regarding the overcrowding issue (it seems the main problem is the prescribed pace for the lanes (slow, med, fast) and people having difficulty choosing the right lane).

Rebecca points out that Stanford has 6-7 aquatic varsity teams, more than other universities. She is here since June, so pretty new, still figuring things out. She comes from George Mason University, where she managed the pools. There she had separate pools for athletics teams and rec swim and could hold very good rec swim programs, but this seems hard at Stanford.

Rebecca says, apart from varsity and rec swim, there are other groups using the pool. One of them is SCRA, which is a type of country club that is part of the Stanford community. For some reason, they really used the pool a lot this fall, thus constraints on evening schedule, but should be better in winter and spring. Gunn High-school will have their last day of pool use this Friday; after that will expand space for evening swim at Avery from 7 to 14 lanes.

Eric, who is also in charge of the BeWell (Stanford wellness) program willing to look into this issue. He and Rebecca think evening swim is easier to tackle than morning because in the morning need to preserve flexibility for varsity teams, also seems to be less demand for morning (maybe it’s too cold now), so plan to reduce morning swim in winter, bring back in spring.

Eric reports that meetings about budgets are coming up in the next few weeks, need to discuss rec sports budget in light of overall budget cuts of the university. At the same time, Eric thinks if this is a real need, money shouldn’t be the obstacle. Emphasizes that he thinks it’s great he is hearing from students (hasn’t really heard much thus far), and that he tries to respond (gives example of extending hours at ACSR from 7am-11pm to 6am-1am). Eric wants to hear about the needs first, then see what he can do, then possibly let us know if he needs help. He says he is responsible for “the world of rec sports” and thinks that things can be figured out and shifted to meet the needs.

Eric and Rebecca reluctant to disclose finances – they say it is against the policies. But Rebecca does mention that heating for the pools is very expensive – it’s $60,000/month, and that doesn’t include any other operating expenses. Rebecca adds that another issue is staffing – hard to find life guards. They have paid staff, for policy reasons cannot have volunteers, but paid students are just fine (if certified). Certification classes coming up. Nanna encourages Rebecca to forward this information – we will distribute this info to constituents, undergrads should do the same. Certified student life guard gets paid $14/hour. Another issue are the availability of locker rooms (cannot overcrowd them) and the manpower it takes to get pools ready.

Eric and Rebecca say that they will definitely look into more evening swim at Avery, possibly two days of morning to start with. They are very reluctant to accept any help from students/student reps, say they will report back next week.

Addy asks if Gunn High-school and SCRA have fixed time slots or can come whenever. Nanna: They have fixed time slots.

Ryan says SCRA has own pool near Rains. Justin says it’s under construction. Should be done by the end of the fall though, so no more constraints by SCRA then (like the Rec people said).

Ryan and Mary wonder, if they let the pool cool down every night and find it unlikely. Say costs of life guards shouldn’t be so bad given operating costs.

10) 6:36 NomCom Supplementary Funding Request of $500 (Nanna for Eric Osborne)

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NomCom requesting additional funds for training (budgeted $6,000 overall, with the following break-down: $1,500 Encina Hall rental, $120 janitor service, $250 misc events and labor services, $4,130 catering). Say that $6,000 is 63% of annual NomCom budget. Requesting $500 from GSC, and also from UG Senate and ASSU Exec, respectively. Say that without extra funding, only have about $2,500 for catering, which they find hard to work with, given the $16/person cost for catering. Say they had extra money left over from last year, but didn’t realize that SSE fiscal year ends June 30 and that they would be unable to use it.

Nanna says General Discretionary could be the source (had $4,690 allocated; $3,200 left).

Aleksandra asks: how many people are on NomCom? Melahn says probably 250 people. Aleksandra thinks budget for catering is too high given number of committees. She says there are probably not 125 grads on the committees. Adam B. says there are about 50 committees. Maria says it’s training for everyone from NomCom. Some people are confused and think that we fund NomCom. Matt McL. clarifies and says their other money is from endowment payout says. Matt adds that NomCom has not done training in past, but Eric is very ambitious. Polina points out catering also includes labor, cutlery, etc.; that’s why it costs co much.

Two objections, so we go to a roll call vote. In favor: 5 Opposed: 5 Abstaining: 2

Giving $500 to NomCom for training does not pass.

11) 6:42 Stanford Dining (Eric and Michael)

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Eric Montell (Executive Director for Stanford Dining) introduces himself. Stanford dining has changed; still have all the dining halls (as before), now also summer conferences, training, Schwab (executive education). Have been working on several initiatives with Justin’s help. New: Grad Meal plan. Really looked at how to provide value to grad students at price that would be conducive to grad student lifestyle, have lunch and dinner plans.

Now also looking at dining from event perspective (faculty speakers with topic of interest to grads). Planned: 10-12 environmental faculty series per year, had first one in October, next event in Wilbur on November 12. Topic will be Sustainable Seafood, with people from Monterey Bay Aquarium, Ethics and Society Center, Alaska Seafood Technical Director, and others. Setting up registration for upcoming event. Trying to get grads to come to undergrad dining halls. These events are a new service.

Michael Grotz (Dining Hospitality and Retail Services Director) introduces himself. In charge of Stanford guest house, concessions at stadium, retail dining locations. Was at USC before coming here (11 years). New at Stanford. Wants to learn new things, find out about grads’ priorities. Says he is pro-student. Thinks students bring important issues to the table. Wants to bring value to retail cafes, e.g., at Tresidder. Peet’s converted. New: organic yogurt at Tresidder (contract has been signed with Fraiche, with formal announcement expected in the next few weeks). Michael has background in retail and hospitality (worked in hotels for many years).

Eric: Munger is coming, and will have store and café and banquet hall. Law school and GSB students and variety of others will be living there and making use of this. Will seek input regarding menu and prices from grads.

Michael: Like to develop more of a unique characteristic in their facilities. Axe and Palm is popular, already had menu feedback. Goal is to have unique facilities with good ambiance, not goal to compete with other facilities on campus, but have dining facilities stand out. Students have impact over the long term!

Melahn says: Request for Michael Pollen for the speaker series because he is local. Eric thinks it’s a good idea.

Melahn asks: What did you mean with not wanting to compete? Dining: Most important goal to bring value to students, not cheaper at cost of quality. Dining evolves around student lifestyles; students expect different things year to year, expectations change.

Melahn asks: What fraction of cost is labor? Dining: It’s the most significant cost. But good point because one thing important to students is how employees are treated and paid. Dining pays a living wage to its employees, other facilities don’t.

Addy reports he has been a meal plan member last year when there was no grad meal plan, grad meal plan has decreased his cost by half, says thanks. Asks, if there are plans for breakfast on grad meal plan (would specifically like it at 750). Dining: No current plans for breakfast at 750, but possibly at Tresidder. Need to see, if and where there would be demand.

Dining is thinking about creating a grad family meal plan, asks if that would be added value?
Melahn suggests: Have it around off-hours of undergrad facilities, so the costs for dining don’t increase. Justin says: Quick answer to family plan question: not sure, doesn’t have kids. Do you have business cards and ways to get in touch? Dining pass around contact info to some GSC members. Suggest to look for contact info on website. Adam B. says: Location would be a problem for families; plan would be too expensive given what employees would have to be paid.

Fen reports she didn’t know about grad meal plan, doesn’t reach everyone, suggests Dining talk about it and promote it better. Grad meal plan: $5.95 for lunch bought in blocks of 5, $6.95 for dinner in blocks of 5, all you can eat, any undergrad dining hall, doesn’t expire. Dining halls ONLY.

Munger will be retail café, not a dining hall.

Addy comes back to the topic of breakfast: He talked to Marcela (from GLO), and she said that nobody comes to 750 for breakfast. Justin said yesterday’s breakfast was a special event; usually there is not breakfast at 750. Addy asks about cardinal dollars, Dining responds that they can be ordered online, but that there are some places that don’t accept them, such as Nexus at the Clark Center (near the Medical School).

Addy says: Dining halls close to grad housing (such as Stern near Crothers and CroMem) are very crowded for lunch. Addy asks: Are there plans of expanding service in Branner Dining Hall (one place where the Grad Meal plan can be used)? Dining says: No.

Ryan asks: Are all dining halls near undergrad residences? Someone says no. One is next to Lyman. Ryan thinks there should be dining halls near new buildings, like lab buildings (especially for lunch), e.g., near new med school buildings. Dining says, yes, this is an issue because the infrastructure there has grown a lot.

Another big issue: How many cafes can this campus really support, such that they do a good job, have enough customers? If there are too many cafes, it degrades the whole program. There are plans though to put a new café into new med school buildings.

Ryan says: Late night/dinner services: Not that many options (Mary says: Treehouse, 750, hospital are available).

Adam B. says: There is nothing anywhere near Clarke that takes cardinal dollars. Do something about that (suggests new facility or ask them to take cardinal dollars). Dining explains: Can create low cost plans by capturing the overhead costs somehow (staff, electricity, etc.). If they spread it out a lot, they can’t do that anymore.

Fen asks: Is there any chance of getting a dining hall near EV? Since Munger will only have retail? Fen wants a real dining hall near EV. Dining cannot build a dining hall independently. But Michael says: Munger programming still has to be determined, how it will look (breakfast vs. lunch vs. dinner, what are the expectations for opening hours, need more discussion). If anyone wants to serve on Munger advisory committee, they will recruit in next few weeks. It involves brainstorming ideas about café, convenience store, etc. Asks us to put a group together and then contact dining with the names. Polina agrees to do that.

Shane asks: What percentage of products is locally produced or organic? Dining says: Around 40%. Really focused this year on seafood, challenging because it’s a wild product, changing. Trying to partner with Monterey Bay Aquarium. Schwab was rated #1 exec conference center in the world for 2 or 3 years in a row, so pressure to keep that up. Wanting to expand sustainability program with students. Employ 20 students as gardeners. How can we grow more products on the campus itself? Organic herb and vegetable gardens are at every dining hall. Plan to look for co-ops of farmers, can overwhelm individuals with volume alone. Cannot rely on one farmer because maybe that person sometimes cannot deliver something that’s necessary. They are trying to work with family farmers on becoming organic. Had a discussion with other universities, talked with Peter Singer (Princeton, I think), this organic development is a process, gradual.

Melahn says: Maybe you could have increased participation of grads, if you offer more discounts or deliver and take-out. Thinks GCC seems best place to serve food to grads. Suggests creating a meal plan at 750. Or replace 750 possibly?

Person from Asian American Graduate Student Organization: Establishing some graduate dining hall would be nice. Doesn’t think that family meal plan can be successful if it’s far away from families. Thinks families also wouldn’t necessarily want to share dining halls with undergrads who have quite different demographics.

Dining cannot build a new facility because they have to compete for space with new academic buildings. Have a general use permit.

Grad meal plan: Trying to get the price right, know grad students are on tight budgets. Say it’s great, if you can cut your price with this, especially because food prices are really going up!

Dining asks: How does the GCC still remain the GCC with the new Munger facilities? What do we want in terms of programming for GCC and Munger? Equal? How can we keep great life at GCC AND also have something at Munger?

12) 7:16 GSPB Magician Supplementary Funding Request of $256 (Nanna)

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GSPB is requesting an additional $256 for the Magician Show on November 14 (in addition to $500 that we approved last week) to increase length of show from 40 minutes to 1 hour 15 minutes. This would come from GSPB Co-sponsorship from Co-sponsorship line item in Programming account.

Addy is concerned that it might not fit in the budget, and they might go over budget but Nanna reports that she received a budget from Robert and Annemarie, and that GSPB has everything well-planned out.

Giving $256 to GSPB from Co-sponsorship passes by consensus

13) 7:18 Stanford Dance Marathon (Diana and Jessie)

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They are looking to include grad community in this, not just undergrads. Want to know what community service looks like for grads. Are grads interested in participating/coming to Dance Marathon (DM)?

Dance marathon was started at Stanford 5 years ago, goal to raise awareness about HIV and support international health issues.

Each year have dancers register to stay on feet for 24 hours, also need moralers who stay for 3 hours, all raise money (moralers less than dancers). Choose their own beneficiaries, this year in organizations in Rwanda and San Mateo.

Also want to support individuals who want to provide service. Past two years, they raised over $100,000. This year Face Aids is matching all money raised, aiming for over $200,000. This is going to health and nutrition and school programs with Partners in Health (www.pih.org) for Rwanda. Also working with Ellipse in San Mateo county.

Last year: 600 dancers. In the past, had some med and law students participate. How to reach more grads?

Also have a contemplation room, which is educational.

Also have family day for Stanford and outside community (games, activities, food).

Campus Team: events, community, campus.

This year, dancers goal is to raise $192 each, describe how much money can do what ($120 for ARV’s for a year, etc.)

Community Team: local business and corporate outreach. This year another component of DM: 24 hours of technical service, Google, Yahoo, and others will sponsor.

Upcoming events (dm.stanford.edu). Dancer deadline: Nov 21. Big game t-shirts to benefit HIV organizations. Paul Farmer coming to speak Nov 14, World AIDs day coming up Dec 1st, etc.

More info/interest – contact Diana Willard dianaw@stanford.edu

Polina asks them to send information to GSC. Also submit to grad events! Get in touch with Andy Hernandez (GLO) about Family Day.

Justin asks: Would you be interested in having an event in Grad land to sign people up? Get in touch with Justin. Diana says, yes interested, perhaps want to come to Comedy Night to sign people up.

Addy suggests having a table at USC tailgate.

Addy says partners in health has been cleared by UNICEF and another organizations to prevent spread of HIV from mother to child.

Fen asks about “mechanics” of dance marathon: Do you have to dance the whole time? What if you cannot dance? Diana: It’s about the support and staying for 24 hours, but really it’s a whole year of fundraising and community service. The actual DM day is just for community building. Justin says DM is a party. Diana invites everyone to stop by, usually cover charge of $10 which gets donated to the beneficiaries.

14) 7:30 Publicity (Zeng and Ivette)

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Zeng and Ivette are working on next publicity event: Happy Hour with GSC. Maybe join in on other happy hours around campus? Idea of going to the students, instead of having students come to us. Maybe donating some wine.

Addy says that there are departments that have enough wine and beer. Thinks it’s a good idea to go, even without giving people an incentive.

Polina says: Get in touch with people running the happy hours to make sure it’s ok to go. Have a member of GSC from that department present.

15) 7:33 Votes to fill At-Large seats (Polina)

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We have two vacant voting seats. They are both At-large seats. One of them is vacant because Karan Chaudhry, who was holding the seat, no longer has time to fulfill his role as a GSC rep. Then other is the seat that Ryan was holding as an interim rep. At the retreat, we decided to fill these mid-year open seats by announcing to the GSC-members list at least a week before the vote what positions would be up for consideration. Polina did send an email to the GSC-members list last week to announce today’s vote for the two At-large seats.

Addy asks: Was Ryan voting today? Ryan says no.

Four people want the position: Ryan Peacock, Mary Van der Hoven, Melahn Parker, Jason Lang.

Polina explains that each voting member will have two votes since there are two vacant seats.

Candidates introduce themselves.

Mary: School of Earth Sciences, coming to GSC meetings since summer, encouraged by some people to run, was originally somewhat afraid of time commitment. Can offer different perspective from other people because she has been around longer, and her perspective is not that represented on the GSC so far.

Ryan: Was an At-large rep for the last few months, wants to continue. He has been active with Legislative Action, went to D.C., serves on our behalf at NAGPS, will definitely continue that, acts as liason to UG senate.

Melahn: 6th year grad student in Engineering, has been involved with Stanford community (GSPB and GSC in the last two years), other activities, events, bringing people to run comedy, other larger campus events. Considers himself very engaged in campus life. Ran for Engineering position in last Spring’s election, but was removed because he was not a registered student. Now he is registered, next quarter as well. Wants to take on the responsibility of having a vote and being a regular attendee and wants to be part of the decisions.

Jason Lang: 1st year MBA at GSB, just found out about GSC last week through Kristina Keating via dependent healthcare initiative. Started to rally for support at GSB for dependent healthcare and started a petition for that, wants to be involved with the GSC healthcare advocacy group. Wants better integration of GSB with rest of Stanford. Really interested in working on integrating grad communities.

Candidates leave the room for the discussion and vote.

No audio or written recording of discussion about the candidates.

After the vote, Ryan will be the new At-Large 4 Rep; Mary is the new At-Large 5 Rep. Will be sworn in next week.

16) 7:46 New Business (Polina)

[Audio recorder did not recorded this part.] Justin reports that GSPB is doing really good programming now, almost every day. Money really getting used, make sure you get on grad events email list!

Adjourned 7:47.

GSC meeting 2008-11-12

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

Proceedings of the November 12th 2008 GSC meeting


Agenda

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Shane!)

2) 6:00 Welcome, introductions and announcements (Polina)
i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.
ii. Approve minutes from the last meeting (11/05/08) with the following changes:
- Some factual changes in the Dining section about specific dining locations and what they offer.

3) 6:05 Funding (Addy)
i. Stanford Student Biodesign
ii. Nigerian Students Association (Naija)
iii. Stanford Alpine Project

4) 6:15 ASSU Update (Jonny and Fagan)

5) 6:20 Undergrad Senate Report (Ryan and Justin)

6) 6:25 Programming (Justin and Adam S.)

7) 6:30 Diversity Committee Update (DAC Representative)

8) 6:35 NAGPS Update (Fen and George)

9) 6:50 eGroups Update (Matt McLaughlin)

10) 7:05 Committee on Graduate Studies (Danielle and Cameron)

11) 7:25 Supplementary Funding Request ($256) for Elections Party (Justin)

12) 7:30 Funding Source Modification for Chinese Student Group (Addy)

13) 7:35 Supplementary Funding Request ($500) for NomCom (Eric)

14) 7:45 Swearing in of new At-Large reps (Polina)

15) 7:50 New Business (Polina)

Attendance

Voting members present:
At large 1: Aleksandra Korolova
At large 2: Adam Beberg
At large 3: Nanna Notthoff
At large 4: Ryan Peacock (not voting yet)
At large 5: Mary Van der Hoven (not voting yet)
Business: Rick Thielke
Earth Sciences: Justin Brown (proxy Simone Manganelli present)
Education: Shane Moise
Engineering 1: Polina Segalova
Engineering 2: Addy Satija
Humanities: George Bloom
Law: Andrew Park
Natural Sciences: Fen Zhao
Medicine: Sean Young (proxy Maria Spletter present)
Social Sciences: Hanna Muenke

Voting members not present:

Other people present: Shelley Gao (UGrad Senate), Joseph Lau (VSO), Mohammad Hekmat, Vincent Le Chenavec (FSSA), John Ten Hoeve, Adam Sciambi, Peng Shu, Daisy Chen (Daily), Matt McLaughlin, Shashank Gupta (Sarvodaya), Abhinav Agrawal (Sarvodaya), Alex Ene, G. Hippolyte, Eric Osborne (NomCom)

Minutes

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Shane!)

2) 6:01 Welcome, introductions and announcements (Polina)

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i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.
ii. Approved minutes from the last meeting (11/05/08) by consensus with the following changes:
- Some factual changes in the Dining section about specific dining locations and what they offer.
iii. Thanksgiving website is up. 256 signed up so far, total capacity is 1500.
iv. A Grad student in EE passed away last week. There will be services on campus, attendees are requested to wear bright clothes.

3) 6:06 Funding (Addy)

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Listen to this segment

i. Asha for Education. Need $173.69 in addition to their previous request. Thought they just needed monitors, but now also need to separately rent other equipment such as cables. Actual increased cost is higher, but they have found some sources for those. Also now need to rent tables, since the ones we planned to have available aren’t ready yet. Giving $174 passes by consensus.

ii. Stanford Alpine Project – Group of students, mainly from Geology department. Do fundraisers, then every few years go on Geological field trips. Planning to go to Iceland this summer. Having a chili cookoff next Friday as a fundraiser. Requesting $700 for that. Fen asks about possibility of working within Stanford Outdoors umbrella – they haven’t been involved with that yet, but might look into it for some activity options. Giving $700 passes by consensus.

iii. French Stanford Student Association. Will be having a Wine and Cheese event, for which they previously requested some money. They’re doubling the size of event though, so need another $400. Giving $400 more passes by consensus.

iv. Persian Student Association. Requested money for Classical music series (for honorarium) and would now like to serve refreshments after the event, so are asking money for that. They are not at their $8000 cap yet. Giving $300 passes by consensus.

v. Sarvodaya – Name means ‘Welfare for all’ and they try to do social service. Would like to show movie about Gandhi and have dinner for 70-80 people. Giving $750 passes by consensus.

vi. Stanford Solar and Wind Energy Projects. This is their second year, are 75% Graduate Students. Assess resources on campus, seek to increase the amount of reuseable energy that Stanford uses. Having a speaker series, much of the money is planned for food and honorarium for those. Have already had three speakers, next one in two weeks. Also asking for some conference registration fees. Some of the requested budget was planned for equipment to measure wind in Salinas, but we don’t fund capital equipment for VSOs, but it’s not clear from the initial budget presented which portion was for that. Polina suggests working offline to get the details worked out, so we’ll come back to this later. Not approving yet.

vii. Stanford Student Biodesign. Goal is to connect students to BioX initiative. Requesting money for a speaker series, think it will draw 150 students. Particular upcoming event is a lecture about consulting and biotech followed by dinner. Recommended $610. Giving $610 passes by consensus.

viii. Stanford Student Biodesign and Nigerian Students Association (Naija) are not present.

Taking a food break 6:21. Stopped recorder.

6:29 Back to Stanford Solar and Wind Energy Projects. $1687 of their proposed budget is for things we can fund, like honorarium, food, marketing, and conference fees. Giving $1687 passes by consensus.

4) 6:30 ASSU Update (Jonny and Fagan)
Not here.

5) 6:30 Undergrad Senate Report (Ryan and Shelley)

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The Undergrads now take minutes at their Senate meetings, and can forward them to us if we’d like.
Shelley reports that they’re trying to encourage more intergroup interactions, similar to what we have done.

6) 6:31 Programming (Adam S.)

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Tailgate soon, Formal in April.

7) 6:32 Diversity Committee Update (Shane)

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Working on a new Grad Student Life survey, and are putting questions together now. Plan to use this to guide their priorities for the next year. Suggestion to get feedback on survey design from GSC people who have worked on other ones.

8) 6:34 NAGPS Update (Fen and George and Ryan)

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NAGPS is National Association of Graduate and Professional Students. Work with other schools to develop platform for things that affect all graduate students, then lobby in DC.

Fen and George went to 2008 NAGPS conference in Minnesota. 70 students from various universities attended.

In terms of structure, there’s a NAGPS Board, with advocacy committees, executive board, regional coordinators, and constitution/by-laws maintenance. On issues, each school gets one vote, and there are 80 member schools.

Have four main committees:
Legislative Concerns
Social Justice (Bill of Rights for Graduate Students, Human Diversity)
International Student Concerns (Visa and employment issues, works with Council of Graduate Schools)
Employment Concers (Healthcare, stipends, housing, survey piloted at Brigham Young
Public Relations is also a committee, but less central.

Some conference events:
Had speakers on
- National Grad Crisis Hotline, 1800-GRADHLP
- BetterWorldBooks
- InsideHigherEd (free online publication)
Workshops. There were lots, these are what Fen attended.
- Grad housing – closed with 6-month warning at University of Cincinnati. They compiled some stats at the time that might be helpful for any other schools facing trouble with housing for graduate students.
- Communication ideas. They liked Wiki sites, personal contact (though what that looks like at a big school is unclear)
Book: 101 Ways to build an effective graduate-professional student organization. Will at some point be online at nagps.org

Legislative Action plans
- Down to 3 pages and 40 points
- Student rights: healthcare, child care, equity with undergrads, 1st amendment
- Higher Education Funding: student loans, federal funding to universities, grants, RISE Act
- International Student Issues: visas, country caps, SEVIS, federal aid, equal access to leave
- Educational Policy: Diversity, pipeline, advisory committee, Grad-Prof student appreciation week
- Tax Policy: Restore tax exemptions, FICA exemption (why we don’t pay social security tax)
- Chose not to focus on green energy this year, figure there’s enough other groups focusing on that that grad students in particular don’t need to put their energy towards that.

There’s a Western Regional Conference, to be held (probably) April 2-4 2009. Lots of school in the region that could be involved. May well focus on healthcare and housing, though this is to be decided. Ryan will play a role in organizing this.

Mary wants to know why tax policy isn’t a higher priority. Issues aren’t necessarily listed in a priority order. When you go to DC, you have talking points on everything, and can also talk about other things that you feel are relevant. Mary actually meant why tax policy wasn’t being considered as a topic for the Western Regional Conference. Conferences are a chance to talk about things that in particular affect the schools involved less so than national issues. At least for us and Davis, housing and healthcare are big issues. Berkeley also lost their dependent health care this year, others have as well, so it may well be a broader issue to be explored. This is not what goes to legislative action necessarily.

9) 6:56 eGroups Update (Matt McLaughlin)

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Banking/Capital Group have created an infrastructure for banking for groups.

eGroups now has a function for eChecks (so groups don’t need to collect paper checks for payment) and also eTicketing. This will allow groups to do ticketing online cheaper than other options right now.

The Stanford Ticket Office, which we’ve used in the past, has set-up fee of $30, then 3.5% for credit cards (the actual charge is 1.8-2.2%, so they’re taking a margin), $1.50-$4.50 convenience fee, etc. These fee can really add up.

Egroups does 2.2% + 30 cents. This also allows the money to stay in-house at ASSU. Makes accounting easier, and means GSC would get money faster. Set-up would be $20, also less than the Ticket Office.

Nanna says we did use Egroups last year for bus tickets, which went well. Manager for eGroups seems to be good communicator.

Fen in past had to choose which ticket system to go with for formal. At that point 75% of people bought in person at ticket office, which the Stanford Ticket Office was good for. Right now, the eGroups is set up for online purchasing only, though tickets could be picked up in person afterwards. Keeping money in house is good though –few years back took over a year for them to get money back to the GSC from the ticket sales. Needed to get Ken Hsu’s help in the end on that.

Addy asks whether CAs could use it. Right now it’s only for student groups. eCommerce was not comfortable with it being broader. They have other solutions for different arenas, seem to prefer keeping them separate.

Ryan thinks that people who went to ticket office in past did so to avoid Will Call (which was the only option if you bought ticket online), so if they could pick up tickets after purchasing online more people might do so. In this case, could pick up 9-5 at ASSU, or could print them out on their own.

Fen concerned about forgeries if it’s just printouts.

Mary wonders whether we could get ID cards programmed, but Matt thinks this would be prohibitively expensive and would require coordinating with University.

Addy thinks eliminating the wait would be good, thinks we could figure out details of ticket security.

Matt thinks their office could come up with a good solution.

Simone reminds us that there are various situations that would need to be taken into account (people buying in different ways at different times, including at the door), but these are details that could be figured out.

10) 7:12 Committee on Graduate Studies (Danielle and Cameron)

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Their committee looks at University wide policies.

So far, the agenda, driven by VPGE and talking with smaller groups of students is as follows:
Interdisciplinary programs and how credit units differ in departments.
Rule that PhD students have two years to get to Candidacy, but departments differentially enforce this.
Co-term issues (numbers have grown a lot recently)
Academic Advising
School calendar for 09-10 year – looking to adjust add/drop and lengthen withdrawal, make it consistent and include Law School as they switch to quarters.

Other ideas:
- Rule that you can only apply to one program at a time.
- Making it easier to take classes in other departments. No one says no, but there’s always bureaucracy to get enrolled. For example, hard to register on Axess for Business School class if you’re not in B-school. They’re also on a different schedule with deadlines too.
- TGR fees. Provost’s ideal of everyone finishing in 5 year doesn’t happen. It’s 40% of normal fees. Especially for Humanities, who may not have continued funding and need to pay out-of-pocket, that’s a lot to cover.
- Faculty can’t change grades in Axess after a deadline
- Other comments about how Axess sucks. Don’t think the new version is an improvement. It’s slow, difficult to navigate. Aleksandra reports that she was part of student group who was shown the new site early for feedback, but they didn’t actually take most of the suggestions. Perhaps need some more pushing.
- Search Function doesn’t work well, defaults to Undergrad, so then you can’t do a broad search for classes.
- Nanna found that HelpSU did not really help resolve Axess issue.
- Registrar refuses to certify any outside forms of proof of enrollment.
- Teaching evaluations problematic. Sometimes the system just doesn’t collect feedback due to errors. Other problem is that it has a very specific mold for how classes are set-up, so if there are multi-TA classes it’s hard to evaluate.

Contact info: dharlan@stanford.edu (Danielle) and cmackenz@stanford.edu (Cameron). They welcome any feedback. Good for us to all be on same page for what students need and all push the University on the same issues.

11) 7:27 Supplementary Funding Request ($368) for Elections Party (Nanna)

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We had approved $400, but they had larger turnout than expected and also went longer. It was a good party. $368 now requested to cover the difference for what we initially approved and what it ultimately cost, to come from Programming Discretionary. Giving $368 passes by consensus.

12) 7:29 Funding Source Modification for Chinese Student Group (Addy)

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Last week we funded Chinese Student Group for $4500 for Lunar New Year party, which they are hosting along with Hong Kong and Taiwanese student groups. The money came from co-sponsorship funds that we set aside for groups working together. ($10,000 total). Addy thinks this $10,000 would be better served for smaller VSOs working together, and that we should instead fund the Lunar New Year Party from the $10,000 that we previously approved coming from the reserves in order to fund large events.

Funding committee gets money from GSGF, from which individual groups apply for money for events, up to an $8000 cap.
There’s a separate $10,000 for events co-sponsored by multiple VSOs.
Also, we approved separate money for large events, with the money coming from either unallocated funds from the previous year in the Funding Committee, or up to $10,000 additionally from the reserves for this.

Nanna would like to know what other groups have asked for money from the co-sponsorship.
Persian/Muslim Awareness Network put on an event, Diwali Party was co-hosted, and the Muslin Student Association and Comedy Club are planning an event together.

We had a lot of conversation in the past about the criteria for this extra $10,000 from the reserves for large events, in the end we just specified that it be at least 500 people and open to the community.

Proposal is to move the previously approved $4500 from co-sponsorship to instead coming from the $10,000 from reserves for large events.

Objection because line-item isn’t clear. We did vote on this policy of taking up to $10,000 from the reserves for large events, but we don’t currently have a particular line-item for it.

We follow with more discussion.

Matt McLaughlin wonders why we aren’t paying for this from the General Fee, given that if we over-allocate that it will come from reserves in the end anyway.

Polina reminds us of what happened last spring, when we funded Gran Fiesta Latina but not Persian Student Association. Creating this new policy to differentiate those two situations.

Point being that this could be funded from two sources because it is both a large event and co-sponsored. Last week we said co-sponsorship, now want to switch it to the other one, where there’s perhaps less competition, which would leave more money available for smaller co-sponsored events.

Considering the proposal again to pay the $4500 from the Large Event funds rather than then co-sponsorship funds.

There are objections because of the general idea of this extra money from reserves, and because it’s good to encourage the co-sponsorship (this is the first time the group has worked with other VSOs to put on Lunar New Year).

4 for, 4 opposed. 2 abstaning. Does not pass.

This is the first time we’ve had co-sponsorship as a separate category, might be too low, which we can figure out another time.

At the next meeting we’ll discuss whether to move more money into the co-sponsorship.

13) 7:49 Swearing in of new At-Large reps (Nanna)

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Nanna leads Mary Van der Hoven and Ryan Peacock through the pledge. They are duly sworn in and can vote next week.

14) 7:50 Supplementary Funding Request ($500) for NomCom (Eric)

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This request did not pass when we considered it last week, but Eric wasn’t here, so we were missing some of the info. He’s here now to fill us in.

Eric feels that these University Committees are really important to running the University. Senate and GSC felt there needed to be more training and more coordination for committee members reporting to elected bodies, which is why the committee is planning this event. Hope that having this dinner will lead to people taking this seriously.

Now, each NomCom person will directly work with representatives to particular committees, which will help with accountability and hopefully also increase in information flow.

All of NomCom started last spring, and had $3000 left in their budget, purposely didn’t spend all of it so that there would be more for the fall training events. Were then surprised when their budget left at the spring went back to ASSU reserves (because July 1 starts the new calendar year, which they didn’t know), so now they were short on what they had planned for fall.

Gives some details of the event, including the speakers, who will talk about the major issues facing the University.

$4500 of NomCom’s $7900 budget for the year going towards this. The rest would go towards recruitment in the spring. Last year spent $2700 in spring on recruitment, felt it worked well, their committees are almost full, which is rare. Think costs could be reduced this year, but want to make sure they leave money for the new NomCom team starting in the spring.

Execs have giving $500, Undergrad Senate have given $300, with $200 more conditional on us contributing.

Nanna asks about what training portion will be, both at this event and later. At event, similar committees will be seated together. Will also have speakers and specific training items alternated, and time for committee members to begin talking.

Fen concerned about high cost of event – we don’t give that much to student groups for events. Polina stresses that this is different and important to the functioning of the University.

In future, they will do requests for this event from the Stanford Fund, which suggested they’d be interested, but they’d need to apply much earlier. Also tried some other sources which didn’t pan out this year.

Ryan points out comparison to how much we give to student groups for their events, feels fine about $500 for this important thing. Also thinks that if we can make it a good event this year, next year it’ll be easier to have evidence for getting money from University.

NomCom can’t get funded from Reserves, can only come from ASSU endowment or payoff from them. If they were to ask for all their money leftover from last year, that would need to come from actual endowment, since most of the payoff has been distributed.

This request for $500 would come from general discretionary, which is payoff from ASSU endowment, so not from student fees. About $3000 there currently.

Per head cost of event will be about $60, including room rental. Tried some places like Oak Room, weren’t available.

Fen wonders if NomCom could pay for it all now, then have them ask us for more money in the spring if necessary, because then it would then be more like us funding recruitment. Eric’s point is that them paying for it now would leave less money for recruitment, and there would be a new chair needing to deal with that lack of money.

There’s an objection.
9 for, 1 opposed, 0 abstaining. Giving $500 from general discretionary passes.

15) 8:13 New Business (Polina)
No new business.

GSC meeting 2008-10-29

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

Proceedings of the October 29th 2008 GSC meeting


Agenda

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Sean!)

2) 6:00 Introductions and Announcements (George)
i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.
ii. Approve minutes from the last meeting (10/22/08)
iii. Hanna won’t be here next meeting (November 5th), so we need a volunteer to take minutes.

3) 6:05 Funding (Addy)
i. Pakistanis at Stanford
ii. Persian Student Association
iii. Korean Student Association at Stanford
iv. Chinese Women Collective at Stanford
v. Stanford India Association
vi. Stanford Outdoors Budget Modification

4) 6:15 ASSU and Undergrad Senate Update (Jonny/Fagan and Justin/Ryan)

6) 6:20 Programming (Justin/Adam S.)

7) 6:25 Diversity Committee (DAC Representative)

8) 6:30 GLO (Ken)

9) 6:50 NomCom report (Eric)

10) 7:00 Environmental Faculty Dinner Series (Polina)
i. Request for $500

11) 7:05 Proposed Moratorium on Political Endorsements (Addy)

12) 7:10 GSPB Request for Magician Event (Fen/Melahn)
i. Request for $500

13) 7:15 New Business (George)

Attendance

Voting members present:
At large 2: Adam Beberg
At large 3: Nanna Notthoff
At large 4: (Interim): Ryan Peacock
Earth Sciences: Justin Brown
Education: Shane Moise
Engineering 1: Polina Segalova
Engineering 2: Addy Satija
Humanities: George Bloom (proxy Matt Turk present)
Medicine: Sean Young (proxy Maria Spletter present)
Social Sciences: Hanna Muenke

Voting members not present:
At large 5: Unfilled
At large 1: Aleksandra Korolova
Business: Rick Thielke
Law: Andrew Park
Natural Sciences: Fen Zhao

Other people present: Shelley Gaio, Kyle Anderson, Done Rip Kim, Ping Li, Annemarie Baltay, Li Zhang, Zeng Fan, Matt McLaughlin, Adam Sciambi, Andrew Danowitz, Brian Scoles, Chris Chan, Ariel Dowling, Daisy Chen, Simone Manganelli, Mary Van der Hoven, Melahn Parker, Dave Sty, Morteza Imbrahimi, Eric Osborne, Angelina Cordona, Lila Kalaf, Jonny Dorsey, Andy Lomeli, David Gobaud

Minutes

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Sean!)

2) 6:01 Introductions and Announcements (Polina)

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i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.
ii. Approved minutes from the last meeting (10/22/08) by consensus.
iii. Hanna won’t be here next meeting (November 5th), so we need a volunteer to take minutes. Nanna volunteers to take this role.

3) 6:05 Undergrad Senate Update (Ryan)

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Shelley from Undergrad Senate is here today and will continue to join us in the future.
– Yesterday Senate had an abbreviated meeting, and Matt had a closed meeting about SSE afterwards.
– Adam B. is working on some bylaw revisions that will affect Undergrads, so they’re waiting on those.
– Undergrads also working on the swim access time. Speaking of pool, Nanna gives brief update. Rec people are reluctant to give info on operating costs, still working on that and also trying to get more information about costs from other schools.

4) 6:08 Funding (Addy)

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i. Stanford India Association – Divali celebration this Sunday from 5:30pm on at Old Union, which is the Festival of Lights and very popular in India. Requesting $2250, primarily costs for food. Expecting 450 people to attend, including general public. Giving $2250 passes by consensus.

ii. Pakistanis at Stanford – Beach BBQ targeted for new students to get to know each other. Are arranging rides from Tressider, and will request RSVPs ahead of time. Addy is helping the group with completely liability issues involved with traveling off campus. Requested $500, recommended $490 because of food cap. Giving $490 passes by consensus.

iii. Persian Student Association – Group has been around for 20 years, have primary cultural events. Have two events coming up. First is a fall party including snacks and music. Students from other universities also come, but pay some admission. Requesting $750 for this event, recommended $700 due to honorarium caps. Can’t find the budget for the second event first, so came back to it later. Notes are continued below, but audio file is at the end of ASSU update. Second event is about Persian classical music, and are inviting a professor from UC Irvine who will give a talk and two workshops. ASSU Speaker’s Bureau will also help with the costs of this event, and are requesting $1000 from GSC for honorarium. Total requested for both event is $1700. Giving $1700 passes by consensus.

iv. Chinese Women Collective at Stanford – Cultural adaptation seminars, study breaks, other talks. Group has about 50 members who attend events. Requested $4060, recommended $3860. Giving $3860 passes by consensus.

v. Korean Student Association at Stanford – First time they’ve come for funding this year. About 464 graduate students at Stanford on email list, have 350 people attend their events. Events currently planned for this quarter are: coffee breaks during exam times, a market, a lecture event, and movie night in Havana Room. Recommended $3600. Giving $3600 passes by consensus.

vi. Stanford Outdoors Budget Modification – This is a Special Fee group looking for a budget modification from last year’s budget. This is the first time they’ve been a Special Fee, so there was some difficulty last spring in getting all the sub-groups coordinated to pick correct line-items, so have some changes that they need. Requesting $11,000 to move around. This is approved by consensus.

5) ASSU Update (Jonny/Lila/Angelina)

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– Phone bank this Saturday about No on Prob 8, asking for people to sign up for 3-hour shifts.
– Lila and Angelina are reestablishing a Health Advisory Board. Putting a well-being room in Old Union, and a health-week before dead week. Think some of the health issues on campus could be helped by increasing the role of bystanders, who may observe people in need of help but not step in. Are making a website, bystander.stanford.edu, to help counteract that trend. Would like participation of Grad Students as well because different situations impact them, so it would be worth having targeted scenarios on bystander.stanford.edu. Want to have someone coordinate programming for Grad Students, work on the website, and coordinate resource roll-out. Polina requests that they write up an explanation that can be sent out to the email list and people can get in touch with them accordingly.

6) 6:30 GLO (Ken/Anne/Lorette/Andy)

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– Anne Boswell is new to the group, but was an Undergrad Residence Dean before this job. Others we have met before, but like to say hi again at least every year.
– Main goal of GLO is to avoid students facing difficulties (academic or personal) on their own. For example, the goal of programming is to connect students to schools and each other with the idea that that will make for a more positive experience at Stanford and that they will then have more resources.

Some of their roles are as follows:
One of the four of them is always on-call, pager number is on GLO website.
They run the CA (Community Associates) program in the residences, which is complemented by GSPB doing the off-campus stuff.
Also run Provost and President dinners among other things.
Andy works primarily with the families, and we’ve given some money to help with those events. They try to include grad student families off-campus, but have a hard time reaching them because University doesn’t specifically ask about that demographic information.
Andy will also be helping Munger get started.
Deans can be advocates for us in terms of interfacing with departments and financial offices if something comes up that we can’t coordinate on our own.

Polina asks about what they feel are the biggest issues faced by the grad students in the past 5 years. Ken feels that mental health issues have increased over that time. Have already had 4 involuntary commitments to the Psych unit so far this year. In terms of Policy issues, housing continues to be a problem, in that everything is so crowded they don’t have options for moving students around if there are roommate conflicts. Long waiting list is also a problem in that it’s clear there are more students who want housing who can’t get it. Lots of physical changes around the campus as well, which can certainly impact Grad students.

Question about why there is an increase in Mental Health concerns. Ken thinks part of it may be that because therapy and medications do well in treating existing conditions, more students are arriving at school trying to manage a condition, where previously they may not have made it so far. Also thinks there’s something to be said about the stress levels involved with being a Stanford student.

The GLO offices are just down the hall in the GCC, and also in EV, can stop by if we want to talk to them.

7) 6:48 Programming (Justin/Adam S.)

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– The formal will be on April 25th, about a month into Spring quarter. Good balance of spring weather and not in the way of holidays.
– Election party on Tuesday at 5pm. The 750 Pub will be open at 11am during voting so people can stop by after voting. The polling set-up uses the outside doors to the Havana Room so the line won’t go through the pub, and will leave room for the Election Party later.
– November 15th will have tailgate at noon before USC game.

7) 6:51 Diversity Committee (Shane)

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They had a meeting with the Provost to talk about the letter they sent last year outlining some goals. Two priorities are creating Diversity Advocates and increasing transparency about diversity on campus. Think statistics about grad and faculty diversity should be presented at Homecoming, and would like a link on a prominent Stanford page to a diversity website. Would like Diversity Advocates (faculty or staff) in each department, who could assist in diversity training, encourage reading applications in a manner sensitive to diversity, etc.

9) 6:53 NomCom report (Eric)

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– Last week we approved a budget modification for NomCom, so Eric will say more about that, and also give other updates.
– NomCom met last Thursday to do fall committee appointments, and right now have 10 positions left total to fill, many of which are pretty precise. However, some are broader, like the Sexual Assault committee which hasn’t yet had any Grads apply, and also haven’t had enough applicants for the housing committee. Continues to want our help in emailing out to any communities we’re a part of. Probably next week we’ll vote on the appointments.
– Main news is that training will be November 19th (Wed) at Encina Hall. Training is a new thing and would like to set a precedent for this. Have a speaker who graduated from Stanford Law, accomplished many things after that, including being Chair of the Board, and will be speaking about the role of students. President’s assistant may also come, and there are plans for Jonny and Fagan to also talk. They’ll talk about major issues they feel are facing the university, which gives the 120 students participating on these committees a broad picture.
May request some additional funds for the training once they have their quotes for the event set. Reminder about the policy to submit any non VSO request for GSC money by the Friday before the meeting at which it will be considered.

10) 7:00 Environmental Faculty Dinner Series (Polina)

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This idea came out of meeting with Stanford dining. Plan is to have a series of sustainable dinners including faculty working on the environment in some capacity. Have money from various other sources as well. Money could come from co-sponsorship since we’re working with ASSU and Dining, and do have $26,000 left in that account, though much of that money is line-itemed. We do tend to underspend this category though. Proposal is $300 from co-sponsorship and $200 from Chair discretionary (the latter of which does not require a vote). Giving $300 from co-sponsorship passes by consensus.

11) 7:04 Proposed Moratorium on Political Endorsements (Addy)

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Addy would like us to refrain from political endorsements. Doesn’t think it’s appropriate for us as an elected body to be doing so. Various reasons he believes this, mostly based on circumstances in other countries that students may be from. For example, free speech not always the case, nations can prosecute outside their border, and not all courts are fair.
Some examples of cases where people from other countries were prosecuted by association with groups who made certain proposals, including someone from Malaysia who was prosecuted when his London college made a statement against monarchy.

Justin and Matt argue that we’re always somewhat political by default, so based on some of the examples presented by Addy, students would be in trouble anyway based on what we already do. There are lots of international students that we represent, and Addy concerned that we shouldn’t speak on their behalf for American/Californian issues.

As a specific type of entity receiving certain funding, we are apparently not allowed to endorse candidates, but referendum may be okay.

Sum of points:
International Law (some countries prosecute)
California Law (prohibits aliens from taking part in political process)
Out Constitution (Adam B. says we’re okay though)
Tangibles (What does this accomplish?)
Precedence (Where do we go next?)

Two alternate proposals that Addy would like the GSC to consider:
1) The ASSU Graduate Student Council by-laws to be amended such that we do not take stands of a political nature, over the decision of which, we do not have any control.
2) The ASSU GSC by-laws to be amended to ensure that if we need to make a political endorsement, we will requirement consensus. Any contention/objection serves as a veto for a political endorsement.

Nanna feels that given the advocacy we do (one of our three pillars), we are taking a political stance anyway, so we wouldn’t want to limit that ability by endorsing this proposal.

When we go do Legislative Action, the whole point is to influence the political process. Addy thinks that countries consider this differently than endorsing, since they do lobby the US as well.

Mary thinks much of this conversation is futile given that we don’t have the knowledge/background to evaluate the legal argument Addy is presenting.

501c3 status is important to keep in mind as well, as there are rules that need to be followed by tax exempt organizations, which we are. Every once in awhile this impacts the GSC, so it might be worth getting a straight answer from the University about what exactly we are allowed to do.

Ryan thinks we should consider writing down who votes against or abstains for bills so that international students wouldn’t be lumped in with the rest of the voting GSC unnecessarily. Also, thinks we need to be more consistent about looking at Undergrad Bills that possibly affect us, given that ignoring it might make it look like we support by default, especially if the ASSU Execs and Undergrad Senate do support it.

Maria thinks there should be some balance of the rights of students who are American Citizens and can participate in political process, without putting International students into jeapordy.

Simone thinks that if the reason we considered No on Prob 8 last week is about civil rights, then we also should have considered some of the other Propositions reflecting civil rights. Also feels that we as an elected body shouldn’t make broad proclamations – Congress, for example, doesn’t.

Ryan points out that we considered Prop 8 in particular because that impacts grad students more directly than the other Propositions.

Many people interested in meeting with legal counsel to learn more about what role the GSC can appropriately play politically. Will try to get them to come here to talk to us about that.

Not ready for a vote on this yet, moving on.

12) 7:33 GSPB Request for Magician Event (Fen/Melahn)

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Want to do a show in Havana Room with a Magician. $500 gets 40-minute show, but can pay for more time if we want. The byline total for GSPB co-sponsorship is $10,000 for the year, which they haven’t spent much of yet, but based on splitting that evenly across the quarters and other expenses for events GSPB thinks they’ll have this quarter, there are only about $750 still open for this quarter. However, their budgeter isn’t at our meeting today, so can’t verify that number. We’ll vote on $500 for now, and they’ll figure out the rest of their budget and see if we want to give more money for it later. At first talked about involving families, but based on the timing of show and possible adult content, will just make it an adult event.

At the recent NOLAS event, they gave out 232 wristbands, and there were more people there who didn’t get one, so it was a good event. Trying to do something every Thursday. This week will be at 750, then will have a band, then BlueChalk, and will be at CoHo Dec 11.

13) 7:40 New Business (Polina)
No new business, adjourned.

GSC meeting 2008-10-22

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008

Proceedings of the October 22nd 2008 GSC meeting


Agenda

***************************************************************
GSC Agenda: October 22, 2008, 6:00-8:00pm – FOOD @ 5:45!
Graduate Community Center – Nairobi Room
***************************************************************

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Sean!)

2) 6:00 Welcome with introductions (George)

3) 6:05 Announcements (George)
i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.
ii. Approve minutes from the last meeting (10/15/08) with the following changes:
– add Alex Ene to the attendance
– In the Funding section, Alex Ene should have been acknowledge as helping with the Funding Committee, not Aleksandra.
iii. The GSC Fall Bulletin was mailed out.
iv. Anyone requesting funds from the GSC (not including VSOs applying to the Funding Committee) should submit their budget to the GSC Financial Officer (Nanna, at notthoff@stanford.edu) by noon on the Friday preceding the Wednesday GSC meeting at which the request will be made.

4) 6:10 Programming (Justin and Adam S.)

5) 6:15 ASSU Update (Jonny and Fagan)

6) 6:20 Undergrad Senate Update (Justin and Ryan)
i. No on Prop 8 Resolution

7) 6:25 Swearing in of new Ed School Rep (George)

8) 6:30 Ombuds Presentation (David)

9) 6:45 NomCom Funding Bill (Adam B)

10) 6:55 Swim Petition (Alex)

11) 7:05 Overview of Finances (Nanna)

12) 7:25 New Business (George)

Attendance

Voting members present:
At large 1: Aleksandra Korolova
At large 2: Adam Beberg
At large 3: Nanna Notthoff
At large 4: (Interim): Ryan Peacock
Business: Rick Thielke
Earth Sciences: Justin Brown
Education: Shane Moise (not voting yet)
Engineering 1: Polina Segalova
Humanities: George Bloom
Law: Andrew Park
Natural Sciences: Fen Zhao
Medicine: Sean Young (proxy Maria Spletter present)
Social Sciences: Hanna Muenke

Voting members not present:
At large 5: Unfilled
Engineering 2: Addy Satija

Other people present: Adam Sciambi, Alex Ene, Maxim Afanasyev, Kyle Anderson, Daniel Stringer, Fagan Harris, Jonny Dorsey, Daisy Chen, Ping Li, Zeng Fan, Matt McLaughlin, Daniel Chang, Simone Manganelli, Mary Van der Hoven, Zachary Brown

Minutes

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Sean!)

2) 6:02 Welcome with introductions (George)

Listen to this segment

3) 6:09 Announcements (George)

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i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.
ii. Approved minutes from the last meeting (10/15/08) with the following changes by consensus:
– add Alex Ene to the attendance
– In the Funding section, Alex Ene should have been acknowledge as helping with the Funding Committee, not Aleksandra.
iii. The GSC Fall Bulletin was mailed out.
iv. Anyone requesting funds from the GSC (not including VSOs applying to the Funding Committee) should submit their budget to the GSC Financial Officer (Nanna, at notthoff@stanford.edu) by noon on the Friday preceding the Wednesday GSC meeting at which the request will be made.

4) 6:11 Programming (Justin and Adam S.)

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Working on potential dates for the Grad formal, looking into potential conflicts for other big events and holidays. All of April and two weekends in May are open at the venue, so plenty of options. Talked to Maurice, who will be doing Thanksgiving catering, about the possibility of catering drinks and food for Formal.

Will have Presidential Election event at the GCC on election night, costing $400 that we already approved) with some drinks and appetizers and state maps to fill out.

10 days after that we will have Tailgate for USC game, with GSPB staffing. Location TBD.

5) 6:13 ASSU Update (Jonny and Fagan)

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i. Next week will bring their health person along to tell us what she’s up to in that.
ii. There was a tabling bill that passed yesterday at the Undergrads, which we apparently helped with. We can borrow those tables.
iii. Organizing busses to Big Game. Interest from Grad students? They’ll talk off-line to figure out if we want to be involved.
iv. Will have Big Game block party, but don’t have money for it, so co-sponsorship would be nice.
v. Working on Grad-Undergrad mentorship program. Details will be forthcoming.
vi. Elections Reform Committee will be EOFC and ExComm primarily, but others can sit-in.
vii. Execs request that Justin write future notes from Senate Meeting with less commentary.

6) 6:17 Undergrad Senate Update (Justin and Ryan)

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Justin and Ryan went to Undergrad Senate yesterday, and will try to go weekly to keep dialogue between the two organizations. Undergrad Senator Shelley indicated she would come to our meetings, but she is not here tonight. As part of their meeting yesterday, the Senate passed a resolution endorsing a No vote on Prop 8, which Ryan would like us to consider it as well.

2008-10-22 – GSC marriage equality resolution

The GSC has not taken up these types of issues as much as the Undergrad Senate does, but nothing saying we can’t if we want to.

Ryan feels this is an issue that particularly affects graduate students, which is why he’s bringing it up. Alex has seen issues of discrimination based on orientation in his time here, so thinks it would be appropriate to reaffirm that we do not think those actions are okay.

Jonny and Fagan will be writing an editorial supporting No on Prop 8, so that will be both the Undergrad Senate and the Execs publicly expressing their support.

Fen says that via our advocacy issues, such as immigration, we do put some political issues on our table, and considering the Resolution for No on Prop 8 falls into that realm.
There is objection to consensus, so we move to a vote.

12 for, 0 opposed, 1 abstaining. Passes.

7) 6:25 Swearing in of new Ed School Rep (George)

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We’ve had two people from the Ed School joining us, and they’ve decided amongst themselves that Shane will take the role. Shane Moise heard about the GSC via previous Ed School rep Michelle and thought it’d be a good chance to get involved.

Other student is Dan Stringer, who is a second year PhD student in the Ed school. Was at Stanford as an Undergrad and was involved in the Senate at that point. Will be serving as proxy for Shane when Shane can’t be here.

Nanna leads Shane through his swearing in. Next week he will get to vote.

8) 6:28 Ombuds Presentation (David)

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David is here from the Ombuds office to make sure we know about his office and the role it plays. The Ombuds office is a confidential, neutral office that serves the entire University. People come in with ethical concerns, or other things that don’t feel right. He operates on a confidential basis, other than when he feels someone may be in danger. Sometimes people come in to think out-load, sometimes people are looking for information on University policies, sometimes he mediates between people (student-student, student-TA, etc).

Some of the issues have been academic, like progress to graduation being blocked, and sometimes people come in for more personal conversations. Sometimes people come in looking to get different perspectives about how they might approach an issue they’re facing.

Other academic issues that the Ombuds has helped with are authorship for papers, how to speak-up and discuss those kinds of issues, students feeling that their ideas are taken, which battles you choose to fight, etc.

Ombuds office is in Mariposa House, near Bechtel International Center, so easy to stop by without making it conspicuous.

David is happy to talk to groups about communication and negotiation skills, or other specific areas that might be helpful, along with giving presentations on the general role of the Ombuds office.

About 30% of total traffic to his office is students, about half graduate students. Sees up to 400 cases a year.

Calling or emailing is a good way to set up an appointment, and information is on website as well. Can also try to drop by. Generally around during normal business hours.

There’s a separate ombuds office for the Medical School, but otherwise he’s a one-man-show.

His background is as a psychologist, and served faculty in that role before becoming the Ombuds.

Does sometimes play complementary role to Vaden. For example, his is not a reporting office, so someone who might not be sure whether they want to report sexual harrasment can talk through the issues and implications, whereas if they went to Vaden, an investigation would need to proceed.

Many grad students coming in are about issues with advisors. He can work with individuals until a decision is reached about how to proceed. Once any official action is taken, he’s out.

9) 6:40 Swim Petition (Alex)

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Talked to us previously about reduced hours at swim centers, with particularly limited options outside of normal work hours.

The only hours at Avery had been 10-12am, while morning and evening hours were at Roble, which is much smaller, and easily overcrowded. Had a petition going around seeking more swimming space, which garnered 1000 signatures.

One seemingly good change is that they moved evening swim back to Avery, but are only offering ¼ of one pool, so in the end there’s no increase in capacity from Roble. However, this is an indication that this issue is on the radar.

Alex will talk with the Avery facilities manager (Rebecca) and the manager of recreation/wellness soon. Has some undergrads involved in this process, and would like a grad student as well for the meetings.

Would really like to get some information about costs and how things are decided around the pool, which hopefully those meetings will help with.

Right now the Recreation department hasn’t confirmed what the hurdle is to getting more hours at Avery. One possibility is that money is a concern, given that the pools are at least sometimes completely empty, and rarely are all four pools being used, so the center is not running at capacity.

Adam B. thinks there was an accident at the pool a few years ago, which might be why they’re wary about opening spaces up.

Nanna volunteers to help with this issue.

10) 6:49 NomCom Funding Bill (Adam B)

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Joint-2008-10-22-NomCom

We have oversight over NomCom, so we need to approve their proposed budget revision. Still working with the same amount of money, but would like to move money to discretionary to help with their goal of implementing training. The money they’d like to move was originally sourced for marketing, but they have been marketing via emails and internet rather than newspaper ads, so expenses there have been reduced.

As a reminder, NomCom is the group of people who assign interested students to University Committees. This request is mostly about training the people who will be going to the various committees.

Our oversight ends at giving them the budget, after that they will be able to spend as they want to as specified by their chair, given that most of the budget is marked as Discretionary Expenses. They’re trying to adjust their budget to do something new with training, but not sure what exactly it will cost, so making it vague in order to leave their options open.

Adam B. suggests that this year we let them be general, given that they’re trying something new, but for next year’s budget request that they line-item more specific expenses.

Fagan says the money will be used primarily for recruiting students in the spring and to have this training in the fall. He thinks that the training will help set an appropriate tone for the students participating for the rest of the year.

Registrar is apparently considering listing NomCom participation on transcripts, which would possibly also set a tone of taking the role seriously for participating students.

Question about whether we can wait a week in order to allow more details to be written before we vote on it, so it’s not just discretionary. Given how late in the quarter it already is, requests to just vote as is so that NomCom can start to organize their training sessions. If we change anything, then Undergrad Senate needs to vote on it again, since it is a joint bill, so this would delay the process again.

We need to approve NomComs budget each year, so can certainly insist on more specific budget plans next time. Even if we do approve the budget with generalities today, we can ask Eric to come and talk about his specific plans for the money and give our feedback on that.

Objections to consensus, so moving to a roll call vote on whether to approve the requested budget change. 7 for, 5 opposed, 0 abstaining. Majority is enough for budget change, so this passes.

11) 7:02 Overview of Finances (Nanna)

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Same presentation as she gave at the retreat, but not everyone could make it to that event, so repeating it now.

$$$ – Where does it come from?
– ASSU endowment, currently at 4 million.
– Graduate Student General Fee (GSGF)

ASSU endowment:
– Large fund of money
– Maintained/growing by investments and SSE profits
– Used to cover GSC expenses like regular operations (meeting food, retreats), salaries, advocacy and outreach.
– In 08-09, about $49,000 from the ASSU endowment came into GSC budget.

Matt McLaughlin will be giving presentation on state of SSE (which affects the ASSU endowment) in some closed meetings, could set one up for us as well if we’re interested.

GSGF:
Graduate students pay quarterly feels, though they can request a refund.
Split three ways to Special Fees, GSC, and a smaller part to Other (ASSU Banking Fees, etc)

In 08-09, collected $228,875, refunded $18,310. Of that, $115,300 went to GSC Partition, and $145,000 went to GSO Partition (GSC Funding Committee).

GSGF GSO partition (GSC FC)
– Money allocated to VSOs
– Managed by the GSC FC Officers
– Is $145,000 for 08-09, $10,000 of which is specified for events organized by more than one VSO.
– Unspent money at the end of the year rolls over to the GSC Partition.

GSGF GSC partition
– Money for General GSC programming
– Should benefit the overall grad student community
– Managed by GSC FO and GSC programming coordinators
– $115,300 for 08-09
– Unspent money goes to GSC Reserves at the end of the year

Role of Budget:
– Definition: itemized allotment of funds for a given period.
– Purpose: encourage financial planning and discipline. Large reserves discourage disciplined spending
– Must report and vote clearly on departures from budget.

GSC Budget has three sections:
GSC Operations and Advocacy
GSC Programming
GSC Funding

GSC Operations Account 3050 covers:
GSC Stipends
GSC Operations Regular (retreats, food, supplies, marketing).
GSC Discretionary, which includes General (items not otherwise specified, increase budget for existing line items, approval from GSC needed), Advocacy Discretionary (programs and items to promote advocacy, approval from GSC needed) and Constituency Discretionary (educate constituents about GSC. Max $100 per voting member)

GSC Chair Discretionary account 3055
– Items not otherwise specified in the budget
– Time-sensitive purchased by the chairs
– Not for sole benefit of chairs, must still directly benefit graduate students.

GSC Programming Account 2640 covers:
– Programing (line items for various specific events)
– Co-sponsorship (money for various co-sponsored events. Most are line-items, but we can add others as well).
– Discretionary Programming (new events not in line-items)
– Grad Challenge (to encourage Stanford Grad students to submit ideas to benefit grad students)
– Newsletter
– GSC Stipends for people working on programming in the GSC

GSC FC Operating Account 3160.
GSC Funding Committee Operations, managed by GSC FO.
– Money for meeting food and discretionary.
– Stipends for chair and deputy chair of FC

GSGF Reserve
Money collected through the GSGF (GSO Partition and GSC Partition) that did not get spent and accumulated over the years. We’ve added 10% of the Reserves into the 08-90 budget for Grad Challenge and Co-sponsored events.
Can be spent on large events and long-term equipment purchases that benefit the entire grad student community.

Special Fees:
Student groups can apply to cover organization and basic programming expenses that don’t fit in general VSO structure.
GSC and US establish rules regarding budget and petition presentation
Can include refund buffer of up to 25% of Special Fee requested.
Students vote on special fees in the ASSU spring election. There are Undergrad, Joint, and Grad only Special Fees. Policies for placing a Special Fee on the ballot are outlined in the ASSU constitution.

Aleksandra asks about whether we can reduce the Graduate Student fees. We can, but don’t push this, because it’s difficult to raise it back up later when we’ve spent our reserves. Hanna adds that when students voted on the amount of the fee in the spring election last year, they voted not to change it.

Our reserves have been building since Grad/Undergrad split about a decade ago. Last year we didn’t roll over much into reserves because we did better allocating the money throughout the year. Don’t know the numbers for the past offhand, but Matt volunteers to look that up. We’ve been trying very hard for the past few years to spend our budget and decrease the reserves. For example, this year we added $50,000 from the reserves for co-sponsorship and Grad Challenge.

12) 7:21 New Business (George)

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United Nations Film Festival. Have 41 documentary films over an 8 days stretch. Started last Sunday, going through the rest of this week. Theme is blue planet, green planet, with many films related to environment and other aspects of human endeavor. Have some graduate students working with their organization, but think they could expand that in the future. Have not sought Special Fees or funding from the Graduate Student Council, but all events are free and open to graduate students. Have a last minute request for some funding due to unexpected situation.

All Together Now is their final movie, combining things from Beatles and Cirque du Soleil. Because it’s so visual, the director and producer, who will be present, have requested HD equipment, which we don’t have. Rental would cost $600 for an HD deck, $750 for a screen which they can rent from event services, and a skilled technician for about $80 per hour, totaling about $1700. The event will be at Memorial Auditorium, and all are welcome.

Nanna speaks about where money would come from. It is an event, so it should come from programming. It could be co-sponsored, but much of the money is line-itemed to other events. Other possibility is reserves. Film Society is Undergrad group, and Flicks is joint group, both of which help with this film festival.

Justin asks about why this is such a last-minute thing, and what other sources they may get help from. It is such a last-minute thing because communication broke down. For the final event, Flicks is co-sponsoring, since it is during their usual Sunday evening time. When they set this up with Flicks, they thought the movie would be on 35mm or DVD (which Flicks has equipment for), and the present need for HD is too much for the Flicks budget.

Aleksandra asks about how festival has been advertised, and how it has gone so far. Has been in Palo Alto Weekly, fliers downtown, Shane reports fliers at Bookstore, been using email lists. Don’t have numbers for attendance so far for the whole week, but last Sunday, filled the Aquarius theatre downtown.

Aleksandra also asks about back-up if the GSC opts not to fund this. Would have to cut into their internal budget of UNFM.

We only received this request today, and as of then the request was only for $800, so the request being brought to the meeting is twice as of what they thought they’d need as of earlier this afternoon. The increase is due to the need of the special screen to be rented that they didn’t realize they’d need.

It would be difficult to switch the location of the film, and they don’t think there’s anywhere that they could just borrow an HD deck.

They might be able to get the movie on DVD, but the producer/film maker strongly requested that it be in HD format.

They are charging $8 per non-student already, and do get some contributions from other sources.

Justin does not think money should come from programming discretionary because they have plans for that money already.

Nanna thinks it could be co-sponsorship, feels more comfortable with this because there’s still money in specific GSPB co-sponsorship that we haven’t used much of yet, so suggests co-sponsorhip as the source, with the note that if co-sponsorship is low later in the year, we could transfer the equivalent amount from reserves.

This is the first time the film festival has used Memorial Auditorium for this event, think they could get 1000 people.

Considering $800, the original amount that was proposed earlier in the afternoon prior to the GSC meeting.

Objections to funding $800 so we move to role call vote.

5 for, 4 opposed, 2 abstaining. Passes.

Polina adds a note that in the future (as she had tried to suggest over the summer when she exchanged emails with them), they should get in touch with VSOs and collaborate with them, since we have more money to give to VSOs through the Funding Committee than separate organizations.

GSC Meeting 2008-10-15

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

Proceedings of the October 15th 2008 GSC meeting


Agenda

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Sean!)

2) 6:00 Welcome with introductions (Polina)

3) 6:05 Announcements (Polina)
i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.

ii. Approve minutes from the last meeting (10/8/08) with the following change:
Add a note to the Programming section that although in the meeting it was stated that money for the Tailgate would come from GSC-GSPB co-sponsorship, there is actually a specific line-item in the Programming budget for the Tailgate, so the money will come from there.

iii. Retreat is this Saturday (Oct 18th)

iv. As some of you know, three students from the Graduate School of Business passed away this Friday when their car veered off Highway 1 on their way to a GSB gathering. The students are Viet Nguyen, Chris Sahm, and Micah Springer. Please remember that assistance is available through CAPS, the Office of Religious Life, and the Graduate Life Office.”

4) 6:10 Funding (Addy)
i. Hindu Students Council
ii. GradQ
iii. Chemical Engineering Graduate Students
iv. Biomedical Association for the Interest for Minority Students
v. Association of Chinese Students and Scholars at Stanford

5) 6:25 Programming (Justin and Adam S.)

6) 6:30 ASSU Update (Jonny and Fagan)

7) 6:35 Retreat Logistics (Polina)

8) 6:45 New Business (Polina)

Attendance

Voting members present:
At large 2: Aleksandra Korolova
At large 3: Adam Beberg
At large 4: Nanna Notthoff
At large 5 (Interim): Ryan Peacock
Business: Rick Thielke
Earth Sciences: Justin Brown
Engineering 1: Polina Segalova
Engineering 2: Addy Satija
Humanities: George Bloom
Social Sciences: Hanna Muenke

Voting members not present:
At large 1: Karan Chaudlory
Education: Unfilled
Medicine: Sean Young
Law: Andrew Park
Natural Sciences: Fen Zhao

Other people present: Andrea Hartsoch, Akashay Agarual, David Gobaud, Maria Spletter, Ping Li, Zeng Fan, Don Chang, Adam Sciambi, Etosha Cave, Alex Ene, and likely others who did not sign the attendance sheet because it did not get passed around.

Minutes

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Sean!)

2) 6:03 Welcome with introductions (Polina)

Listen to this segment

3) 6:05 Announcements (Polina)

Listen to this segment

i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.

ii. Approved minutes from the last meeting (10/8/08) with the following change by consensus:
Add a note to the Programming section that although in the meeting it was stated that money for the Tailgate would come from GSC-GSPB co-sponsorship, there is actually a specific line-item in the Programming budget for the Tailgate, so the money will come from there.

iii. Retreat is this Saturday (Oct 18th)

iv. As some of you know, three students from the Graduate School of Business passed away this Friday when their car veered off Highway 1 on their way to a GSB gathering. The students are Viet Nguyen, Chris Sahm, and Micah Springer. Please remember that assistance is available through CAPS, the Office of Religious Life, and the Graduate Life Office.”

4) 6:07 Funding (Addy)

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i. Association of Chinese Students and Scholars at Stanford – Fall budget requested for 4 events, namely an Advising program kick-off party, Christmas party, Family center seminars, and Life in industry seminars. Recommended $2820. Giving $2820 passes by consensus.

ii. Biomedical Association for the Interest for Minority Students –Try to make a community out of the relatively small numbers of them. Have workshops to teach students how to apply for fellowships, have dinner at end of fall quarter, have banquet in May to celebrate achievements. Recommended $4585, slightly lower than requested due to food constraints. Have about 80 students and have been around since 2004. Giving $4585 passes by consensus.

iii. Chemical Engineering Graduate Students – Group of about 90, past few years have gotten money from alumni donations and have used that to organize events, but now looking for other sources. Are also seeking money from School of Engineering and VPGE. Asking for money for one event this fall. Recommended $350 for BBQ mixer. Giving $350 passes by consensus.

iv. GradQ – Group to foster warm community for students identifying as part of alphabet soup. This request is for reach-out BBQ, because this is a new VSO this year, want to make sure people know there is support out there. Every other Wednesday have get-together at pub, also previously funded by GSC. Recommended $300, giving $300 passes by consensus.

v. Hindu Students Council
50-50 Grad-Undergrad, about 450 students total. Goals is to provide a Hindu experience on campus. Divali is their biggest event this fall, including food and then dance party, and also have a talk about religion in the modern era. Other events later in year include multifaith event with religious scholars of different religions, and Holi (festival of colors). They also have weekly classes on Yoga and Geetha. Also asked for money from Undergrads, covering about half their budget. Some line-items are ones we don’t fund, and in other places they hit caps, so recommended budget is $7515. Giving $7515 passes by consensus.

Ping and Alex Ene have been helping with funding. Ping is working on feedback in particular.

5) 6:19 Programming (Justin and Adam S.)

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Having a GSPB-GSC co-sponsorship request for three Grad Nights. Want to run 3 events, with 300 people expected at each, and each costing $300. GSPB has $2000 less in their budget this year than previously, so working through co-sponsorship all the more important. First event will be Oct 23rd at Nolas, with the money being used to get some appetizers. Will later have two Grad nights at 750 with bands being booked, and are aiming for Thursdays two-weeks apart. The $300 requested for each event will go towards bands, and GSPB will buy drinks. Overall request is thus for $900. Won’t need separate busses for the Nola’s trip, and will just direct people to Marguerite. We have a budget of $10,000 for events co-sponsored with the GSPB which we haven’t touched yet. Giving $900 from GSC-GSPB co-sponsorship line-item passes by consensus.

Second update is that the Grad Formal will be in the spring this year, possibly April. Will be at Computer History Museum again, but will this time take advantage of outdoor spaces as well. Adam B. concerned about overlaps with other groups’ formals. Justin thinks those are in May, but they’ll check. Right now the venue is pretty open on dates in the spring, so shouldn’t have a hard time.

6) 6:25 ASSU Update (David)

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Jonny and Fagan couldn’t make it the GSC meeting tonight because they’re at a meeting for planning busses for the Big Game. They’re working on mental health things, and can get in touch with them if you’d like to be involved.

7) 6:26 Retreat Logistics (Polina)

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We’ll probably leave here 9am on Saturday, Polina will coordinate rides based on the email she sent out, so everyone should respond to her. Make sure to specify if you aren’t planning on staying over, otherwise she will assume you are. We’ll probably be done by 6pm on Saturday with business stuff, and then hang out.

8) 6:26 New Business (Polina)

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i. Having food tasting for Thanksgiving on Monday at noon with a vendor in Menlo Park. Justin, Ryan, Adam S., Maria, and Etosha volunteer to go along to help taste food for Thanksgiving. If anyone has suggestions for vendors to consider, let Polina or George know.

GSC meeting 2008-10-08

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

Proceedings of the October 8th 2008 GSC meeting


Agenda

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Sean!)

2) 6:00 Welcome with introductions (George)

3) 6:05 Announcements (George)
i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.
ii. Approve minutes from the last meeting (10/1/08).

4) 6:10 Funding (Addy)
i. Engineers for a Sustainable World
ii. Bahai Association at Stanford
iii. Hellenic Association at Stanford
iv. Asian American Graduate Student Association
v. Canadian Club

5) 6:25 Programming (Justin and Adam S.)

6) 6:30 ASSU Update (Jonny and Fagan)

7) 6:35 Diversity Committee (Courtney, Shantal and Daniel)

8) 6:50 Pool extended hours (Sabine and Alex)

9) 7:00 New Business (George)

Attendance

Voting members present:
At large 2: Aleksandra Korolova
At large 3: Adam Beberg
At large 4: Nanna Notthoff
At large 5 (Interim): Ryan Peacock
Business: Rick Thielke
Earth Sciences: Justin Brown
Engineering 1: Polina Segalova
Engineering 2: Addy Satija
Humanities: George Bloom
Law: Andrew Park
Natural Sciences: Fen Zhao
Social Sciences: Hanna Muenke

Voting members not present:
At large 1: Karan Chaudlory
Education: Unfilled
Medicine: Sean Young

Other people present: Ping Li, Maria Spletter, Courtney Bonam, Daniel Soto, Maulall Benett, Daniel Stringer, Matt Turk, Simone Manganelli, A. Danowitz, Dom Chang, Shane Moise, Daisy Chen, Mary Van der Hoven, Eric Sundstrom, Alex Hirsch, Adam Sciambi, Stuart Baimel, Luukas Ilves, Donna Winston, David Gobaud

Minutes

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Sean!)

2) 6:01 Welcome with introductions (George)

Listen to this segment

3) 6:03 Announcements (George)

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i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.
ii. Approved minutes from the last meeting (10/1/08) by consensus.
iii. Happy birthday to Zeng, Donna and Kristina!
iv. GSC retreat coming up Saturday Oct 18th, one week from this Saturday. We’ll coordinate rides next week.

4) 6:05 Funding (Addy)

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Listen to this segment

i. Persian Student Association –Have about 230 voting members. Showing of Mystic Iran, a documentary of different religious practices in Iran. The director will be there and will have a question and answer session. Expect 150 people for that. Also have a Welcome dinner which they have every year, and will invite faculty and alumni to that and hope to have a guest speaker as well. Recommended $1000 for dinner, $700 for showing Mystic Iran. Mystic Iran will be held in Cubberley on November 5th and is in English with Persian subtitles. Giving $1700 passes by consensus.

ii. Engineers for a Sustainable World – The group does engineering projects in developing countries, and working to get Stanford students involved in solving these engineering problems. Hosting some events to build awareness around campus. Will have a speaker event on October 14th with money requested for some food. Another event is a biodiesel workshop which has been popular in the past, followed by a speaker discussing issues related to the use of biodiesel. Recommended $1660. Giving $1660 passes by consensus.

iii. Bahai Association at Stanford – Having an interfaith celebration/commemoration of when a faith leader was at Stanford. Goals of Bahai include being open to everyone, so have invited various religious groups to attend this commemoration. Theme of evening is Service to Humanity. Recommended $1036.25. Giving $1037 passes by consensus.

iv. Hellenic Association at Stanford – Longstanding presence at Stanford. Have about 100 people on email list, 60-70 of whom attend events regularly, and non-Greeks attend some events as well. Big event is an Orthodox Greek Easter Event, which is particularly popular for non-Greeks. Greek/Turkish/Persian party is also popular. Have welcome BBQ as well. Green Monday is a non-meat festivity marking the beginning of the Lent fasting for Easter. The request is essentially their annual budget, and is in-line with previous years. Recommended $2920. Giving $2920 passes by consensus.

v. Asian American Graduate Student Association – Social support network for Asian-American community in particular, but open to others as well. Recommended $5570 for the year, with some reductions for caps on honorarium. Plan to have dim sum, grad formal photoshoot, karaoke party, listen to the silence conference, winter photography contest, and some other events as well. Giving $5570 passes by consensus.

vi. BioMass – Now here for annual budget. Plan to have one social event a month to get people together. Biology is spread across 12 different departments so trying to build a cohesive bio-medical community including Engineers, and some other areas such as those working on healthcare in the Law School. Get a lot of money from School of Medicine and some other sources, but ask for some social funding for us. At the end of the year have a BBQ and softball game, which is a slightly larger event. Works out to cost of about $400 an event, and often get 200-300 people per event. Recommended $3950. Giving $3950 passes by consensus.

vii. Canadian Club – did this later, so audio is the separate clip. Had some trouble with the website, so submitted excel data sheet with request instead. Having Canadian Thanksgiving, their celebration of autumn harvest, which is the biggest food holiday in Canada. Have had about 200 people at this in the past. Have traditional Thanksgiving food. Requesting $3040, recommended $2669. Lower recommended amount is because of food and drink caps. According to Adam B., at some point in the past had been doing this event with the GSB Canadian Club, but that hasn’t happened recently. Have this at Bechtel, which gets full. Giving $2669 passes by consensus.

5) 6:22 Programming (Justin and Adam S.)

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Had a great Welcome Back party last weekend, even though it started raining. Ran out of cups, some other things went wrong too, many got fixed in time or didn’t matter. Thanks to the many helpers. Had a good DJ, which made things fun. Not sure on actual headcount, but lots of people there. Went through 15 kegs, and managed to stay well under budget. Ryan asks whether we’ve considered buying taps, which would cost about $60 for metal ones. Breaking the plastic ones that we got with the kegs also costs $60, and they do break, so might as well get some sturdier ones that we then get to keep.

Think they have about $2000 extra from being underbudget, though labor services cost may change that a bit. May try to use surplus to throw small winter event or put the extra money towards the formal.

Some small events coming up in the meantime. Using $400 from programming discretionary for an Election Day Party at the 750. Also have tailgate for USC game planned, working with GSPB to put that together. The money for the tailgate will come from GSC-GSPB co-sponsorship money.

6:26 back to Funding, see notes above.

*** Note added following the meeting. While the above minutes reflect what was stated during the meeting, it was determined afterwards that there is a specific line-item in the Programming budget for a fall tailgate, so the money for the USC tailgate would come from that, not from a co-sponsorship with the GSPB. We did not vote to approve a source of money for the event at the meeting, this is simply added as clarification.

6) 6:30 ASSU Update (Jonny and Fagan)
Not here.

7) 6:30 Diversity Committee (Courtney, Shantal and Daniel)

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Goal is to support and increase student and faculty diversity.
– Town hall forum in winter quarter, good chance to talk with underrepresented students at Stanford to talk about successes and room for improvement in diversity and support on campus.
– Will also do Diversity Week composed of various events meant to educate the Stanford Community about efforts going on to increase diversity and to dialogue with leaders of student organizations to build on those efforts. For example, last year, came up with a letter to Provost Etchemendy and are currently getting signatures of support for some of those ideas that can help promote graduate student and faculty diversity. Are asking GSC for about half of their budget for that week.
– Also asking for funding for food at their meetings. Meet once a week and feel food available gets people there more consistently and working productively.

Met with Chris Griffith earlier today, plan to work with her to involve other student groups with similar diversity goals.

Will plan to have updates every other week to GSC. Next update will have info on their activities for Homecoming, which is this upcoming weekend.

Justin would like to get reminders about their meetings sent to the GSC members list. There’s also a Diversity Committee list that GSC members can be a part of, so can contact Shantal for that.

Adam B concerned about food budget, and thinks VPGE should be giving more of their money, since the VPGE has a lot of overlapping goals with the committee. Aleksandra wonders how their requested food budget compares to what we give to Funding Committee, which is also to some extent a GSC sub-committee. Though these are separate things (Funding Committee money comes from the student activity fee, whereas this request for DAC would come from our operations budget), the funding committee get $600 for food for the year, but that’s for fewer people, so this request for the DAC would be in line with that amount.

Donna thinks food budget isn’t too bad, and that food is a good motivator to get people to meetings. VPGE is pretty limited in their funding, so we can’t really expect them to provide the full budget for the DAC. Courtney reports that VPGE is funding the other half of Diversity Week, but is unlikely to give more.

Fen thinks that the money request is reasonable. Addy thinks meeting food is good incentive to get people to come to meetings, thought Adam B. didn’t really find that.

Nanna gives budget update. We don’t tend to give committees money for regular food at meetings, and thus don’t really have a specific pool of money available for that. We don’t have much advocacy money budgeted, so can’t meet the DAC’s request from that line-item. Advocacy budget is $3500 this year and shared among many committees, including legislative action, which has already gone on one legislative trip and been allotted funds for another, which is expensive. Could potentially deduct some money from our own meeting food money budget to give to DAC. Some general discretionary also available perhaps, which is intended for operational expenses. We do set a budget each year for a reason, encouragement to stick to it, and think about priorities when considering requests. Money given to one request means that it is not available for another, so need to keep that in mind. Nanna thinks we could take some from food money to give to DAC but probably not the whole $1500.

Fen thinks this is a special case, with a particularly strong new effort from the DAC, for which reserves should be used, because it’s worthwhile, but not something we anticipated in our budget. Matt McLaughlin and Adam B. thinks that that would be an inappropriate use of reserves, since it comes from student fees – there are rules for that use that this wouldn’t fall under. Some discussion of how reserves money did seem to be used for things like this request in the past. We will discuss the use of reserves more at the retreat, but for now, taking the option of using reserves off the table.

Ryan in favor of getting more money from Adminstrators like VPGE in the future. VPSA, VPUE have also been asked for funds, but do not meet the full request. VPGE is very focused on academics, and pretty strict about the use of their money, so don’t meet the needs for all the DAC wants to do. Also, this is GSC Diversity Committee, so we do have responsibility to the group and its activities.

General Discretionary has about $5000 right now, and is one of the possible sources of funds being considered.

Adam B. concerned that other sub-committees would also want food and this would cost us money. George thinks it’s good to encourage meeting and would be in support of finding money for food if that would make groups more productive.

Adam B. wonders why it is that they plan to have such regular weekly meetings. Can listen to audio for full explanation, but short answer is that they meet each week for the same reasons that the GSC on the whole meets. They have a lot going on, and different people working on different initiatives/projects, so it’s a good chance to bring updates and discuss larger issues. In the past few weeks have been meeting with lots of administrators, trying to work out their budget, plans for the years, and these are important things to keep everyone involved in. Point out that the regular check-ins they’ll be giving to the GSC as a whole will be good evidence for their progress and why they think it’s important to meet every week.

As Justin and Donna point out, advocacy is one of our main areas, we should be doing what we can to support that. Next year we can consider them as part of the budget as we create it and allocate money accordingly.

Nanna doesn’t recommend funding the request from Advocacy, because there’s not much left in that account.

Motion on the table is to consider the committee’s operations budget and Diversity Week budget separately.

For operations budget of $1500, which is mostly request for food, the current proposal is to split it three ways, so $500 from each of the following sources: Advocacy, meeting food, and general discretionary. There are objections, so role-call vote:
6 for, 5 no, 1 abstaining. Giving $1500 divided as described above passes.

For Diversity week, it is predominantly events, so could do co-sponsorship overall, or split line-items into co-sponsorship for specific events, and advocacy and general discretionary for supplies like wristbands. Because of lack of funds in advocacy and discretionary, easier to call the whole week an event and pull the entire requested budget from co-sponsorship.
Request for the week is $1502. Giving this from Co-sponsorship passes by consensus.

8) 7:04 Pool extended hours (Sabine and Alex)

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Here to talk about a petition that started circulating a week ago to increase hours of recreational swing at Stanford. Got 900 signatures so far, think about 50% are grad students. Thinks some advocacy would make difference for administrators in addressing the lack of swim hours.

Avery is big complex, have two 50 meter pools, and two other pools as well. Have traditionally provided one 50 meter pool from 10am to 2pm and 6pm-8pm, though the evening time is sometimes only half a pool for availability. Hours in general make it difficult for grad students who can’t be there during day because of TA or research responsibilities, and now they have shifted evening hours to Roble pool which is even smaller, and Avery was already crowded.

Comparing Stanford to its peers, we have less recreation swim than any others, despite nicest facilities, including less hours and capacity, particularly off-hour options.

Seems that we’re getting bumped not because of capacity, because there are at least some open times when the pool is not in use, so there must be other concerns, potentially with the budget. For example, they don’t offer swimming in the diving or water polo pools, with the explanation given that there aren’t lane lines, which is theoretically something that could be purchased. Alex thinks that the people who manage the pool seem to control their own budget, and think they haven’t gotten any pressure to allocate some of that to increasing swim options, which might help.

Nanna wonders whether there’s some option to shift hours to more convenient times, which might be easier than adding new hours. Alex thinks that there might well be general support for moving the hours earlier, but thinks the University should be able to add some more hours as well, to be more in line with other Universities.

Many evening swims were very crowded already, which comments on the current petition concur with, and Roble is only 1/4th the size so the problem is worse.

Lucas thinks Alex should stop by the Undergrad Senate to talk about this, because they have had some success in increasing resources. For example, last year the Undergrads got the library to push hours later, with the increase in cost funded by the Provost. Also suggests talking to Daily as well to get an article about this issue, which Alex has tried, but they haven’t responded yet.

Justin asks what the GSC can help with. Alex is here to build awareness, but also to get information about the best way to put pressure on the University. Perhaps meeting with Undergrad and Grad leaderships to create a united group to approach administrators.

Prior to that, should figure out costs of an increase in hours, potential sources of funding, who’s responsible for budgeting, etc. If it’s mostly an issue of staffing, then hiring more people could well be a manageable amount. Alex has been trying to get information, but not all readily available. For example, trying to figure out costs of actually running the pools, which is higher than just having lifeguards.

There will be some more conversations off-line, will potentially come back to the GSC at some later point to give updates.

9) 7:17 New Business (George)

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i. Justin asks about Thanksgiving Coordinator role. Chairs tried to recruit, got no response, so the two of them are planning the event.
ii. Question about what’s going on for Halloween. There’s the Rains party thrown by the CAs, and Undergrads will have their dry party, but GSC does not do its own party.
iii. Mary reports that new 750 menu is going well, and will have Devil’s Canyon beer soon.
iv. One more request for funding for Fen and George’s trip to the NAGPS conference. This request will come from General Discretionary. Would like to get separate hotel rooms, which costs $550 additionally. $2052 would be total money requested for attending the conference when including the amount we approved last week.

Fen’s goals for the trip are to talk to other councils and get information about how they get people involved, how they vote and make decisions, given that some are much larger than ours.

George researched stipend and benefit packages over the summer, and wants to investigate how these different types of set-ups impact students and advocacy at different Universities.

Big advocacy issue they’ll be working on at the conference is dependent health care, which we are obviously interested in.

There are no objections to approving the additional $550 from General Discretionary, so giving $550 passes by consensus.

Adjourned 7:23.

GSC meeting 2008-10-01

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

Proceedings of the October 1st, 2008 GSC meeting


Agenda

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Sean!)

2) 6:00 Welcome with introductions (George)

3) 6:05 Announcements (George)
i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.
ii. Approve minutes from the last meeting (9/24/08).
iii. GSC Fall Retreat will be Saturday, October 18th.
iv. Good attendance at Flicks, thanks to Zeng for organizing and Aleksandra, George and Hanna for help.
v. Send Polina any information for Grad Events by tonight
vi. Volunteers needed for VPSA website brainstorming
vii. Volunteers needed to help with Dependent Health Insurance workshop next Thursday, Oct. 9 for set-up at 5:30 and cleanup at 7:30.

4) 6:10 Funding (Addy)
i. SpicMacay
ii. AAGSA
iii. Pakistanis at Stanford
iv. BioMASS
v. Chinese Women Collective at Stanford

5) 6:30 Programming (Adam S.)
i. Welcome Back Party this Friday!

6) 6:35 ASSU Update (Jonny and Fagan)

7) 6:40 Publicity (Ivette)

8) 6:50 Diversity Committee (Courtney, Shantal and Nanna)

9) 7:05 New Business (George)

Attendance

Voting members present:
At large 2: Aleksandra Korolova
At large 3: Adam Beberg
At large 4: Nanna Notthoff
At large 5 (Interim): Ryan Peacock
Earth Sciences: Justin Brown
Engineering 1: Polina Segalova
Engineering 2: Addy Satija
Humanities: George Bloom
Law: Andrew Park
Natural Sciences: Fen Zhao
Social Sciences: Hanna Muenke

Voting members not present:
At large 1: Karan Chaudlory
Business: Rick Thielke
Education: Unfilled
Medicine: Sean Young

Other people present: Wei Wu, Matt McLaughlin, Maryani Liarat, Deepthi Menon, Akshat Gupta, Shane Moise, Matt Turk, Kyle Anderson, Simone Manganelli, A. Danowitz, D. Chang, Zain Asgar, Alex Ene, Maria Spletter, Daniel Stringer, Fagan Harris, Jonny Dorsey, David Gobaud, Lauren Goodking

Minutes

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Sean!)

2) 6:03 Welcome with introductions (Polina)

Listen to this segment

3) 6:05 Announcements (Polina)

Listen to this segment

i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.
ii. Approved minutes from the last meeting (9/24/08) by consensus.
iii. GSC Fall Retreat will be Saturday, October 18th.
iv. Good attendance at Flicks, thanks to Zeng for organizing and Aleksandra, George and Hanna for help.
v. Send Polina any information for Grad Announce (monthly email to all grad students) by tonight
vi. Volunteers needed for VPSA website brainstorming. Shane, Alexandra, and Alex volunteers.
vii. Volunteers needed to help with Dependent Health Insurance workshop next Thursday, Oct. 9 for set-up at 5:30 and cleanup at 7:30. There will be pizza. Adam Beberg volunteers to help with set-up, still need others for cleanup.

4) 6:09 Funding (Addy)

Listen to this segment

Listen to this segment

i. SpicMacay – Welcome event this Thursday, and a concert later in October. $605 total. Giving $605 passes by consensus.
ii. AAGSA – not here yet
iii. Pakistanis at Stanford – Celebration for end of Ramadan, having dinner this Friday. Recommended $700. Giving $700 passes by consensus.
iv. BioMASS – not here
v. Chinese Women Collective at Stanford – Annual recruiting event, group is fairly new and would like to expand. Recommended $900. Giving $900 passes by consensus.
vi. Stanford India Association – Would like to have a welcome party, scheduled for this Sunday, October 5th in Havana Room. Expect 200 people to attend. Requesting $1000 for Indian food for dinner, and $100 for programming expenses, such as plateware. Recommended $1100. There is some confusion from budgeting system that suggests they have a greater total budget and are only asking us for part, but $1100 is their entire budget for this event. Giving $1100 passes by consensus.
vii. AAGSA is now here. Asian American Graduate Student Association are an umbrella group that was reestablished two years ago. Do predominantly social events, but also some service. Funding request for bubble tea social this Saturday in Nairobi room and another one later in the year ($600 for each of the two events). Also requesting money for pumpkin carving. $720 recommended, giving $720 passes by consensus.

5) 6:14 Programming (Adam S.)

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i. Welcome Back Party is this Friday! 9pm to 1am in Rains courtyards 203-209, somewhat expanded from previous years. Still hoping to get some more volunteers, and primarily need some sober people around to help out and keep an eye on things. If available, you can just show up and check-in with Justin there. CAs are filling part of the volunteering role, so should have enough help.

6) 6:16 ASSU Update (Jonny/Fagan and Matt McLaughlin)

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Jonny and Fagan had a meeting with Alex and Chris Griffith about Mental Health on campus. Right now are in brainstorming/benchmark stage, and can get in touch with them if you’d like to be involved. On Sundays 1-3pm they’ll be holding Legislative Office Hours where we and Undergrad Senators can come and talk about advocacy issues.

Update from Matt on our investments. Obviously, that markets have taken quite a hit, and those responsible for our investments think it could get worse. The investment advisory committee have met about how to handle this and how best to manage the ASSU endowment. which is different than other investments in that it’s very very long term.

6.5) 6:19 Funding part 2
See notes and audio above

7) 6:25 Publicity (Ivette)

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Zeng and Ivette attended GOALIE and the BBQ during NGSO, and thank the others who helped out. At BBQ they handed out 160 laundry bags and at least some of those people stopped to ask questions or check out the GSC poster. Had 270 people stop by for grocery bags at GOALIE, and they seemed to be excited about GSC events. Budget-wise, the Publicity Chairs have about $1000 left for the year, and are starting to make plans for how to maximize exposure for that amount. Brainstorming phase for now, working on website with Matt as well.

8) 6:27 Diversity Committee (Courtney, Shantal and Nanna)
Coming next week instead.

9) 6:28 New Business (Polina)

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i. Retreat (Justin). The GSC holds three retreats each year. For this one in the fall, we set out our long-term goals and logistics for the year. Will start midmorning Saturday the 18th and have a very long GSC meeting, followed by getting to know each other time. Elected folks are expected, others are welcome. Planning on Santa Cruz or San Francisco. Informal head count suggests about 15 people that think they will spend the night.

ii. NAGPS conference (Fen). Last meeting Fen and Ryan talked about their trip to NAGPS Legislative Action Days, and mentioned the upcoming conference, which they have more details about now. The conference is hosted by the University of Minnesota: Twin Cities, and about 100 people from various GSCs are expected. Fen submits a request for funding for her and George to attend. Ryan was interested, but not available. Nanna has the cost estimates. Would be about $345 per flight, $453.60 for 4 nights of hotels, $60 for transportation, $150 for food, no cost of registration, plus safety net equals $1500 requested for the trip. This would come from general discretionary, as it’s not directly advocacy, but more a way to get in touch with other GSCs. Though it’s not directly advocacy, this is where they set the platform that gets lobbied for in DC, so good to be involved.

There are objections to consensus, so roll-call vote.

6 for 2 opposed, 3 abstaining. Allocating $1500 for this conference passes.

6:36 adjourned.

GSC meeting 2008-09-24

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

Proceedings of the September 24th 2008 GSC meeting


Agenda

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Sean!)

2) 6:00 Welcome with introductions (George)

3) 6:05 Announcements (George)
i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.
ii. Approve minutes from the last meeting (9/10/08).
iii. GSC Fall Retreat will be Saturday, October 18th.
iv. We’re back to weekly meetings so remember to show up next Wednesday, October 1st.
v. Thanks to Etosha, Kwami and volunteers for a great NGSO.
vi. The proposal for the dependent health insurance task force was accepted by the Provost.

4) 6:10 EV Family Book Event Funding (Andy)

5) 6:15 Funding (Addy)
i. Bahai Association at Stanford
ii. Association of Chinese Students and Scholars at Stanford
iii. InterVarsity Graduate Christian Fellowship
iv. Shaking the Foundations Conference
v. French Stanford Student Association
vi. Persian Student Association
vii. Spicmacay
viii. Scandinavians at Stanford
viv. Atheists, Humanists, and Agnostics (AHA!) at Stanford

6) 6:45 Programming (Adam S.)
i. Welcome Back Party coming up!

7) 6:55 ASSU Update (Jonny and Fagan)

8) 7:00 NAGPS Updates and Supplementary Funding Request (Fen, Ryan and Nanna)

9) 7:30 Publicity (Zeng and Ivette)

10) 7:40 Flicks (Zeng)

11) 7:45 Grad Voter Registration Drive (Etosha)

12) 7:55 New Business (George)

Attendance

Voting members present:
At large 2: Aleksandra Korolova
At large 3: Adam Beberg
At large 4: Nanna Notthoff
At large 5 (Interim): Ryan Peacock
Business: Rick Thielke
Earth Sciences: Justin Brown (proxy Adam Sciambi present)
Engineering 1: Polina Segalova (proxy Etosha Cave present)
Engineering 2: Addy Satija
Humanities: George Bloom
Law: Andrew Park
Natural Sciences: Fen Zhao
Social Sciences: Hanna Muenke

Voting members not present:
At large 1: Karan Chaudlory
Education: Unfilled
Medicine: Sean Young

Other people present: Andrew Danowitz, Kristina Keating, Sadie Bartholomew (IV Grad), Joe Foley (AHA!), Matt Bunriesci (AHA!), Alex Ene, Julien Cortial (FSA), Matt Turk, Andrew Martinez, Johan Andreasson (Scandinavians at Stanford), Simone Manganelli, Mary Van der Hoven, Ping Li, Jonny Dorsey, Yayati Pipouta, Pra Chandrasoma, David Gobaud, Larisa Masalimova, Matt McLaughlin, Jon Rotzien, representative from Shaking the Foundations conference, representative from Association of Chinese Students and Scholars at Stanford, representative from Bahai Association at Stanford, Amanda from Philosophy department. Likely other people present as well who did not sign the attendance sheet.

Minutes

1) 5:45 FOOD (thanks Sean!)

2) 6:03 Welcome with introductions (George)

Listen to this segment

3) 6:07 Announcements (George)

Listen to this segment

i. Please be aware that all meetings are audio recorded and will be made available on the GSC website.
ii. Approved minutes from the last meeting (9/10/08) by consensus.
iii. GSC Fall Retreat will be Saturday, October 18th.
iv. We’re back to weekly meetings so remember to show up next Wednesday, October 1st.
v. Thanks to Etosha, Kwami and volunteers for a great NGSO.
vi. The proposal for the dependent health insurance task force was accepted by the Provost.

4) 6:10 EV Family Book Event Funding (Andy)

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Having a welcoming event for graduate students with children. In EV have 260 families with 400 children, and there are at least 100 more families off-campus who are also invited to the event. At the event, all the kids get free books, there will also be food, story telling, representatives from the Palo Alto Library, puppets, etc. Total budget is $3000, requesting $1000 from us, with the rest coming from GSPB, EV Family House Dues, and the GLO. Expect 300-400 people in attendance. We have a line-item for EV family events in our budget, so money will come from that. Giving $1000 passes by consensus.

5) 6:13 Funding (Addy)

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i. Shaking the Foundations Conference – Conference about Progressive Lawyering, and this is the 10th year they’ve had it. They bring in various speakers like law practitioners and professors. Students from across the country come to this. This is the only money they request for the year. 300-400 people come, including non-law people, such as those in Education, and Public Policy. Total budget for the event is $32,000, with a big part of the expense coming from flying in all the panelists (have 16 panels with 4 people). Asking us for $5750, with the rest coming from firms, donations from individuals, and the Law school. This is about what we gave last year. Giving $5750 passes by consensus. Shaking.stanford.edu is the website for the conference.

ii. Association of Chinese Students and Scholars at Stanford. Biggest event of year is this Saturday at the I-Center, and expect 200-250 people to attend. Requesting $1900. Giving $1900 passes by consensus.

iii. Atheists, Humanists, and Agnostics (AHA!) at Stanford. New student group. Planning two events. First is lecture by Prof Robert Zapolosky on the science of faith and religion at noon on Thursday, October 2nd. The second is a lecture about the book, “Away with all Gods.” Adam B. asks if they are related to Rational Thought, which covered similar ground, but seems that group is not active anymore. Recommended $900. Giving $900 passes by consensus.

iv. InterVarsity Graduate Christian Fellowship. Requesting money for two big events. Having a welcome dinner, with 120-150 people expected for that. Second is end of year banquet. Requesting $2650. Have advertised on Grad events and put out the flyers for first event. Giving $2650 passes by consensus.

v. Scandinavians at Stanford. Have about 200 members. Have 5 events each year. There’s a crayfish party this Saturday, a Winter Party with some Scandinavian Christmas traditions, a welcome BBQ in October (100 people expected), spring BBQ, and mid-summer party. This is their annual budget. Recommended $3025 (somewhat less than requested because requests for crayfish event were too high). Giving $3025 passes by consensus.

vi. Bahai Association at Stanford. Teachings are about one-ness of humanity. Having a lecture about these ideas, requesting money for food. Expecting about 30 students to attend. Recommended $240, which is within dinner budget estimates. Giving $240 passes by consensus.

vii. French Stanford Student Association. Have primarily social events. Have welcome BBQ on Oct 2nd and Wine and Cheese party in November. Expect about 80 people at each event. Recommended $900. Giving $900 passes by consensus.

Persian Student Association and Spicmacay not present.

6) 6:27 Programming (Adam S.)

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Welcome Back Party coming up! Things going well, time to organize volunteers. This is the first big party we put on each year and 700-1000 people are expected. Hired Events Services to light up some trees for the party, and we’ll have some glo-bracelets for fun. In terms of volunteers, need greeters to check IDs, flyer-ers (2 hours this Sunday), and some some set-up people for two hours before the party. They’re having CAs bartend probably, though others can volunteer if you want. Will have a hip-hop DJ and techno DJ on opposite ends of the Rains Haciena courtyard area, but will have dancing outside this year because that makes clean-up easier. Paper going around to sign-up – remember that GSC members are required to help out with something.

7) 6:31 ASSU Update (Jonny and Fagan)

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They’ll have new times for Ex-comm soon.
Setting up a cup-buying consortium to buy recyclable cups in bulk, will probably ask GSC and Undergrad Senate for help with that.
Reminder of their general role of being a link between student needs/desires and the administration.
They hold office hours for legislative bodies, but haven’t figured out hours yet.

8) 6:34 NAGPS Updates and Supplementary Funding Request (Fen, Ryan and Nanna)

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Fen and Ryan were at NAGPS, went $43.59 overbudget, mostly because they needed to get home from the airport late and had to take a taxi rather than CalTrain. Money will come from legislative advocacy. Giving $43.59 passes by consensus.

During the trip they met with members of congress that represent the areas near us, their staff and legislative assistants about Immigration (H1-B and EB visas), Student Loans, Energy Funding, and the RISE Act. The agenda is set by NAGPS ahead of time.

Met with lots of people, including the House Committee on Education and Labor which focuses on grad education, so that was a good conversation.

Focused mostly on immigration, rather than tax reform (which they thought would be the focus), because some of the tax things had been resolved or weren’t coming up in legislation soon). Immigration as it relates to students is primarily about staying in US after getting a degree. They met with Rep. Lofgren (Chair of the House Subcommittee on Immigration). There are three bills in her committee:
– HR 6039 is about permanent residence for students in STEM fields, which would make residency automatic for those in Science, Technology, Engineering and Math. This would leave more other visas open for others if those students don’t need to apply for visas with caps. This isn’t a partisan issue, but there are plenty of people who aren’t for immigration, particularly from states who don’t have many immigrant workers.
– HR 5921 eliminates country caps.
– HR 5882 is in write-up, and calls for the rollover of 400,000 visas that were not distributed under the caps in the years since 1992. This one seems most likely to get pushed through in the upcoming future.

Other topics, even though these don’t have active legislation yet are Student Loans, Energy Funding, the RISE Act, and Dependent Healthcare.

A. Student loans
- Disparity between grad and undergrad. There was a bill that made Federal Loans a better deal for Undergrads, but didn’t affect Grads. Separation done because of limited money pool at the time, but still not entirely clear why Undergrads but not Grads should get a benefit. Grad students are generally better at repaying, so it’d be nice if that were recognized. For those interested in more details Fen and Ryan have more handouts, which is also what they gave to representatives.
- Also issues with time to degree for PhDs and the standard four year loan terms, which don’t match up. Representatives seemed unaware that it would take so long to get a PhD, so at least now they’ve been exposed to that information. Point being that even if students get a stipend, they may need loans to meet full costs, so this could have high impact.

B. Energy Funding: goal to increase university funding for energy independence research.

C. RISE Act
This Act is about removing restrictions on student loans for those with former drug convictions. The FAFSA currently asks for this information, and disqualifies those with convictions from getting loans, a rule which has been in place since 1994 or so. This includes misdemeanors, where if you have 1, you lose eligibility on one year of federal loans, for 2 convictions you lose two years, and with 3 misdemeanors you are not eligible for any federal loans. This really only applies to these types of drug convictions. In fact, there are specific fellowship programs to help felons on parole, so punishments for drug convictions seem disproportionate.

Alex wonders whether the original law was set-up primarily as a deterrent and a reason for students to not getting into drugs, which is why it seems disproportionately harsh. Others don’t think those students are aware of the consequences for financial aid at the time.

Mary finds a press release that suggests the original law only came into place in 2000.

Nanna thinks it’s an issue of privacy that this type of history is investigated for financial aid.

If the RISE act passes, there might be more competition for federal loans since more people would be eligible, which might reduce the amount available per person.

Rick and Kristina don’t necessarily think focusing on the RISE act is the best use of time as compared to other issues, though it does affect a lot of students.

D. Dependent Healthcare
The Knox-Keen Act prevents Stanford from self-insuring, and there is currently legislative action to see if this can be changed. Self-insuring might be a good way to keep our health insurance costs down.

UC Davis also lost dependent healthcare two years ago, and are thus very vested in this issue.

NAGPS offers PPO policies for students and dependents. Has high options, low options, and plan for international students. Students must sign up for the plan themselves in order to also enroll their dependents, and students can sign up at any time point.

The website with specific information about the plans that NAGPS uses is at https://www.uhcsr.com/NAGPS, and includes specific price points. It is less expensive than Cardinal Care for single students, though dependents are pricier. Also, we’re not exactly sure how the plan compares in quality to Cardinal Care, but Hanna has passed along the information to those at Vaden who are knowledgeable about insurance and they are investigating.

Overall, Adam B. says that he pays less per year for him to have Cardinal Care, his wife to be on Kaiser and his child to be on the Santa Clara Healthy Families plan, so this NAGPS plan may not necessarily be best overall, but still worth looking into more as an option.

What Fen has figured out so far about the plan is that mental health treatment is covered up to $5000, that the plan does apply to services at Stanford Medical Center, that prescriptions are covered, and that costs are generally reimbursed at 80% after the deductible ($500 for low plan, $100 for higher plan) is met.

Overall, we’d probably get lowest insurance costs long-term if we can self-insure, so legislative action is still pursuing the Knox-Keene act, but in the meantime, still looking for more immediate options to help the students with dependents.

The NAGPS plan is available to all students at schools involved at NAGPS, which is about 80 schools. UC Davis has been using this, especially since losing their coverage for dependents, so think there’s a reasonably sized pool to spread out costs, which is important to prevent the spiraling costs that precipitated the end of dependent health insurance on campus.

Alex asks about Dental, which is not included in the basic plans, but they do have a discount service that we haven’t looked into yet, though it may be similar to Vaden’s current offering. Students can purchase insurance quarterly, so they wouldn’t need to pay for the whole year if not planning on using it.

NAGPS is having their 22nd conference later this fall, entitled, ‘Putting it all together – scholarship, leadership and activism in Graduate and Professional Education.’ George, Ryan and Fen are interested in attending. Dependent Healthcare is the top thing on their agenda for the meeting, so good chance to learn more about that. This conference is where they make the platform that people later go lobby about, so attending the conference would give us more involvement in setting those priorities.

The conference would be a good chance to learn from and collaborate with GSCs around the country. Fen has learned a lot from interactions with other GSCs over the legislative action trip to D.C. and would love to continue this. For example, learned that other GSCs have departmental representatives, leading to much larger organizations and more people investing their time and energy to address grad student needs. While having that many active voting members may be too much for us right now, good reminder that it’s worth making connections with departments.

Final thoughts:
– Ryan is now the Western Regional Coordinator for NAGPS, so good start to us being more involved.
– Legacy membership is a bulk payment of 15K, and currently we pay $500 a year to maintain membership. Perhaps something to consider switching.
– Would like to take a more active role in NAGPS – definitely one of those organizations that you get more out of when you put more in.
– Before going on legislative action trips in the future, would consider communicating with Stanford lobbyist. May not always be in agreement regarding what priorities should be, but other schools found that a useful step.
– Make sure we keep an eye out for relevant legislative things affecting students.

9) 7:14 Publicity (Hanna for Zeng and Ivette)
They could not make the meeting, passing along the message that they did lots of publicity during NGSO, and will have a full report next week.

10) 7:15 Flicks (Hanna for Zeng)

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Showing Wall-E at Flicks this Sunday, and it is the only family friendly movie on the list for the quarter, so we’d really like to do the Grad Night with donuts at this movie despite the short notice. Family friendly movies got good turnout in the past, and this is also a fun movie for all ages. Sent out an email to the GSC list over the weekend with the idea of doing Grad Night at Wall-E, and no one objected at the time, so went ahead and started advertising already, with hope that we’d get approval. However, we still need the official approval now. Holding Grad-night at Wall-E this Sunday passes by consensus. Aleksandra volunteers to help Zeng pick up supplies around 5:15, and George and Hanna volunteer to help pass out the donuts around 6:30. Zeng will coordinate details of this.

11) 7:17 Grad Voter Registration Drive (Etosha)

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Important to get grad student vote out, and would like to set-up a table to make it easy for students to register in California or to register to vote absentee in home states. Goal is to get 500 students to go vote. Plan to do this Wed Oct 1st on the Quad.
Proposed budget:
Some supplies for table: $150.
Stamps to mail in registration: .43*500=$215
Snacks/coupons for food. $2*500=$1000
Envelopes: $50
Training dinner: $100.

Suggestion to have it at Bytes area instead of the Quad because that might be more populated with Grad students.

Undergrads have coalition army that we’re coordinating with, will get forms from them. Matt thinks we could use ASSU bulk mailing for this. Could get it down to 15 cents through this if we have enough envelopes to make it worth the process.

Hanna suggests not to give coupons for lunch, since it should be enough incentive that it’s being made easy to vote.

Maybe get stickers reminding people to register and/or vote, hand out at Welcome Back party and at the tabling event.

Total request is now $615 (the original budget, but with $100 for snacks rather than $1000 for actual food coupons) to hold the event at Bytes. This will come from programming discretionary since it’s an event for graduate students. Adam S. is okay with the allocation.

ASSU Execs encourage us to plug into their existing efforts to get out the vote.

Suggestion to go door-to-door to get sign-ups. Adam S. volunteers that we can flyer at the same time for that as the Welcome Back party, though for that he wasn’t planning on going door-to-door and talking to people, but rather just putting up lots of fliers around the grad housing areas. ASSU people actually go into all the dorms with dorm captains, but we don’t really have a good set-up for that.

Fen, Mary, Simone volunteer to help with the tabling.

Political speaker coming Thursday 9/25 at 7pm in Cubberly about running Newark and the violence there, all are welcome.

Giving $615 to Grad Voter Registration Drive passes by consensus.

12) 7:31 New Business (George)
Need to sign-up for party helping!