Skip to main content

The Tufts Daily - Monday, December 12, 2022

Page 1

FEATURES

ARTS

SPORTS

page 3

page 4

back

Foreign language learning fosters cross-cultural connection

Boston Pops pop off for the holidays

Men’s basketball dunks on Clark and Suffolk

THE

INDEPENDENT

NEWS

1

FEATURES

3

ARTS & POP CULTURE

4

FUN & GAMES

6

OPINION

7

SPORTS STUDENT

N E W S PA P E R

OF

TUFTS

UNIVERSITY

BACK

E S T. 1 9 8 0

T HE T UFTS DAILY VOLUME LXXXIV, ISSUE 14

Monday, December 12, 2022

MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.

UNIVERSITY

Tufts Labor Coalition calls on Tufts Dining to increase number of bakers, stop outsourcing baked goods by Matthew Sage Staff Writer

The Tufts Labor Coalition is currently running a petition to address the decreasing quality of the dining centers’ baked goods and to earn fairer hours for Tufts baker Melissa Lee over winter recess. Emma Holland, a TLC organizer responsible for dining worker outreach, said the petition is a part of their larger “Bring Baking Home” campaign, which is a response to changes in Tufts bakeries. She said that back in 2019, there were five dedicated bakers working at Tufts dining centers, and all baked goods were produced in house. “Fast forward to 2022, there [are] only two bakers total. Only

one of them is one of those original [bakers] from 2019,” she said. “A lot of goods are being outsourced and they’re stored frozen until they’re ready to be served, which means the allergy regulations are not necessarily as good because we can’t really track how they’re being prepared.” Patrick Collins, Tufts’ executive director of media relations, confirmed the university’s receipt of the petition. “We have received the petition from TLC and have referred it to the appropriate parties for review,” he wrote in an email to the Daily. Holland said the first goal of the petition is to help baker Melissa Lee earn more job security over winter recess.

Lee has been working at Tufts since March. “Because she’s new, she’s what’s considered a non-legacy employee,” Holland said. “And part of what that means is that they don’t have to pay her over recess. So over fall break or winter break … she’s not contractually obligated to have paid time off.” According to Lee, she will be scheduled just four working hours a day during winter break but has not been told when she will start her shifts. The petition demands Lee gets the opportunity to work a full 40 hours per week. “I need more hours because the winter break is long,” Lee said. “I’m of course not happy. … Maybe I need to find a part-time job or something else. … I need to save money.”

SAMANTHA POKORNY / THE TUFTS DAILY

The Dewick-MacPhie Dining Center is pictured on Dec. 5. Lee described how, in the past, dining hall management required her to make excess baked goods to be frozen down and served during breaks.

“When they need, they just take out [the frozen goods] and then they don’t let me work,” see BAKERS, page 2

UNIVERSITY

Tufts announces construction of new residence hall by Michaela Loughran Contributing Writer

Tufts has announced a plan to begin construction on a new residence hall on Boston Avenue next year, with hopes of completing it by fall 2025. The new seven story building will be open to juniors and seniors only and will house 398 Tufts students in apartment-style units. In a first for Tufts residences, the dorm’s first floor will be home to some sort of retail space, such as a restaurant or cafe, and an outdoor plaza, that will be accessible to the public. “We do not expect the retail location in the proposed new residence hall to be a significant gen-

erator of revenue,” Barbara Stein, the vice president for operations, wrote in an email to the Daily. “We envision the proposed retail location more as an amenity that will benefit students, faculty, staff and our neighbors in the area.” The building will be across the street from the new Medford/Tufts Green Line stop, which opens today. This will afford residents convenient access to other important locations on campus, such as the Tisch Sports and Fitness Center, the Joyce Cummings Center and Kindlevan Café in the Science and Engineering Complex. Tufts also plans to work with BlueBikes, a Boston area bike share program, to construct two new stations a walkable distance from the new residence hall.

DAVID KIM / THE TUFTS DAILY

Boston Avenue, the location for the new residence hall, is pictured on Dec. 5.

Proximity to public transportation, however, isn’t the only sustainable aspect of this new construction project. If all goes as planned, the building will help Tufts meet its goal of becoming a carbon neutral institution by 2050. It will be constructed to meet a low energy target and be connected to Tufts’ main energy plant for utilities, which is already energy efficient. Additionally, the building will be solar ready and outfitted with solar panels. In addition to sustainability benefits, Christina Alch, the director of residential life and learning, believes that increasing the number of juniors and seniors living on campus has significant benefits for the greater Tufts residential community. “Living in our residential community is such a special opportunity because you form relationships with other people, receive support from university resources, and learn and develop life skills more naturally than you might living off-campus,” Alch wrote in an email to the Daily. Recent demand for the construction of more on-campus housing options has been high from both students and members of the Medford/Somerville community. For students, on-campus living

offers closer proximity to classes, and local community members are hoping that it will open up more off-campus housing options for local families. Rocco DiRico, the executive director of government and community relations, cited the need for greater housing capacity as the factor that had the most weight in the decision to build the new residence hall. “We have heard from our students and neighbors, both groups want us to add more on-campus housing options,” DiRico wrote in an email to the Daily. At a recent community meeting with over 50 attendees from the Medford/Somerville community, residents got a chance to voice their thoughts on the new construction project. DiRico noted that community response was largely positive. “Many neighbors appreciated our transit oriented, mixed-use design,” DeRico wrote. “Other folks were glad to see that we were adding more on-campus housing and thought the location was a good choice.” He mentioned that the response wasn’t all positive, with some neighbors expressing concern about construction and traffic impacts, but said that these issues would hopefully be addressed prior to construction.

DiRico is confident that once completed, this building may become an important spot on some prospective students’ campus tours. “In the future, many prospective students will arrive on campus via the Medford/Tufts Green Line Station,” he wrote. “This transit-oriented development will be the first thing they see as they step onto campus.” He believes that it will provide a strong demonstration of Tufts’ commitment to “on-campus housing, sustainability, and forward-looking architecture.” DiRico also noted that though this will be the first residence hall construction project since Sophia Gordon Hall was finished 2006, Tufts has made housing a top priority in recent years. “Tufts has added more than 485 on campus beds over the last five years,” he wrote. “In addition to those 485 beds, Tufts also added The Court at Professors Row which houses 150 first year students. … We’re also constructing two new CoHo houses and expanding 29 Sawyer Avenue in Somerville.” Tufts plans to begin construction on the new residence hall in 2023 and hopes to finish construction by the fall of 2025.

tuftsdaily

tuftsdaily

thetuftsdaily

The Tufts Daily

The Tufts Daily

daily@tuftsdaily.com


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
The Tufts Daily - Monday, December 12, 2022 by The Tufts Daily - Issuu