Op-ed: I once was endorsed to be the Daily Bruin’s editor in chief. I agree with staffers’ concerns.

For the past eight years, I have worked in big newsrooms like the Los Angeles Times and The New York Times, and have learned a thing or two about office politics.

But the worst, most politically fraught period of my life remains the three months I campaigned to be editor of the Daily Bruin. And one of the most emotionally weighty days I’ve ever had was the day I won by one vote.

I’m totally serious. Politicking for votes among your best friends and college family is not fun. Neither is giving a speech in front of them, or having one of your peers call you out for a few typographical errors in your 10-page application. And neither is seeing people gather and whisper angrily when it’s announced that you’ve won. When you give over your life to something in college and love it unconditionally, you want it to love you back.

Although I edged out my opponent, I was incredibly pained that only half the staff wanted me to lead them. What of the other half? I took it all very personally. And so I stewed on Janss Steps with two Bruin friends, drinking wine until the bottle was empty. Then we went to The Apple Pan and stewed some more. By the time I was finally done stewing, I was so upset and emotionally exhausted, I decided to withdraw my application.

About the only thing that could have made the situation worse would have been if I had stayed in the race and interviewed with the ASUCLA Communications Board, as is protocol, and then been told by that board a group of people I’d never met that they had overruled the Bruin staff, invalidated my three months of work, and selected the other candidate to become editor.

That is essentially what happened this week when the Communications Board picked The Bruin’s next boss. They selected the candidate who had failed to gain the endorsement of her fellow staff members by a margin much larger than the one vote I won by nine years ago.

I cannot pretend to know how the two candidates feel, but I imagine they are both emotional wrecks. One must feel cheated; the other has been left, at least for now, with a depleted staff as well as several peers who are extremely upset. And this all could have been avoided had the Communications Board shown a little deference.

Stripping away who the actual candidates are, and stipulating that reasonable people can disagree on who would be a better editor, the situation comes down to this: A group of folks mostly lacking ties to The Bruin or professional journalism experience, who met the candidates once and interviewed them for a matter of minutes, had the hubris to believe they could assess the candidates better than the candidates’ peers could. They decided that their snap judgments and impressions should outweigh those of the people who have spent, in many cases, 40 hours a week with the candidates for three years; that their inspection of a candidate’s writing samples should count for more than the judgment of other student journalists who have observed the candidates’ work over the years.

It is the board’s prerogative to make such a decision. They technically publish the paper, and based on my reading of a letter they released Tuesday night, they appear to have made their choice in good faith. But over the years, as they obliquely note, when selecting the editor, the board has, with very few (and perhaps equally contestable) exceptions, deferred to the wisdom of the staff the people who know the candidates best.

Because they failed to do so this time around, they have created quite a mess. Staff members have gone on strike, and I have to presume that no one involved is more miserable than the candidates themselves. I urge the members of the Communications Board to really reflect on that, and to consider how they might feel if a group of strangers said they weren’t good enough for a job or a promotion after a group of their peers who know them well said the opposite.

The Daily Bruin has a way of overcoming UCLA’s bureaucracy and will carry on. The situation will eventually blow over. You don’t get to be almost 100 years old without some bumps.

But this move by the Communications Board has set a deeply troubling precedent for the next 100 years. In seizing control of this decisionmaking process, the board has disenfranchised the students who give their sweat and their hearts to The Bruin every day. And in failing to allow the staff to democratically elect their own leader, they have stifled the voices of the very people who allow the rest of campus to be heard.

Stevens is a former Daily Bruin senior staff writer who graduated in 2011. He is currently a reporter for The New York Times.

Bruin Tea: How does CEC put on so many free events?

Quarter system got you down? Have you fallen and can’t get up? Bruin Tea is a series investigating student questions and petty concerns about UCLA.

Question: How does Campus Events Commission put on so many free events?

Alley Madison, USAC’s campus events commissioner, said The Undergraduate Students Association Council CEC office’s ability to put on free events, such as film screenings, comes in part from its established relationships with outside companies, such as HBO. The office also frequently partners with UCLA organizations such as the Graduate Students Association Melnitz Movies.

“Some of our staffers have gotten the connections that they have through a connection that maybe somebody like five years ago has had, and we’ve just maintained it so well that we’ve built up a reputation with certain film distributors that they’re really excited to work with us, and will actually reach out to us with film screenings,” Madison said.

The CEC is hosting three free events this month including a sneak peek of the upcoming film “Little Woods” on April 17, a film screening of “Someone Great” on April 18, and an arts party for college students April 19.

“It really comes through, institutional relationships that have been built and honored and kind of held up through generations of (campus events commissioners),” Madison said.

Madison said she thinks the office will continue working with outside companies and entities to provide free film screenings beyond her tenure as commissioner.

“I definitely think it will continue because at this point the CEC has really come into its own as an entity within just the community here, and in Los Angeles and on our campus that film distributors and production companies really want to work with us,” Madison said.

TL;DR: CEC has good connections.

 

Women’s basketball guard Kennedy Burke earns second-round pick in 2019 WNBA Draft

Kennedy Burke has become the third Bruin in two years to be selected in the WNBA Draft.

The Dallas Wings took the senior UCLA women’s basketball guard in the second round with the 22nd overall pick Wednesday night. Last year, former Bruin standouts Jordin Canada and Monique Billings were taken with the fifth and 15th overall selections, respectively.

Burke played in 138 of 139 games over her four-year career at UCLA, making 97 starts and appearing in 13 NCAA tournament games. She also posted averages of 15.4 points, 6.2 rebounds and 2.3 assists this past season, good for career-highs in each category.

If Burke earns a roster spot out of training camp, she will join a Dallas roster led by former Notre Dame standout and four-time WNBA All-Star Skylar Diggins-Smith. The Wings finished last season with a 15-19 record and claimed the eighth and final playoff spot before being eliminated in the first round by the Phoenix Mercury.

The 2019 WNBA season is set to begin on May 24, and barring any roster changes, Burke will face off against Billings and the Atlanta Dream in her professional debut.

Baseball’s strong at-bats drive in 6th-straight midweek win over UC Irvine

The Bruins remain perfect in midweek games.

No. 1 UCLA baseball (24-6, 9-3 Pac-12) defeated No. 18 UC Irvine (21-6, 5-1 Big West) 9-3 at Jackie Robinson Stadium to increase its Tuesday winning streak to six. This marks the first time since 2015 that the Bruins have gone this deep into the season without a midweek loss.

Tuesday games – which coach John Savage also calls “tuneups” – are viewed as chances to make improvements before a three-game weekend series by the Bruins. Savage said the games are significant opportunities for his team to get better each week.

“We take a lot of pride in (midweek) games,” Savage said. “(UC Irvine) is a very good team, so this was a big night for us.”

Almost all of UCLA’s damage came early in the game, with seven runs scored by the end of the third frame. Sophomore right fielder Garrett Mitchell and junior first baseman Michael Toglia led the way with two hits apiece during that span.

The Anteaters, however, got on the board in the top of the first when first baseman Adrian Damla hit a two-RBI double down the right field line off freshman right-hander Jesse Bergin. Mitchell said the 2-0 deficit was actually convenient since the Bruins approach every inning like they’re losing by two runs, regardless of the actual score.

“(Assistant) coach (Bryant) Ward always talks about playing like you’re two runs down, and it’s kind of funny that we were down two runs in the first inning,” Mitchell said. “Having that mindset of going out there and trying to get on base was all we were trying to do.”

Mitchell led off the bottom of the first with a single to left field and was driven in by junior second baseman Chase Strumpf two at-bats later to cut into the Anteaters’ lead.

The Bruins followed with three runs in both the second and third. Despite batting around the lineup in the second, the Bruins recorded only one hit.

Toglia led off the inning with a single to left field, but the Bruins reached base only via three hit-by-pitches and two walks for the rest of the frame.

“We don’t necessarily need to be getting hits to be scoring runs if we’re having good at-bats,” Mitchell said. “Hit-by-pitches, walking, sac-flies – whatever it takes.”

Toglia tied the game at two when he crossed home on a wild-pitch. During that same at-bat, Mitchell hit a sacrifice fly to center field to give the Bruins the lead for good.

Junior left fielder Jack Stronach was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded for the Bruins’ third run of the inning.

The Bruins scored more conventionally in the third, starting with a ground-rule RBI double by freshman catcher Noah Cardenas that bounced off the warning track in left field. Mitchell followed with an RBI single to left and junior third baseman Ryan Kreidler hit a sacrifice fly to make the score 7-2.

Another two runs were added in the seventh when freshman infielder Mikey Perez hit a pinch-hit RBI single to left-center and Kreidler manufactured his second sacrifice fly of the night.

On the mound for the Bruins, Bergin made his third-consecutive Tuesday start. After taking a no-hitter into the sixth inning against CSUN a week ago, the freshman said it was difficult to get comfortable during his two-run first inning.

“It took a little longer than I expected to find some rhythm and momentum,” Bergin said. “After the defense picked me up and the offense started going, it was easier for me to relax a little more and get into my groove.”

After the first frame, Bergin pitched four scoreless innings and ended his night striking out seven, walking three and allowing two runs on four hits.

Despite one run and one hit allowed by junior right-hander Felix Rubi in the ninth, the Anteaters didn’t record a hit against the Bruin bullpen.

UCLA will stay home this weekend as they host No. 8 East Carolina starting Friday at 6 p.m.

Op-ed: AFSCME to go on strike to protest alleged worker intimidation, free speech issues

Over the last year, University of California workers have gone on strike three different times. These disruptions have been precipitated in part by the University’s failure to negotiate fair contracts with the workers who make our state’s third-largest employer run every day.

But rather than addressing the eroding economic opportunities at the University, it has insisted on outsourcing what were once good-paying jobs to low-wage contractors and has imposed contract terms that flatten wages and cut benefits for its lowest-paid employees.

The UC has been entirely blind to a deepening income inequality among its workforce.

These same UC workers will strike again April 10. However, at issue this time is something far more fundamental than wages, benefits or staffing levels. It’s about employees’ ability to exercise their right to voice concerns over working conditions – free of interference or employer retaliation – at all.

Less than a year ago, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 5-4 to reverse a generations old-precedent setting the terms of the relationship between public sector workers and the unions that represent them. In its Janus v. American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, Council 31 decision, the court ruled workers could no longer be required to pay for services provided by their unions. The anti-worker zealots financing the case theorized that if they could starve unions of the fees they get from nonmembers who still reap the benefits of collective bargaining, they could ultimately weaken the chief institutional adversary to unchecked corporate power. In doing so, they could redistribute more wealth from those at the bottom of the income scale – primarily women and people of color – to those at the top.

In many respects, the gambit has already worked. While most public sector unions – including AFSCME Local 3299 – have actually increased their dues-paying memberships in the wake of Janus, most have still lost revenue from represented “fee payers.” Not coincidentally, as union bargaining power has declined, income inequality today has reached levels not seen since the Gilded Age.

Such is the case at the UC, which has gone even further than Janus by actively trying to tip the scales against its own workers. It has also gone further than any public institution in California in lining the pockets of a small group of highly paid administrators and well-connected elites at the expense of its lowest-wage workers.

Its actions are well-documented. The University issued one-sided communications to employees, urging them to drop their union membership, and interfered with union efforts to communicate about bargaining with represented workers. It has monitored employees, threatened them and retaliated against workers engaged in union activities. It has offered financial incentives to encourage workers to cross lawful picket lines. It has threatened arrest and citations against workers for engaging in peaceful demonstrations.

The UC has also effectively condoned physical assault against picketing workers, including an attack by a UC Davis supervisor and another by UC Berkeley police against an African-American worker at a peaceful demonstration honoring the labor activism of Martin Luther King Jr.

Any one of these incidents would be enough on its own to warrant punitive sanctions against the UC. Taken together, they symbolize a far deeper and more toxic shift is underway at the California institution that once claimed to be a national leader on issues like free speech, equality and social justice.

Today, striking workers will stand up to reclaim these principles. Without them, the UC is not just complicit in the economic disparities that are costing too many working Californians a fair shot at the middle-class – it’s the tip of the spear.

Perlman is AFSCME Local 3299’s executive director.

Letter to our readers: Why Daily Bruin staffers are going on strike

To the Associated Students UCLA Communications Board, Jacob Preal, Abigail Goldman, Doria Deen and the readers of the Daily Bruin,

We, the undersigned, are writing to express dissent and disappointment with the ASUCLA Communications Board’s vote to appoint an editor in chief against the staff’s recommendation.

At the start of spring quarter, the Daily Bruin staff conducts a hearing of all applicants to be editor in chief for the upcoming academic year. Each applicant makes a 20-minute speech followed by a 40-minute questioning session from the staff. The staff then enters into deliberation and finally takes a vote. The Communications Board, which oversees UCLA Student Media, including the Daily Bruin, has the final say on the next editor in chief, but takes the staff endorsement into strong consideration. Over the past 30 years, the Communications Board has generally confirmed the staff’s choice. This year, however, was a rare exception.

This decision sets a dangerous precedent for the independence of a student newspaper. The Communications Board is in part appointed by students who sit on the Undergraduate Students Association Council, and this decision raises serious questions regarding the judgment of the board.

As members of the Daily Bruin, we feel that we must defend the staff and their decision. The editors and reporters of the Bruin work incredibly hard day in and day out and should have the right to choose their future leader.

We do not believe that a 58% vote to endorse one candidate is marginal, nor an insignificant percentage. The endorsement was made after a long and difficult deliberation by staffers who have spent the past weeks considering this decision.

Our adviser and the current editor in chief both asked us to respect the larger institution at work and remember that the Daily Bruin is larger than any one person. But the Daily Bruin is not just a student organization – it is a body of journalistic work that holds incredible historical value. It has gained this value through its reliance on independent student journalists and we stand by that principle.

We ask that the Communications Board not ignore The Bruin’s student journalists now.

To be clear, we have faith in the ability of the Communication Board’s chosen applicant to lead the paper. Rather, what we disagree with is the Communications Board’s move to ignore the staff endorsement, its refusal to disclose their reasons for doing so and its denial of any avenue to appeal its decision.

We refuse to work for an organization that disrespects our decisions and thus undermines our work. To expect our continued contribution while revoking our agency in this organization’s most important decision of the year without explanation is disrespectful, not only to current staffers but also to the century of staffers who have preceded us.

Those signed below are holding a strike, effective immediately, until the staff endorsement is honored or reasonable justification for the decision is provided.

Amelia Baumgartner
Managing editor

Michael Zshornack
Digital managing editor

Hedy Wang
News editor

Melissa Morris
Assistant News editor

David Gray
Assistant News editor

Joy Harjanto
News and Stack staff

Anna Whittle
News contributor

Vito Emanuel
News contributor

Linda Xu
A&E senior staff

Nate Nickolai
A&E senior staff

Christi Carras
A&E senior staff

Edward Qiao
Design director

Callista Wu
Assistant Design director

Elysia Ouyang
Assistant Design director

Angela Song
Design senior staff

Lauren Ho
Design contributor

Aileen Nguyen
Design staff

Pauline Ordonez
Graphics editor

Mavis Zeng
Assistant Graphics editor

Nicole Anisgard Parra
Illustrations director

Amy Dixon
Photo editor

Axel Lopez
Assistant Photo editor

MacKenzie Coffman
Assistant Photo editor

Joe Akira
Staff Photographer

Niveda Tennety
Photographer

Anush Khatri
Copy chief

Rachel Wong
Assistant Copy chief

Nidhi Upadhyay
Slot editor

Dustin Newman
Online director

Grace Yu
Bruinwalk director

Michael Zhang
Main Site director

Henna Dialani
Stack editor

Simran Vatsa
Copy and Stack senior staff

Andrew Warner
Blogging editor

Audrey Pham
Blogging contributor

Sandra Carbonell-Kiamtia
Video producer

Kitty Hu
News and Opinion Video producer

Joey Wong
Video contributor

Juliette Le Saint
PRIME director

Megan Le
PRIME art editor

Lena Nguyen
Opinion columnist

Michael Hull
Sports senior staff

Brian Yung
Design staff

Minh Tran
Video contributor