Showing posts with label financial vice president. Show all posts
Showing posts with label financial vice president. Show all posts

Monday, February 18, 2008

The arm of ASG some hope to change

Aneesa Arshad held one of the most – if not the most – powerful student positions on campus.


As the former Associated Student Government financial vice president, the SESP senior oversaw a board that doled out about $1.2 million to student groups last spring.


Last Wednesday, her reign came to an end.


“I’ve learned a lot,” she said to the Senate as the outgoing financial vice president. “It’s sad to go, but change is good.”


Yet questions loom as to what change will come in Arshad’s place.


The change starts with her successor, Weinberg junior Seva Rodnyansky who is making sure the Student Activities Finance Board will be ready for spring funding. 


Right now, Rodnyansky is working on transitioning to the position. Despite having been part of the board since Fall Quarter during his freshman year, he said “there’s always more to learn because it’s a constantly evolving process.”


And if ASG President Jon Webber has his way, the funding process could change more than anyone in SAFB would expect.


Weeks before B-status group funding took place Feb. 13, the Weinberg senior was already thinking of ways to change spring funding for A-status groups which in a time-honored tradition has kept tired senators and student group leaders in a cramped Norris room for many hours.


The board oversees funding for A-status groups, on-campus groups that are typically more established and require more funding. It prepares for the largest event of the year with a set of recommendations in a 60-hour auditing and interviewing process. During the process and throughout the year, the board follows a strict protocol of monthly audits, weekly petition and numerous applications. Some see this process as too rigid, but SAFB members say this is crucial for student group accountability. The board is responsible for the $44 student activities fee every student pays each quarter.


“At the end of the day, this is students’ money,” Arshad said. “And if there weren’t so many rules and procedures, I think people would feel nervous that every cent isn’t being held accountable.”


Webber has yet to announce the funding changes, pending further discussion with Rodnyansky, who has held the office of financial vice president for less than a week now. Webber has talked to over 20 A-status groups’ leaders and compiled pages upon pages of notes in a Word document. He said there are emerging themes from these complaints and suggestions that could potentially alter, or even encourage a major overhaul of, the process, the protocol and the institution. 


With an arm of ASG that is potentially more powerful than the body itself, compiled of six senators and six non-senators, there is a sense of division and friction. Members of the board go into Senate meetings, dressed like career-oriented men and women, occupying a corner of the room and focused on their laptops. But the greatest tension stems from who has the final say at the end of funding.


Senators, who act as a check to the board by debating the funding recommendations, have an amendment pool of about $20,000 during spring funding that they can allocate to the student groups. But most the time, senators pass almost all of the recommendations.


“This is one of the most important things that Senate does,” Arshad said. “And there’s a little bit of tension because (funding) is something that’s supposed to be  ultimately up to the senators, but because we put so much time and have so much knowledge (having audited these groups), we actually – I think a lot of people would agree – have more power in the process.”


Even within the board, with members who might be friends, debates are heated.


“At committee, we go at each other 10 times more than people go at each other in Senate,” Arshad said. “We tear each other apart.”


But there are no hard feelings – such debate is crucial to the board’s effectiveness, Arshad said.


“If we’re not debating, and we don’t really disagree, then we’re not doing our job,” she said.


This is all before they make their recommendations. These internal divisions don't make a difference when recommendations are finalized. When the board presents the funding recommendations, it presents them as one board.


Relations between the board and student groups most obviously become strained during the funding process because “there’s never enough money to go around,” Arshad said.


Unhappy groups can mobilize and bring a number of members to the Senate meeting to debate funding. While a group might try to get the largest slice from the senate’s discretionary pie, Arshad said outsiders’ presence sometimes signals student group disapproval of the board.


As the newest financial vice president, Rodnyansky is face of SAFB. Even though he has his own set of goals to bring in change, he, like Arshad did, will face difficulties – not from outsiders, but from the position itself. It’s a difficulty that Webber, in his quest to change the board, will have to deal with as well.


“Each financial vice president has goals … But it’s just so overwhelming the things you have to do day to day,” Arshad said. “There are things I wanted to do that I couldn’t.”



—ALICE TRUONG

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Two applications for financial vice president

According to current SESP senior Aneesa Arshad, Associated Government financial vice president, she has received two applications for the FVP position.  Arshad will chair the selection committee as a nonvoting member (except in the event of a tie).  

There are six voting members in the committee: ASG president, speaker of senate, Student Activities Finance Board advisor, most veteran senator member of SAFB, most veteran non-senator member of SAFB and a senator elected from the Senate.


—ALICE TRUONG

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Preview for Feb. 6 ASG meeting

Tomorrow is the start of B-status group funding. The Daily will be live-blogging the event, so check out the latest news as it breaks tomorrow, starting at 7 p.m.

In addition to funding, two bills introduced at last week’s meeting will go to floor.
  • Protecting Gender at NU aims to change the university’s non-discrimination policy.
  • Group Executive Accountability aims to conduct quarterly evaluations of group executives that work with B- and T- status groups.
Associated Student Government financial vice president applications are due tomorrow to current FVP Aneesa Arshad. As of late morning today, the SESP senior said. Check out The Daily's print version for more information to come soon.


—ALICE TRUONG

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Financial vice president application due Wednesday

The deadline for the financial vice president application is fast approaching.  All those interested should e-mail their applications by Wednesday, Feb. 6 to current Financial Vice President Aneesa Arshad, who will be the chairwoman of the selection committee.

SESP junior Neal Sales-Griffin was recently elected to the selection committee as a member of the Senate on Wednesday's meeting, saying he was looking for someone passionate best for the job.

As of Wednesday evening, Arshad said she has not received any applications for the position, which was in charge of funding more than $900,000 to 44 A-status student groups this past Spring Quarter.  Arshad said she expects a minimum of two applications based on the inquiries she has received.

More to come on The Daily print edition soon.


—ALICE TRUONG

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Financial Vice President selection committee

Neal Sales-Griffin has experience as a leader with International Student Business Education. He says he has good judgment, he can manage, but none of those skills he can list on a resume can really explain why he’s best for the job.

“The most important thing is passion,” the SESP junior said, “passion for ASG, for Northwestern.”

Five individuals in the Associated Student Government have been nominated for the financial vice president selection committee: Weinberg junior Aamna Anwer, SESP junior Neal Sales-Griffin, Weinberg junior Will Upton, Weinberg junior Allison Cook and SESP senior Ivy LeTourneau. Weinberg sophomore Samir Pendse was nominated but declined, saying he didn't have enough time to dedicate to the job, which would require about five hours per week, according to current Financial Vice President Aneesa Arshad, a SESP senior.

Sales, a SESP junior, has been elected by the ASG senate to the position, making him one of six members to vote on the new financial vice president.

Neal Sales-Griffin has experience as a leader with International Student Business Education. He says he has good judgment, he can manage, but none of those skills he can list on a resume can really explain why he’s best for the job.
“The most important thing is passion,” the SESP junior said, “passion for ASG, for Northwestern.”

"We just want good people," Sales said. "We want good passionate people making good judgment."


—ALICE TRUONG

Thursday, January 24, 2008

General project updates and the like

So outside of heated debates, many other things happened during yesterday's ASG meeting.  They won't necessarily take headlines (or even appear in the last sentence of the copy), which is why The Daily has a blog.  These little updates are worth mentioning, especially when committee investigations are involved.  It's also great in helping The Daily keep up with its tracking projects.  For tracking updates, I'll put in an obnoxious UPDATE! in front of the description starting with this blog post.

UPDATE! ATEC
, the temporary name for the off-campus housing review Web site (dubbed after the Course and Teacher Evaluation Council reviews), has been renamed the Apartment and Condos in Evanston.

There are two undergoing invesgitations concerning College Feminists' publication Juice and For Members Only's publication Blackboard.  The investigations will be discussed Tuesday in committee and presented Wednesday to the Senate where recommendations will be made and senators will choose either to close the investigation or create sanctions against the groups.

The African American Theater Emsemble has removed its remaining funds from its fall events to its winter show.

UPDATE! The transportation poll, which was thought to run last Thursday, will be up sometime this week.  The poll is part of the external relations committee's efforts to gauge student opinion about a possible weekend Chicago shuttle.

LISTSERV UPDATES

As for other news, there are a couple things circulating on the ASG listserv.  Aside from the typical listserv forwardings, a couple might be of intrigue to the student body.
  • Senator attendance.  Who's representing you?  Is s/he really representing you if s/he doesn't show up?  Keep checking the ASG blog to see updates on this.
  • Financial vice president application for the upcoming year.  This is a pretty comprehensive application.  It includes 12 questions and five hypothetical situations.  But of course, the six voting members on the selection committee wouldn't want to laboriously read pages upon pages about ways to improve Student Activities Finance Board and the like, so there's a page limit.  14 pages double spaced.  Applications are due Wednesday, Feb. 5.
  • ASG President Jon Webber sent out last week an informal survey to senators, past and current student group presidents and PR chairs.  In it, he asked questions ranging from their use of ground flyering to their use of NU Link.  Webber said a couple weeks ago that he hopes the Undergraduate Budget Priorities Committee (which he is a part of) will recommend increasing communication technology on campus similar to what the dining halls and Norris University Center have been planning.  On top of the technology, which could involve more flat screen televisions like the ones in Norris and outdoor weatherproof kiosks, helping student groups publicize their events, the technology could be helpful in the event of an emergency.

—ALICE TRUONG