EDITORIAL | Ordinance fails citizens of Northwest Auburn
After months of postponement on an issue that required expedited fixing, the City Council has once again given constituents in Northwest Auburn a plethora of reasons for outrage.
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After months of postponement on an issue that required expedited fixing, the City Council has once again given constituents in Northwest Auburn a plethora of reasons for outrage.
Sexual assault on college campuses is endemic.
Alabama’s budget is sorely needing sources of funding. No longer can the state face more budget cuts, and Alabama’s politicians are unwilling to increase the state’s main tax sources.
Auburn’s basketball program is now one of the best basketball programs in the SEC, and five years ago, nobody would have guessed that would be the case.
Auburn is facing a gentrification crisis. This is not something that the city can deny. Many long-term, poor, black residents are being forced out of their established neighborhoods as developers search for and buy new lots to erect student housing on, in the form of so-called Academic Detached Dwelling Units.
Over the last two weeks, images of students, influencers and elected officials clad in theatrical costumes with black paint plastered on their skin resurfaced with due criticism, but also resounding apologist sentiment.
February is a month during which it is integral to look at the past and learn from the country’s failures and triumphs.
Confused, concerned, scared — Auburn’s campus community was all of those things last Thursday.
It’s been said before, “Auburn is a football school.” Some even said this year, “Auburn is a basketball school.” Pretty soon, however, people may say, “Auburn is a performing arts school.”
As Auburn’s population of students and residents grows, so does its development.