In hopes of getting as many viewpoints as possible before voting on what is considered a "monumental" piece of legislation, Associated Student Government (ASG) is hosting information sessions for students before voting on the Executive Reorganization Act of 2007. The information sessions are open to all students and will take place at 1 p.m. Nov. 16, at 5 p.m. Nov. 19 and at 4 p.m. Nov. 26. All sessions will be held in ASG's conference room at 376 Shriver, in the student organizations wing. The legislation; written by President Pro Tempore Douglas Haynes, Student Body President Jens Sutmöller and former Student Body President Brian Alexander; calls for more effective distribution of executive cabinet responsibilities within ASG. These actions include eliminating the positions of executive vice president, the vice president for student services and ASG's communication director. "What we're attempting to do is to make student government better," Haynes said. "To make the people (on cabinet) who get paid to be better at what they do." The executive vice president, elected by the student body, primarily chairs all student senate meetings and serves as the head of ASG's election committee. The vice president for student services, also elected by the student body, primarily chairs the Student Legal Services Board as well as produces the First-Year Record. The communication director, elected by student senate, markets and advertises ASG events and maintains the ASG Web site. The most drastic of these changes is the elimination of the executive vice president, splitting the position into two-the student body vice president and president of the student senate. The student body vice president would be elected by the student body and would chair the elections committee and the student legal services board. The president of the student senate would be elected by the senate and would chair all senate meetings. The responsibilities of the former communication director office would also be split two-fold, with public relations duties given to a newly created secretary for public relations, elected by ASG; and Web site responsibilities going to a newly created technology director, to be chosen by a special committee of members of ASG and Information Technology (IT) Services. In addition to these changes, the legislation also recommends that the position of vice president of management-who heads the ASG funding committee that funds all recognized student organizations-be re-named the vice president of student organizations. These proposals were first brainstormed in February with the creation of the ASG task force of Haynes, Sutmöller, Alexander and former ASG parliamentarian Colleen Beirne. The task force was charged with finding ways to improve ASG as a governing body, and after months of researching the student governments of other colleges like the University of Notre Dame, Ohio State University and the University of Virginia-and hearing the recommendations and research of Peter Magolda in October-the task force presented its recommendations to senate Tuesday. "We analyzed our weaknesses and took steps to improve upon them," Sutmöller said. "It's crucial to move forward with these steps for this election cycle." If the recommendations don't pass after the senate meeting Nov. 27, the legislation's proposals wouldn't be able to take effect for next semester's elections, said current executive vice president Jeremy Harrell. However, some senators, like first-year Heath Ingram, can currently find no faults with the legislation. "Cabinet did seem kind of unorganized when I first got here," he said. "The way (the ASG task force) thought it out was tactful. I honestly don't see any negatives."







