Thursday, May 10, 2018

This Fish That Has Human Teeth Is Real And It Will Haunt My Dreams

Imagine swimming along and this guy just chompin’ on you.

The South Carolina Department of Natural Resources is a government agency that is in charge of things like hunting, boating, fishing, and conservation in the Palmetto State. It also has a pretty neat Facebook page!

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Check out this post on the Boykin Spaniel, the official state dog of South Carolina. How nice!

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The agency also shares photos of the state's beautiful wildlife.

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Including this f— WAIT WTF IS THIS???

Including this f— WAIT WTF IS THIS???

South Carolina Department of Natural Resources

No, I didn't photoshop a human mouth on a fish. This is a real fish with teeth like a human's. The agency posted it and invited Facebook readers to guess what kind of fish it is. It went viral because, I mean, look at it.

No, I didn't photoshop a human mouth on a fish. This is a real fish with teeth like a human's. The agency posted it and invited Facebook readers to guess what kind of fish it is. It went viral because, I mean, look at it.

South Carolina Department of Natural Resources

"You’ll need a saltwater fishing license to catch me! I like to hang out near rocks, jetties, reefs, and even bridges. I’m also known as the convict fish because of my black and white stripes. The coolest thing about me? I have human-like incisors and molars to help crush my food. I like shrimp and oysters just like you do!" the agency wrote on its Facebook page.

"Coolest" is relative, I suppose!!!

People naturally had a lot of comments.

People naturally had a lot of comments.

Facebook

Say what, Brenda?!?

Say what, Brenda?!?

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Drag her, Grace.

Drag her, Grace.

Facebook

Many people guessed correctly, though. A spokesperson for the agency, David Lucas, confirmed to BuzzFeed News the fish is called a sheepshead. Here's a YouTube video of the fish and its chompers in action.

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"[The fish is] very common in the waters off our coast, and a favorite of saltwater anglers here in South Carolina," Lucas said. "Other folks less familiar with this fish are probably quite surprised to see the teeth it sports."

Lucas gave kudos to Pam Corwin, a biologist and member of the agency's Freshwater Fisheries Section staff, for writing their viral post.

"Of course it’s great when any of our social media posts get wider reach – we are always interested in communicating with folks about our state’s outstanding natural resources and our agency’s role in managing and conserving them," he said.



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A White Woman Called The Police On Bob Marley's Granddaughter For Not Smiling At Her

Instagram: @iamdonisha

Three black artists who police in Rialto, California detained as they left an Airbnb rental in a predominately white neighborhood demanded on Thursday a criminal investigation into the white neighbor who called the cops on them.

"There was an individual that placed this racist call with false allegations to the Rialto Police Department on April 30th. And we want her held accountable," said attorney Jasmine Rand, who along with Benjamin Crump, is representing the three women.

Activist and artist Donisha Prendergast — the eldest granddaughter of reggae legend Bob Marley — filmmaker Kelly Fyffe-Marshall and Afrofuturist artist Komi-Oluwa Olafimihan attended the Kaya Festival in nearby San Bernardino and stayed at an Airbnb for two nights, along with a white photographer friend.

As the four left on April 30, a neighbor called the police and reported a suspected robbery, after they didn't wave hello at her as they placed their suitcases in their car. The identity of the neighbor is not public.

Police cars and a helicopter responded, Rand said. She said police told her clients a neighbor had reported three black people acting suspiciously.

Instagram: @iamdonisha

Police detained them for 20 to 45 minutes, the lawyers said.

Speaking at a press conference on Thursday in Harlem, Fyffe-Marshall recounted how they showed police their Airbnb booking and messages with the host on the app — which showed the address of the home — and that police wouldn't believe them.

Even when the Airbnb host was called and speaking to police on the phone, police doubted her identity.

Video posted by Fyffe-Marshall to Instagram shows a police officer telling them that someone reported "there's three black people stealing stuff."

Instagram: @directedbykells

"The reporting party did not recognize the vehicle or the people as neighbors, or the homeowner," according to a statement from the Rialto Police Department.

Fyffe-Marshall also said at the news conference that they were the part of a wave of high-profile stories involving white people calling the police on black people for doing everyday things — and that it was time they were held accountable.

"From what happened in the Waffle House to what happened in the Yale dorms, all the things that are coming up, it's getting out of hand, and now it seems as a black person you can't live," said Fyffe-Marshall.

Prendergast had been a guest speaker at the Kaya festival, which also included performances by Lauryn Hill, Ziggy Marley and Damien Marley.

Despite news reports the three are suing the Rialto Police Department, their attorneys said they had not yet filed a lawsuit but instead requested all the evidence, body camera footage, and information available about the incident.

Rand and Crump are known for their representation of high-profile civil rights cases, including the families of Michael Brown, Trayvon Martin and Tamir Rice.

Police didn't respond to a request for comment on if they are pursuing the neighbor who made the call. In its press release about the event, it applauded the actions of its officers.

"In this matter, officers followed departmental policies and producers in handling this reported in-progress residential burglar call and we are very appreciate of the cooperation shown by its residents and visitors," it read.

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In a press conference with the Rialto Police Department earlier this week, the Airbnb host and homeowner — who was not identified — said she was glad her neighbor called police.

"I applaud her for that. I went over to her home after I got home from work and thanked her," she said.

"If the kids had simply smiled at (my neighbor) and waved back and acknowledged her and said, 'We're just Airbnb guests checking out,' none of this would have ever happened," she said. "But instead, they were rude, unkind, not polite."

The trio's lawyer vehemently disagreed during on Thursday's press conference.

"We don't want to live in an America where black people are forced to smile at white people to preserve their lives," Rand said.



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A White Police Officer Choked A Black Man Shortly After He Attended A Prom

Anthony Wall/Facebook / Via Facebook: profile.php

A police department in North Carolina is investigating after one of its police officers was caught on video choking and slamming a man wearing a tuxedo to the ground after he'd attended his sister's prom.

In the video posted to Facebook on May 8th — its been viewed nearly 500,000 times — a white police officer can be seen choking 22-year-old Anthony Wall then slamming him to the ground.

"Get your hands off of me," Wall, who in the beginning of the video had his hands in the air, can be heard shouting.

"Get your supervisor out here and get your hands off of me," Wall continues to scream after he is pinned on the ground with the officer's left hand on Wall's head.

"Put you hand behind your back," the officer, who has not been identified, can be heard saying.

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Wall had accompanied his sister to a prom on Saturday, May 5th, and had gone to the Waffle House afterwards to eat. The Warsaw Police Department, a town an hour outside of Raleigh, were called after Wall argued with the staff at the Waffle House.

Another cell phone video, shown on local news channel ABC11, shows an agitated Wall shouting at the staff of the Waffle House before police arrived. Wall said he's responsible for his actions at the Waffle House but said the actions of the police officer were not justified.

"I was pretty much trying to scream for air and trying to breathe because he was holding my throat and that's when I got aggressive with him because you are choking me," Wall told the television station.

Warsaw Police Chief Eric Southerland told The News & Observer that the incident is being investigated. "We are aware of the video and currently working on an investigation, following up based on the video posted, doing interviews, gathering video evidence," Southerland said.

"It's not what you're trained to do in incidents like this but when you're dealing with someone fighting and resisting against an officer, you try to use proper tactics and go for one move, but that might not work because that person is moving or the officer is moving," Southerland said when asked if the officer's actions were in accordance with training guidelines.

"In real versus training situations, moves don't always work out like you want them to," Southerland said.

Wall was arrested for resisting arrest and disorderly conduct.

A spokesperson for the Waffle House said, "We are looking into the incident that occurred at our Warsaw, NC, restaurant to gather all the facts. Initial reports say the customer became agitated, and the police were called."

BuzzFeed News has reached out to Wall, the Warsaw Police Department, and the Waffle House for comment.



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Parents And Students Are Pissed After A High School Allowed Anyone On The Cheerleading Team "To Be Inclusive"

“This decision was made in the best interest of our students and was made to be as inclusive as possible,” the superintendent said. However, current cheerleaders feel like it’s devaluing their hard work.

A high school in New Jersey caused a lot of drama after it instated a rule that would allow anyone interested in trying out for a top-tier cheerleading team to make the team.

A high school in New Jersey caused a lot of drama after it instated a rule that would allow anyone interested in trying out for a top-tier cheerleading team to make the team.

The new policy was reportedly instituted after a parent of a student who did not make the cut had complained about their "selection process."

Hanover Park High School in East Hanover decided to suspend its scoring system for cheerleading try-outs and allow anyone in 11th and 12th grades to automatically make the higher-level team. Underclassmen will be put on a lower-level team.

They're also condensing three competency-level cheer teams into two — now based only on a student's grade level.

The teams had previously been selected based on skill after a rigorous cheerleading audition where students were scored on things like tumbling and choreography.

In a statement provided to BuzzFeed News, Hanover High School superintendent Carol Grossi said these changes were made after a "discrepancy was reported concerning the selection of the three varsity cheerleading squads."

Several students told CBS2 it was a parent of a student who was placed on a lower-level squad who had made the complaint and reported the "discrepancy" to the school.

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That complaint led Hanover Park High School to launch an investigation into the cheerleading scoring and try-out process.

That complaint led Hanover Park High School to launch an investigation into the cheerleading scoring and try-out process.

The school "discovered...an irregularity" with this process, they said, "which called into question the validity of the results."

In a letter to parents and students, school district officials explained that after only six students achieved the cut-off score for the top team under the initial scoring system, the cut-off score was then arbitrarily lowered so that five more could join the squad.

Yet other students still missed out, so school officials decided a more inclusive policy was more in-line with their values.

The high school principal then decided that for the 2018-2019 school year, their three skill-level squads will be condensed into two general squads based only on a student's grade.

"Our goal in doing so was to include more opportunities for those who want to be on the squad. We had a shortage of members on the team, so our goal was to get more participants onto the team for a full squad," Superintendent Gross told BuzzFeed News.

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The decision has pissed off many current cheerleaders and their parents — especially those who've been training rigorously to make the elite top team. Last week, a group of them showed up at a school board meeting to push back.

The decision has pissed off many current cheerleaders and their parents — especially those who've been training rigorously to make the elite top team. Last week, a group of them showed up at a school board meeting to push back.

According to News 12 New Jersey, 10 cheerleaders addressed the board of education in a meeting last Wednesday.

“I came up here to state that I did not put in 18 months of work to lead up to this moment, just to be told it didn’t matter anymore,” a sophomore named Jada Alcontara said.

Another student agreed, saying that the decision from the school had undermined her hard work.

“I tried my hardest. Now everything is going away because of one child who did not make the team," Stephanie Krueger addressed the board. "Their parent complained so now all my hard work has been thrown out the window."

newjersey.news12.com

On Facebook, critics are flooding the school's page with comments about the policy breeding "fragile snowflakes" and not teaching kids to "accept failure and move on."

On Facebook, critics are flooding the school's page with comments about the policy breeding "fragile snowflakes" and not teaching kids to "accept failure and move on."

Facebook: Hanover-Park-High-School

"Moving forward, next year we will be releasing the new designations along with the clear scoring process prior to holding tryouts to clarify the requirements for varsity and junior varsity squads," she said.

"All guidelines will be clearly identified for all processes moving forward."

"This decision was made in the best interest of our students and was made to be as inclusive as possible," Grossi added.



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Yale Says It's "Troubled" After A White Student Called Police On A Black Student Because She Was Sleeping In A Common Room

From Lolade Siyonbola's videos: the woman who she said called police at left; police responding at right

Facebook: video.php

When a white graduate student at Yale came upon a black graduate student asleep in a common area of the school early Tuesday morning, she called the police — telling them the student didn't have a right to be there.

After a 17-minute interaction with the officers who answered the call — which the student, Lolade Siyonbola, recorded on video and posted to Facebook — the police determined the student had done nothing wrong and had every right to have fallen asleep on the common room couch.

The video, much like a video of two black men arrested at a Philadelphia Starbucks for sitting at a table waiting for a friend to arrive, has since been viewed hundreds of thousands of times.

On Wednesday evening, Yale's Vice President for Student Life Kimberly Goff-Crews wrote in an email to all graduate students that she was "troubled" by the incident and that she would be holding listening sessions with the school community.

"We remain committed to quickly and appropriately addressing issues of racism and bias on campus," she wrote.

"The Yale police officers who responded spoke with both parties and subsequently admonished the complaining student that the other student had every right to be present," Goff-Crews added.

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Facebook: video.php / Via Lolade Siyonbola

Siyonbola, 34, who is working towards a Master's degree in African studies, told The New York Times she was working on a "marathon of papers" and had fallen asleep.

In a second video, the white student can be heard saying, "I have every right to call the police. You cannot sleep in that room.”

When the officers arrive, one tells Siyonbola, "We need to make sure that you belong here," and asks for identification.

While verifying her identity, at one point, Siyonbola says, "I am not going to justify my existence here.”

Yale spokesperson Tom Conroy said in a statement Wednesday that the university believes "the Yale police who responded followed procedures.”

“As we do with every incident, we will be reviewing the call and the response of the police officers to ensure that the proper protocol was followed and to determine if there was anything we could have done better," he said.

Christopher Capozziello / Getty Images

According to a university spokesperson, the reason it took longer than usual for the student’s identification card to be verified was because the name on her card was her preferred name (which students are permitted to use) and did not exactly match her name in the university records.

The spokesperson said officers are trained "on unconscious bias, de-escalation techniques, and problem solving, and seek to treat each individual with respect."

In emails to the Yale student body following the incident, the Dean of the School of Graduate Studies wrote that the incident "remind[s] us of the continued work needed to make Yale a truly inclusive place," and that she is "committed to redoubling our efforts to build a supportive community in which all graduate students are empowered in their intellectual pursuits and professional goals within a welcoming environment."

On Facebook, Siyonbola thanked people for the outpouring of support.

"Black Yale community is beyond incredible and is taking good care of me,” she wrote. “I know this incident is a drop in the bucket of trauma Black folk have endured since Day 1 America, and you all have stories.”

BuzzFeed News has reached out to Siyonbola and the student who called the police and will update with any comment.

You can read the emails from administrators to students in full below. The first was sent Tuesday, the second on Wednesday.

Dear Graduate Students,

I write to you about an incident that occurred last evening in the Hall of Graduate Studies. A resident of HGS called the Yale police to report that there was an unauthorized person in the Common Room. The police responded and confirmed the student was in fact a resident of HGS and had every right to be there.

Incidents like that of last night remind us of the continued work needed to make Yale a truly inclusive place. I am committed to redoubling our efforts to build a supportive community in which all graduate students are empowered in their intellectual pursuits and professional goals within a welcoming environment. An essential part of that effort must be a commitment to mutual respect and an open dialog.

Please feel free to contact me with any concerns or comments.

Yours,

Lynn Cooley, Ph.D.
Dean, Yale University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
C.N.H. Long Professor of Genetics
Professor of Cell Biology and MCDB

Message from Vice President for Student Life, Kimberly Goff-Crews:

Dear Yale students,

I am deeply troubled by an incident that took place Monday night in the Hall of Graduate Studies. One graduate student called the police to report another student in the common area, who had every right to be there. The Yale police officers who responded spoke with both parties and subsequently admonished the complaining student that the other student had every right to be present.

As Vice President for Student Life, I have worked with administrators, faculty and students to strengthen the resources available to address incidents of racial bias, discrimination and harassment. This incident and others recently reported to me underscore that we have work to do to make Yale not only excellent but also inclusive. I strongly believe we must strive to create an environment that values equity and justice and in which all students are empowered to pursue their personal and professional goals – an environment that is diverse, intellectually challenging, and broadly welcoming. Over the last 48 hours, I have been in discussion with Dean Lynn Cooley, Chief Ronnell Higgins, and other university staff, including Yale police, to better understand what exactly happened at HGS on Monday night, and how we can work together to avoid such incidents in the future.

We still have so much more to do.

As a step in the process, Chief Higgins, Dean Cooley and I will hold listening sessions with students in the coming days and months. In addition, the university will continue to implement the initiatives we announced a year ago, including the appointment and training of dean’s designees in each school to address student concerns about equal opportunity, diversity and inclusion, and discrimination and harassment. This past year, we also launched a comprehensive website and adopted a discrimination and harassment reporting protocol using the Bulldog Mobile (LiveSafe) app and have been looking at ways to make this more accessible. As already planned, we will share this tool more broadly with students and clarify the reporting process. Over the summer, I will work with administrators and student leaders to review and strategize around suggestions that we have received from faculty, staff, and students, especially with regard to improving the university’s response to incidents of discrimination and harassment. We remain committed to quickly and appropriately addressing issues of racism and bias on campus. As always, we welcome your ideas and feedback on how we can improve our community together.

All of us in senior leadership recognize that incidents such as this one are being framed within a difficult national context. I want to underscore our commitment to carry out our mission as a university in an ethical, interdependent, and diverse community of faculty, staff, students, and alumni, where all are respected.

Sincerely,

Kimberly M. Goff-Crews



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This Candidate Became The First Woman To Use Campaign Funds To Pay For A Babysitter

Courtesy of Liuba Grechen Shirley

The Federal Election Commission on Thursday gave a female candidate running for Congress the green light to use portions of her campaign funds to pay for childcare.

Liuba Grechen Shirley, a New York mother of two young children running for Congress on Long Island, pays $22 an hour for a babysitter to take care of her toddlers for about 20 hours per week.

Las month she petitioned the FEC, asking for permission to use campaign funds to pay for childcare, citing two cases from 1995 and 2008 where male candidates asked to use campaign funds to pay for certain childcare expenses in more limited circumstances.

In her letter to the FEC, Grechen Shirley wrote that prior to running for Congress, she worked from home as a consultant and was able to care for her three-year-old daughter, Mila, and two-year-old son, Nicholas, full time.

When she decided to run, she says she had to hire a part-time babysitter so she could focus on the campaign.

"As the primary election approaches, I expect to need full-time care for my children, along with additional support on evenings and weekends, so that I can devote the time necessary to run a successful campaign," she wrote in her letter.

The FEC's ruling applies to future candidates who, like Grechen Shirley, incur childcare costs as a result of running for office.

"The Commission concludes that your authorized campaign committee may use campaign funds to pay for the childcare expenses described in your request because such expenses would not exist irrespective of your candidacy," the FEC wrote in its ruling.

Grechen Shirley released a statement Thursday saying she's proud to be the first woman to spend campaign funds on childcare, adding that she hopes the decision inspires other women across the country to run for office.

"There’s a reason more than half of Congressmembers are millionaires: running for office takes a huge toll on a family’s budget, especially while raising children," she said in a statement. "This groundbreaking decision will remove a major financial obstacle for working families and mothers at a time when women are increasingly considering elected office."

Former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton had previously sent a letter to the FEC in support of Grechen Shirley's request, writing that if the FEC denies the request it would discourage young mothers from running for office.

"Young women like Ms. Shirley are now running for office in record-breaking numbers ... Under a plain reading of the law, as applied to Ms. Shirley's facts, the answer to her question can only be 'yes,'" Clinton wrote in the letter.

Grechen Shirley also had the support of 24 members of Congress who submitted a letter to the FEC, saying "as we work to build a political environment that is fair to candidates of all backgrounds, the Commission has a role to play in fairly enforcing and administering federal campaign finance laws."



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Wednesday, May 9, 2018

NYU Took In Students From Puerto Rico After Hurricane Maria. Now It's Sending Them Home — But They're Not Ready To Go.

Carlos Gabriel Matos

Puerto Rican students who were accepted into an NYU program for Hurricane Maria survivors are asking the school to extend their stay for one more semester because they're frustrated with the island's slow pace of storm recovery and are concerned about the economic instability they'd return to.

"Long story short, the crisis isn’t over. They're saying that this program was an emergency response to the disaster that my institution was facing. It's not a past tense thing, it's very present," Amanda Conyers-Godreau, a 19-year-old sophomore majoring in interdisciplinary studies at the University of Puerto Rico, Cayey.

The Hurricane Maria Assistance Program (HMAP) was open to students at several colleges in Puerto Rico, giving them an opportunity to study at NYU for the spring semester in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria's widespread destruction. They paid tuition at their home institutions and NYU provided housing, food, health insurance, and $200 credit at the university bookstore.

At least three other universities, Tulane, Cornell, and Brown offered similar programs during the spring semester.

The program expires when the semester finishes in the coming weeks — students are expected to return home when their classes and exams finish. But 25 students in NYU's program say that conditions are still so unstable at home that they're not sure they'll be able to continue with their studies if they have to go back for the coming semester.

"The HMAP program was established in order for us to continue our studies while our home institutions, and country, recovered from the destruction witnessed by the world after the passing of Hurricane María," the students wrote in a letter to NYU president Andrew Hamilton on April 27.

"The efforts to rebuild our Puerto Rico have been superficial at best and neglectful at worst."

"Like you," they continued, "we hoped our country and home institutions would have returned to their pre-natural-disaster state by this time. Unfortunately, the efforts to rebuild our Puerto Rico have been superficial at best and neglectful at worst."

While most universities on the island are now open and operating at some capacity, the students say going back to the frequent power outages, coming hurricane season, and economic turmoil on the island is daunting.

"We humbly request that you consider the reality under which HMAP was first conceptualized, compare it to the one we face today, and then consider our proposal to extend the program from its original one-semester plan to a two-semester plan," they wrote in the letter.

Another student who signed the letter, Carlos Gabriel Matos, is a 20-year-old electrical engineering major and sophomore at the University of Puerto Rico Mayagüez, on the island's west coast. He said he's had severe anxiety since living through the hurricane and the power and water outages that followed. He couldn't contact his family for days after the storm, and spent months afterwards trying to care for his mother and grandmother who both had medical emergencies.

"It was a chain reaction which kind of has left me unstable. When I came here I left my university but my studies were already affected because of my anxiety, I had to drop two out of four topics," he said, adding that seeing a counsellor and being in a stable environment at NYU has helped him work through some of that. "I am going back only because I don't have a choice."

Hamilton, NYU's president, wrote back to the students on May 2, denying their request. Still, the students are hoping the school will change its policy.

In his letter, Hamilton said NYU had heard from some of the students' home institutions that they would not support extending the program, and that it "was always intended to be an emergency response, for a single semester."

"NYU’s program, like our fellow universities’ initiatives, was launched in hopes of making it possible for you to continue to pursue your degree in the face of curricular interruptions back home, and in hopes of making it easier for campuses in Puerto Rico to reopen. In particular, we strove to structure HMAP so as to minimize any unintended ill effects to your home institutions in Puerto Rico," Hamilton wrote.

"Based on our conversations with representatives from schools in Puerto Rico, we believe that extending our program would in fact cause harm to their own recovery efforts, and we know they are relying on each of you to play an important role in that work," he wrote.

NYU declined to comment when BuzzFeed News asked how much the program cost.

There were 57 Puerto Rican students in total accepted into NYU's HMAP program, according to NYU, out of which more than 40 were students from the University of Puerto Rico system, the largest group of public universities on the island.

The University of Puerto Rico, which has 11 campuses, sustained around $132 million worth of damage in total from Hurricanes Maria and Irma, according to the UPR 2018 Fiscal Plan. Total enrollment at UPR dropped from 61,748 in the 2017 financial year to 58,402 in the 2018 financial year.

University of Puerto Rico officials did not respond to requests for comment.

Josh Taylor, associate vice chancellor of Global Programs at NYU, oversaw the program. He told BuzzFeed News on Monday that students were welcome to apply for a transfer to NYU if they wanted to, but said the school is also wary of poaching high-achieving students from Puerto Rican universities.

"If they have applied [for a transfer], got in and are able to make it work financially and logistically then that would be one option," he said.

Conyers-Godreau said she's applied to transfer to NYU, but she thinks the financial burden would be too much, even if she receives some aid from the school.

Amanda Conyers-Godreau

"It's very clear to me that the financial aid that I would need to get is nowhere near the amount that I would need so I would be in considerable debt," she said. She has also applied to Parsons, the University of Southern Florida, and the Savanah College of Art and Design.

The students say they're not sure if they will be able to continue their studies when they go back home, between trying to support themselves through college during an economic crisis and the still-unstable infrastructure of the island.

"When I get back home I don’t know what will happen," said Priscilla Malavet, 21, a journalism student and junior at UPR Rio Piedras in San Juan. "I’m in the honors program, and we have to take certain classes to complete a thesis. I think I have to drop out of being an honors student because doing classes and a thesis I cannot pay for it. It’s not just my classes, it’s paying for gas, electricity, apartment, water, it’s a lot of things you have to do."

Priscilla Malavet

She said she'll try to finish her degree as soon as possible and then apply for a graduate degree or a job somewhere outside Puerto Rico. She's still reeling from the stressful situation she left behind. The retail store she worked at closed for a month and a half, cutting off her income. And when she went back she was working close to 40 hours per week to try to make up for the loss of income while also juggling six classes.

"I would literally get to my job, close the door and cry a little bit, then go out and start working," she said.

On top of Puerto Rico's struggle to permanently fix the electric grid, the University of Puerto Rico is facing a turbulent period financially: as part of the Puerto Rican government's attempt to manage the debt crisis, public universities will raise tuition significantly. For undergraduate students, the cost of one credit will rise from $57 to $115 in the coming year, and will continue rising to $157 per credit by 2023.

Angela Elliston

In March last year, a strike protesting the changes shut down University of Puerto Rico schools for several months. The federally-appointed Financial Oversight and Management Board, tasked with overseeing the island's financial affairs during the debt crisis, approved the tuition increases in April. Students say there's already talk of more potentially debilitating protests at the campuses they're returning to.

"NYU has resources that right now the UPR system doesn’t have and what’s happening now with the rising tuition just to assuage the debt, we’re going to have the same terrible infrastructure, we’re not going to have more classes, or more professors," said Malavet.

For Angela Elliston, 20, a junior studying art history and creative writing at UPR Rio Piedras, the past few months at NYU gave her a sense of security, which she's worried will be hard to find back home in Puerto Rico right now.

"It felt like stability for the first time in a long time. Because after the hurricane I just didn’t know what was going to happen with my future, everything was just a mess," she said. "It's funny but even having homework was such a relief, I felt like I was back on track."

LINK: Power Is Back On In Puerto Rico After The Island's Worst Outage Since Hurricane Maria

LINK: The Hurricane Hit Puerto Rico’s Paradise Of Hotels And Resorts Hard — And Workers Are Facing An Uncertain Future

LINK: Puerto Ricans Who Moved To New York After Hurricane Maria Are Living In A State Of Uncertainty



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