Co-op Family Center begins ‘RFP’ process ■ The bidding is set to begin for groups looking to provide child care services on campus By Lisa Toth Oregon Daily Emerald As contract negotiations with large ASUO programs get under way spring term, the Co-op Family Center could face opposition from similar providers wanting to fill the center’s current role on campus. No groups have yet come forward to try to be the new child care provider, but the Co-op Family Cen ter, with the help of the ASUO, is currently in the preliminary stages of the complex “Request For Pro posal” process. ASUO Accounting Coordinator Jennifer Creighton said a RFP process means the Co-op Family Center, or possibly another child care provider, must have a contract agreeing to tailor its services to the ASUO’s requests and show how it will meet those requests. Other organizations, such as Lane Transit District, are termed “Sole Providers” and do not have to go through the RFP process because they are the only provider of a spe cific service in Eugene. Creighton said the Office of Busi ness Affairs and Contract Office will help the ASUO advertise about the bid competition for the contract. The advertising will explain that the contract is open to those groups locally that provide child care serv ices similar to those the Co-op Fam ily Center provides. But Creighton said the details of the RFP process for the Co-op Fami ly Center are still in the very early stages. She said ASUO President Jay Breslow sent the Co-op Family Cen ter a letter last week explaining that by entering the RFP process, no communication should take place between the ASUO and the groups involved who are the bidding for the contract, including the Co-op Family Center. But Creighton said the ASUO can still maintain contact with groups about necessary current issues that could arise such as student payroll problems. “We will know a lot more details in a couple weeks after we meet,” Creighton said. Creighton said the RFP will be de veloped by the ASUO on March 16 and will eventually be sent to the State Attorney General’s office. All contracting parties are required to have signed their contracts by the July 1 deadline, and University Vice President Dan Williams will be in volved in the process as the contract ing officer from the University. Alisa Stull, acting co-director for the Co-op Family Center in Spencer View Family Housing, said she is nervous about the whole contract process. But she also said the group’s autonomy on campus for the past 20 years will be a major advantage for the group. “We felt that going for the con tract was best for the Co-op,” Stull said. “We are comfortable with the fact that we have been here a long time and provide an invaluable service.” Creighton said the Co-op Family Center received a funding increase of $53,980 for the 2001-02 school year from the Programs Finance Commit tee. The center needs a formal agree ment with the University and the ASUO defining the services it pro vides because it receives ASUO fund ing from student incidental fees. Tami Brown, acting co-director for the Co-op Family Center, said while the ASUO writes the RFP for the cen ter, members of the center are not al lowed to participate in the proceed ings because it is an open bidding process and other child care groups can also compete for the contract. “We hope it is written in a way that Laura Smit Emerald Six-year-old Withney (left) and her classmates listen as their teacher reads a story after lunch at the Co-op Family Center. The center faces a budgetary uphill climb next term. is conducive to what we are and what we provide,” Brown said. Brown said the Co-op Family Cen ter is a non-profit group, not a Univer sity program, though they receive ASUO funding. Brown also said she hopes the center will be competing against as few other groups as possi ble. She said she felt confident that the center is unique based on its ex tremely high parent involvement. “We are hoping it will be an easy process, but we haven’t gone through it before and we don’t know,” Brown said. “It’s a new en deavor.” Students discover Oregon bicycle laws the hard way ■ Some students are caught off-guard for breaking bicycle laws they didn’t know existed By Darren Freeman Oregon Daily Emerald It was a Wednesday night, and Carla Reitan, who was riding her bike west on 13th Avenue near Hilyard Street, was about to re ceive a sudden, and expensive, lesson about Oregon bicycling law. “A cop walked out from behind something and said, ‘You, stop,’” the junior music and biology major said. Though Reitan had a red light on the front of her bicycle, the Eu gene Police Department officer who stopped her issued her a tick et for insufficient lighting. According to Oregon law, a bicy clist riding at night must ride with a white light visible for at least 500 feet at the front of a bike. At the rear of a bike, a red reflector or light must be visible for up to 600 feet. Reitan said she was unaware of this law, and she felt it wasn’t fair for her to be ticketed for breaking a law she didn’t know existed. “They never gave me a chance to explain myself and just gave me a ticket,” she said. “I make maybe $58 per paycheck. I’m a scholarship student, and I have to make all my spending money. [The $135 ticket] is a pretty big hit.” EPD Spokeswoman Jan Power said police regularly ticket bicy clists. “Enforcement has been consis LACIK Laser Vision Correction Nearsightedness, farsightedness, and astigmatism STEVEN OFNER, MD You Don't Have To Imagine Anymore! Discover the freedom of reducing your dependence on glasses or contact lenses. Call us to see if you are a candidate & explore your 011049 Jerry Allen BEFORE .. it*.\ i Jerry Allen AFTER (Surgery by Steven Ofner, MD) options witn a tHKK consultation appointment STEVEN OFNER, M.D. (541) 687-1715 http://www.eugeneeyecare.com tent,” she said. “It’s just a matter of being at the right place at the right time, or at the wrong place at the wrong time, if you’re a bicyclist.” But many bicyclists, such as Re itan, aren’t even aware of the laws they break. “When you’re riding a bike out on the roadway, every law that applies to an automobile applies to a bicycle unless it’s logically or physically impossible,” said Pe ter Aguilar, an EPD officer as signed to campus. Susan Kelley, owner of Blue Heron Bicycles, 877 W. 13th Ave., said many of her customers report learning about bicycling laws only after being ticketed. “There seems to be confusion about what is the law,” she said. For more information regarding these regulations, copies of Ore gon laws are available at Blue Heron Bicycles. Also, more infor mation about bicycle laws and safety are available on the Oregon Department of Motor Vehicles Web site, www.odot.state, or.us/techserv/bikewalk/. SPRING Ceramics Drawing £ Jewelry Photography Stained Class Weaving Woodworking CR \ F I CENTER - For more information or to have our brochure mailed to you call: 346-4361 or www.craftcenter.uoregon.edu Oregon Daily Emerald P.O. Box 3159, Eugene OR 97403 The Oregon Daily Emerald is published daily Monday through Friday during the school year and Tuesday and Thursday during the summer by the Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co. Inc., at the Uni versity of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon. A member of the Associated Press, the Emerald operates independently of the University with offices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. The Emerald is pri vate property. The unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law. 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