“That's why we're out here today — because young people refuse to sit on the sidelines any longer as our democracy continues to fail.”
This was the rallying cry of organizer and UNC sophomore Sam Hiner at a rally on Friday, where students gathered in support of making Election Day a holiday at the University and marched to the polls.
Hiner is the executive director of UNC’s chapter of the North Carolina Young People’s Alliance, a student voting advocacy group.
He said they gained the signatures of over 1,500 students and 100 professors in support of an election holiday, which they said would allow more than 3,000 additional students to vote.
The issue had even been approved by the University Calendar Committee, which passed a calendar including the holiday to the chancellor’s office, Hiner said.
“Someone from the chancellor's office did say to us that they had no objection to Democracy Day," Hiner said. "And if they got a calendar with a Democracy Day from the Calendar Committee, they would pass it.”
Hiner said his group later found out through public records that the chancellor’s office removed the holiday from the proposed draft of the academic calendar.
He spoke alongside N.C. Sen. Valerie Foushee (D-Chatham, Orange), Durham County Board of Commissioners Chairperson Brenda Howerton and Orange County Democratic Party Chairperson Jonah Garson at the rally, which took place outside the Student Union.
“If we can't show that students care about these issues through our signatures and through the actions that we advocate for to the administration, then we will come out here and protest. And that's why you see so many people out here today,” Hiner said at the rally.