The second day of the USSA Congress got underway with meetings of the Association’s regions, where delegates planned strategy for the Congress and began the process of choosing regional officers. Next up on the agenda was a “Triple SAC” session — a meeting of the State and Systemwide Student Association Coalition (SSSAC).

State and systemwide student associations have been a major force in American student organizing ever since the voting age was lowered to 18 in the early 1970s, allowing undergraduates to take a direct role in lobbying and electoral organizing for the first time. SSAs have long been a backbone of USSA, serving as a link between the campus and the national organization and providing student activists with experience organizing and politicking beyond the campus. More than fifty students from at least seven SSAs from around the country were present at yesterday’s Triple SAC meeting, where the group agreed on a set of proposals to present to Friday’s plenary and nominated candidates for SSSAC’s chair and vice chair, who serve on the USSA board of directors.

Nominations for USSA’s officers followed at lunch. Sitting vice president Gregory Cendana declared his candidacy for presidency, as has become traditional in the Association, and was unopposed. Also unopposed is vice presidential candidate Lindsay McCluskey, a recent graduate of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst and the chair of USSA’s New England region. As an undergrad Lindsay helped found her state’s new SSA and served as student representative to the University of Massachusetts board of trustees.

In the early afternoon USSA’s National Women’s Student Coalition (NWSC) and National People of Color Student Coalition (NPCSC) met in back-to-back sessions, with “ally” meetings held at the same time. USSA’s ally meetings are an opportunity for students who are not members of the Association’s identity-based caucuses, but consider themselves supporters of those caucuses’ work, to meet to discuss issues relating to the caucuses’ missions. I attended both of yesterday’s ally sessions, helping to facilitate the white students’ meeting, and came away impressed as always.

Dinner on Wednesday was a banquet sponsored by Google, who sent a representative to talk about the company’s Google Books service, which is currently awaiting judicial review of a proposed settlement to a lawsuit filed by authors’ and publishers’ groups. Google is looking to dramatically expand online access to books that are in copyright but out of print, but court approval of their proposal is not yet assured.

More caucus sessions followed dinner, including meetings of the National Queer Student Coalition and eight smaller caucuses. Two of five evening workshops discussed the DREAM Act, a bill that would provide a path to legal permanent residency for many undocumented immigrant youth. The DREAM Act was a major USSA legislative priority in 2008-09, and will likely come to a vote in the House and Senate in the coming year.

The Congress agenda for Wednesday wrapped up after midnight, and sessions began again at 9 o’clock this morning. Today sees more workshops and caucus meetings, along with the deadline for submitting proposals for tomorrow’s plenary sessions. The candidates for USSA’s presidency and vice presidency will make speeches and answer questions over lunch.

Previously: USSA Congress 2009, Day One