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ResLife takes a shot at banning alcohol paraphernalia

Alec Heilmann

Issue date: 3/11/08 Section: News
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Media Credit: Michael Rice

Residential Life could find students in the wrong for possessing empty Keystone Light cans and alcohol funnels in their dormitories if changes in the university residential contract are passed.

Director of Residential Life Scott Chesney is proposing a few new guidelines he would like to see enforced next year. Among others changes, these guidelines have to do with outlawing empty alcohol containers in areas exclusively housing underage students as well as outlawing alcohol paraphernalia.

According to Senior Assistant Vice President for Student and Academic Services Anne Lawing, who works closely with Chesney, the proposed changes in student guidelines are nothing out of the ordinary. The goal of the alcohol-related guidelines is to cut back on confusion between the administration and students when it comes to determining if alcohol has been illegally consumed or possessed in a student's room.

Lawing said that any guideline having to do with alcohol or drugs is put in place or proposed for three basic reasons: to conform to the law, to keep students safe and to keep residential halls as an environment they were intended to be. According to Lawing, these guidelines are meant to uphold UNH's academic mission. While it may seem that UNH is somewhat unrelenting in its proposition of stricter guidelines, Lawing explained that the timing of Chesney's new rules is to give Student Senate and the general UNH population time to analyze them so that by the end of the year, they can be either accepted or reformed.

While administration claims that these rules would be simple improvements on the already well-developed guideline system here at UNH, the student body has not accepted the propositions with open arms.

As a freshman at UNH, Kayla Delman thinks that the rules the university has recently employed and plans to enforce in the future are too harsh.

"College is about people learning their boundaries and having new experiences," said Delman. "There's a lack of warnings for the people who happen to get caught in the act. It's just too strict."

She thinks that because UNH scored in the top ten party schools in the country according to the Princeton Review, they are making an effort to become stricter. Delman also explained that because she is new to the school, the rules seem somewhat daunting and limit the places she goes on weekend nights as well as some of the people she associates with. She was concerned with the idea that a student can be in a room where illegal activity is occurring and still get in trouble without being personally involved in anything illegal.
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Viewing Comments 1 - 10 of 12

Jack Daniels

posted 3/11/08 @ 9:37 AM EST

How long before they have to start advertising for people to live in the dorms after they kick out a ton of students out of the res halls and others don't want to live wiht the hassles? Don't they ever learn? Those who don't learn from history are bound to repeat the same mistakes. (Continued…)

Sandra

posted 3/11/08 @ 11:52 AM EST

I find it laughable that these "proposed" rules have already made their way into the permanent language of the 2008-2009 Room and Board Agreement (http://www. (Continued…)

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

Joseph F.Durocher

posted 3/12/08 @ 12:27 PM EST

Sandra brings up a good point about a public conversation. A University should be a place where one can discuss topics openly and be presented with both sides of an argument. (Continued…)

Jim DeFilippis

posted 3/12/08 @ 1:53 PM EST

If the University wants to do something, they do it. A few people will complain, but the rest won't do anything. The problem is that most students who live in the dorms haven't been out of their parents' house for very long and have a low expectation for rights of privacy and due process, which they should receive as adults. (Continued…)

CONCERNED UNHer

posted 3/12/08 @ 3:15 PM EST

Scott Chesney
email: scott.chesney@unh.edu
phone: 862-1870

Let him know how you feel about this, its obstruction of what you believe to be your freedoms, the possible consequences on demand for living in dorms, the further stress this brings to the RA-resident relationship and interaction. (Continued…)

'98 alumnus

posted 3/12/08 @ 7:20 PM EST

It's unfortunate that UNH has decided to enforce a massive CYA policy (Cover Your ***) without any regard for the real effect it has on the students they are tasked with allowing to develop and learn. (Continued…)

Average Joe

posted 3/12/08 @ 7:59 PM EST

While I may not approve of the new rules, I certainly am sick of being part of a "party school." I hope students start taking their role in the US Economy and the globally competitive job market more seriously. (Continued…)

DS

posted 3/13/08 @ 1:30 AM EST

Another Stanford grad student here, and while I didn't go to UNH, I have family and friends who attended and are attending, and thus follow the news.

I went to U. (Continued…)

'05 Alum

posted 3/13/08 @ 2:41 PM EST

Another great way to collect tuition money than kick kids out for having a beer poster. Get out of their private space and do something constructive. Reasons like this are why I'll never contribute money to this school. (Continued…)

J

posted 3/14/08 @ 8:09 PM EST

I think this is one of the MANY reasons people decide to move off campus and not just because housing either kicks them out or because the dorms are over-crowded. (Continued…)

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