7-2-2021

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FRIDAY JULY 2, 2021

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THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER AT BOSTON UNIVERSITY

YEAR LI. VOLUME C. ISSUE I

Transgender students share frustrations with BU Housing, dorm bathrooms Anna Vidergar Daily Free Press Staff Transgender and nonbinary students say Boston University’s housing options and selection process present several challenges, including single-sex bathrooms and the lack of administrative help in finding other trans students as roommates. BU offers gender-neutral housing in all residences “with the exception of Claflin, Rich and Sleeper Halls; the Warren Towers complex; and The Towers,” as listed on their website. University spokesperson Colin Riley wrote in an email the majority of incoming freshmen are placed in these large gendered dorms as well as small brownstones, specialty housing and in some cases living-learning communities. The Housing website states “freshmen are not eligible to live in gender-neutral housing, regardless of residence location.” Two to three percent of sophomores, juniors and seniors elect to live in gender neutral housing each year, Riley wrote. Riley added that incoming trans and nonbinary freshmen can contact BU Housing to request specific accommodations. “We work with the individual student to identify the building and room type where they will be most successful,” Riley wrote.

However, transgender and nonbinary students in recent years have reported oversights in housing assignments. Marshall Brown, a transgender male and rising sophomore in the College of Communication, lived in Warren Towers his freshman year and is moving off campus this fall. He said he reached out to Housing before the start of the Fall semester last summer. “I said me being trans was a concern and I want to be paired with another trans person or I want to be put in gender-inclusive housing,” Brown said. “They said that they’re very busy with COVID housing, and then never got back to me.” Brown said while he lived on a coed floor, it was on the female side. “I was able to use my preferred

bathroom, but it was uncomfortable because they put me on the wrong side of the hall.” he said. “That’s my experience in gendered housing.” Dante Gonzalez, a trans man and rising sophomore in the College of Fine Arts, lived in Kilachand Hall his freshman year and will remain there for the upcoming year. He also tried to contact Housing about the possibility of gender-neutral housing last summer, he said. “I tried reaching out to someone to try and figure out what gender-neutral housing looked like for trans students, but it didn’t really feel like a feasible option,” Gonzalez said. “I didn’t have any particular person in the community that I wanted to connect with and live with.” Riley said in an interview it can be difficult to provide transgender

THALIA LAUZON/ DFP FILE

The Warren Towers complex entrance. The student residence is one of a few that Boston University transgender and nonbinary students have voiced as lacking in accommodation to trans students in the housing selection process.

students with single rooms given the limited availability of the rooms, so Housing works with them individually to find the best possible placement. A single room without a private bathroom costs $14,290, and with a private bathroom, $15,330 for the 2021-2022 academic year. A double, triple or quad ranges in price from $10,990 to $13,670. Saman B-Razavi is a rising sophomore in the College of Arts and Sciences and transgender male who lived in Warren Towers his freshman year. He pointed to the use of communal bathrooms within the residence as an everyday struggle — a common complaint among trans students interviewed. “You’re going to have to worry about, for me, making people comfortable in one bathroom, or feeling comfortable yourself in another bathroom, which is really annoying,” B-Razavi said. Warren Towers includes only single-sex communal bathrooms on its residential floors. B-Razavi said he chose the Core House as his residence this fall in part for its gender-neutral bathrooms. The University has “no immediate plans to create more gender-neutral bathrooms in existing buildings,” Riley wrote in his email. Gonzalez noted the inconvenience posed by the lack of gender neutral restrooms in his Kilachand Hall residence. “I don’t think my dorm has a single

gender-neutral bathroom,” Gonzalez said. “If I need to take a break before heading out for the day, I would need to be able to get back into my dorm and use my personal bathroom in order to feel comfortable, and sometimes that’s just not a possibility.” Another challenge for trans students, noted B-Razavi, is finding a trans roommate. “It’s just annoying that there’s no way to find roommates that are also trans,” B-Razavi said. “At the Core House I had a roommate at first and [she] was a girl … and she wasn’t comfortable rooming with me.” Brown suggested possibly adding an option to the housing profile for trans students to find each other. The solution, said Dani Williams, a nonbinary rising sophomore in CAS, comes down to listening to trans and nonbinary students. “Maybe hosting a meeting where we could get together with the Queer [Activist] Collective or with nonbinary students,” Williams said. “Just making a priority to, within the housing form, putting ‘are you nonbinary, what kind of housing do you feel comfortable with, how can we assist you during this time’ and just making it easier for students.” Riley noted changes or improvements in support of transgender and nonbinary students are “not a housing issue, that’s a University issue,” and BU will remain committed to “[supporting] all of our students.” BU Housing declined to comment.

BU Out List gives LGBTQ+ faculty and staff visibility, connection Molly Farrar Features Editor Boston University’s Queer Activist Collective, or Q and the BU LGBTQIA+ Faculty & Staff Community Network worked together to release The BU Out List — a resource for students to find faculty and staff who identify as LGTBQ+ at Boston University, as well a source of connection for students and staff Christian Paredes, a rising senior in the College of Arts and Sciences, is on the executive board of Q who worked as a student co-chair with the LGBTQIA+ FSCN to create the Out List. The BU Out List invites LGBTQ+ faculty and staff members across campus to create a profile only accessible to the BU community. Students cannot make profiles for themselves, but can search through staff profiles. Each faculty and staff profile can include someone’s sexual orientation, gender identity, race, romantic orientation, religion, hometown and whether they were a first-generation college student. Including the additional information in profiles helps LGBTQ+ students “find those intersections” in their community, Paredes said. Paredes said meeting his queer mentors at BU, including professors

now visible on the Out List, was “serendipitous.” “I came across one professor who is queer my sophomore year and ended up forming a really great relationship because she can see me in a different way as a person,” he said, “and it really changed the trajectory of my career.” He said the Out List, which is accessible to the entire BU community, can help facilitate those types of connections for other students. “It’s more easy for people to see which departments or which subjects might have a professor that they’ll feel more comfortable in a classroom,” Paredes said. “That could be really meaningful for having a great experience at BU and just feeling like they’re in a more inclusive environment.” Thomas Lee, the academic program administrator for the School of Public Health and the vice chair of the LGBTQIA+ FSCN, said the Out List was inspired by the Boston University Medical Campus OUT & Ally List, which includes the option to be identified as an ally as well. Lee and Paredes, who worked together to compile the Out List, said their choice to not include allies was to maintain a platform for specifically queer voices. Lee said the Out List helps fill the gap between faculty and staff and students in the LGBTQ+ community.

During his graduate studies at BU, McKenzie said. “I feel a responsibil- ty” has a lasting impact on students. he said he had limited ways of con- ity as an academic, as an instructor, Lee said the Out List also “has givnecting with queer faculty members. not to necessarily to proclaim it from en [Q] a virtual space” by using the Now, as the vice chair of the task- the high rooftops, but to say, ‘this is Out List as a their unofficial homeforce, he said he’s working to create a who I am, this is part of what makes page, promoting resources for queer more visible queer community at BU. up me.’” students and strengthening Q and the “Our main goals are to promote a McKenzie said the Out List can LGBTQIA+ FSCN’s relationship. deeper sense of community and cel- help provide a “beacon of normality” “It’s really been a way to unify and ebrate identity among LGBTQIA+ for LGBTQ+ students to see queer almost build a coalition,” Lee said. faculty and staff at BU,” he said. faculty and staff in different careers “There were so many independent “There was a huge vacuum at BU, and fields. He said especially in fields groups before, and now there is a cenlike this didn’t exist. One of the main such as STEM or business, a facul- tralized platform which is way more findings of the taskforce a few years ty member who “steps forward and effective when you have the voices ago was there aren’t systems in place speaks their truth about their identi- unified.” for queer faculty and staff and to some extent students to really build community.” Christopher McKenzie, an instructor in film and television at the College of Communication, said he has “the privilege to be able to say that I’m bisexual.” He said he chose to be visible on the Out List because he wants to be a resource for LGBTQ+ and questioning students. “Even though we live in a part of the country and part of a world that is relatively tolerant and progressive, it is still an ILLUSTRATION BY CONOR KELLEY important thing to step The Boston University Out List website. The BU LGBTQIA+ Faculty & Staff Community Network forward and speak out and BU’s Queer Activist Collective collaborated to create the list: a University-wide platform for and assert who we are,” students to connect with LGBTQ+ identifying faculty and staff.


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