The Signal
Vol. LIII, No. 7
https://www.tcnjsignalnews.com/
Serving The College of New Jersey since 1885
December 1, 2023
Forcina Hall to undergo $22 million renovation
The renovation, which is slated to begin this summer, will be completed by October 2025.
By Kate Zydor Staff Writer During their meeting on Oct. 17, the College’s Board of Trustees discussed the upcoming renovation scheduled to take place in Forcina Hall. While discussing the College’s capital project budgets, the Board approved a budget of over $22 million for this renovation which is set to begin in the summer of 2024. The funding allocated to this project will come from Asset Renewal
Reserves as well as a grant from the N.J. Office of the Secretary of Higher Education (OSHE). “The Forcina Hall renovation will reimagine and renovate instructional and academic support spaces in the building for a number of academic programs,” said Jeff Osborn, Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs. The renovation will include the construction of designated spaces for the Department of Nursing, Department of Public Health and the School of Nursing and Health
Photo courtesy of Shane Gillespie
Sciences offices. Several building upgrades will also be completed which include improvements to the hall’s elevator. “This work is funded, in large part, by assistance from the State of New Jersey through the Higher Education Capital Facilities Program,” said Osborn. This program allows institutions of higher education to better their instructional facilities, focusing primarily on technology improvements, capital construction, rehabilitation of space and acquiring
necessary academic equipment. “Recognizing the space limitations that our current Nursing and Public Health students, faculty, and staff are experiencing, [the College] directed its proposal, successfully, on improving training facilities for the state’s future healthcare workforce,” said Osborn. “TCNJ’s proposal to the state program was titled “Educating New Jersey’s Next Generation Health Workforce.’” The Forcina Hall renovation will ultimately allow for all nursing and public health programs to exist in a common location. However, this will require the displacement of a number of groups and classrooms currently located in Forcina Hall to Roscoe West Hall. “I was told about potential renovations at the beginning of the semester when the nursing panel was introducing us to the program,” said freshman nursing major Lindsey O’Leary. see FORCINA page 2
Navigating dining with restrictions Campus Town begins barnacle system By Nicholas Steinhauser Correspondent
dietitian at the College. At every station in Eickhoff, there are signs regarding dietary Dietary restrictions are an im- information in the meals that are portant part of many students’ being served so the students will lives, whether they be an allergy know what they will be eating in or a personal choice. No matter their meals. However, depending the needs, there are resources on the day, Eickhoff may have available at the College to ac- little or nothing that a student commodate students with food with dietary restrictions can eat, that they are safe and comfort- thus limiting their options and able eating. meal consistency. One option to assist with acStudents may instead feel more commodations is Eickhoff Hall. comfortable forming their own preHere, students have a lot of flex- planned menu for the week with ibility when it comes to how safe and related options. By meetthey want to manage their re- ing with Sugrue, students can set up a menu for the entire week and strictions. “The dining hall displays the select a time to pick up their food foods we are serving, the aller- each day so they can have a safe gens associated with the foods, meal prepared for them when they need it. and it is where we have our alEickhoff can have some safe oplergy chef to accommodate stutions for some students at stations dents with food allergies, so it like the Simple Zone, which offers is the primary location to go to gluten-free and nut free options for for students with food allergies,” people with allergies. see DINING page 4 said Anne Sugrue, the registered
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By Isabella Darcy Opinions Editor
Campus Town recently implemented the usage of “Barnacles” or window blockades to its parking regulation process, eliminating towing for parking violations. The Barnacle is a device that Campus Town maintenance staff place on vehicles that violate parking regulations in order to immobilize them. The device works by attaching to a vehicle’s windshield via two large suction cups, obstructing motorists’ view. The Barnacle remains attached to the windshield until a $200 violation fine is paid. “We want to enforce the parking rules but we don’t want to send people down to the yard every time they make a mistake, so we are doing it this way,” said director of sales and marketing for the PRC Group Jeff Kearns. Campus Town parking regulations are violated when a mo-
torist parks in a residential space that does not belong to them or in front of a Campus Town retail location that they are not actively a patron of. Prior to the implementation of the Barnacle, vehicles that violated Campus Town parking regulations were towed and taken to a yard in Trenton. Motorists would have to travel to the yard to pay a fine to pick up their vehicle. With the Barnacle, vehicles stay where they are parked, and motorists can settle the violation fine directly at their vehicle. Sophomore marketing major Gianna Sassi recently removed a Barnacle from her vehicle. Sassi said that she found the process to be a quick and convenient alternative to towing. “I like how I was able to do it myself rather than having to contact a company or going to get my car,” Sassi said.
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see BARNACLE page 2