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Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 101, No. 5, © 2019
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 2019
In a Flash
See the world through the lenses of the Georgetown photographers that are influencing the world.
EDITORIAL Georgetown must give the GUSA president a voting seat on its board of directors.
GU HOSTS HILLARY CLINTON The former secretary of state honored three women for advancing women’s rights.
OPINION, A2
NEWS, A7
Stalking, Burglary Incidents Nearly Doubled in 2018 ANNALISE MYRE Special to The Hoya
Reports of stalking and burglary incidents in oncampus, nonresidential buildings have nearly doubled in last year, according to the Georgetown University Police Department’s 2019 Annual Security Report. The report documents that total reported on-campus stalking incidents increased over the past year to 17 reported incidents in 2018, up from 11 reported incidents in 2017. Stalking is defined as any conduct, including unwelcomed communication or surveillance, directed at an
individual that puts a person in fear for their safety, makes them feel alarmed or causes them emotional distress, according to the report. Among reported stalking incidents, stalking in nonresidential buildings saw the highest increase, with 13 reported incidents in 2018 compared to seven reported incidents in 2017. GUPD sent the report to the Georgetown University community in a Sept. 30 email. The increase in reported incidents of stalking on campus may not necessarily reflect heightened safety See SAFETY, A6
OLIVIA CHUANG FOR THE HOYA
The Georgetown University Police Department released its 2019 Annual Security Report, which found jumps in stalking and burglary, last month.
MEREDITH MILLER FOR THE HOYA
Six months after the referendum passed, the Georgetown University board of directors did not provide a clear timeline for action on the GU272 referendum’s results in two meetings that included student leaders, leading to student demonstrations.
Students Protest Inaction on GU272 RILEY ROGERSON Hoya Staff Writer
Student frustration is continuing to build as Georgetown University’s board of directors, which met multiple times this week, has still not publicly provided a concrete timeline to students for action on the GU272 referendum’s results, over six months after the student vote. The board of directors did discuss the GU272 referendum during its meetings this week, according to university spokesperson Meghan Dubyak. When student representatives to the board raised the topic of the referendum at a meeting between representatives and the board Oct. 3, the board indicated plans to
contact the GU272 advocacy team but did not have a clear timeline for referendum implementation, according to Casey Doherty (COL ’20), who is a student representative to the board. The board of directors held at least three meetings Oct. 3: One meeting included student representatives Doherty and Eliza Lafferty (COL ’21) along with the board of directors; another full-body meeting included Georgetown University Student Association President Norman Francis (COL ’20) and President of Georgetown Graduate Student Government Lewis May, a second-year master’s student in the School of Foreign Service; a third private meeting was closed to students, according to GUSA Press Secre-
Women’s Center Remains Leaderless NATE KRAL
Hoya Staff Writer
On Oct. 5, it will have been exactly one year since the Georgetown University Women’s Center last had a program director. Laura Kovach, who led the Women’s Center from 2008 to 2019, was the first of two full-time staffers to vacate their position in the last year. Without a director, program coordinator Karla Rondon continued running regular programming until her own departure from the Women’s Center in June. Neither of these positions have been filled by the university, leaving undergraduate program assistant Caroline Sarda (COL ’20) as the Women’s Center’s most experienced staff member, having worked there since her sophomore year. The Women’s Center now has no full-time staff, relegating operations to three undergraduate students, two of which were hired this semester. Despite these vacancies lasting for months, the university has just formed a committee comprised of students, faculty and staff that is set to meet this month in order to interview candidates in November. As the Women’s Center continues to run without a permanent full-time director or coordinator, the brunt of
FEATURED
the work falls on the student interns and other resource centers such as the LGBTQ Resource Center. Often underqualified and overloaded, the students are unable to provide the services that are expected of the Women’s Center with a full-time staff.
“It is imperative that qualified, full-time staff are hired to work in the Women’s Center to support students, faculty and staff.” LAURA KOVACH Former Director, Georgetown University Women’s Center
PICKING UP THE PIECES
Since Kovach left last year, the prolonged search for her replacement — along with the lack of other professional full-time staff members — has detrimentally affected the Women’s Center’s ability to function at full capacity. In an attempt to supplement the Women’s Center during the search for a full-time director, the LGBTQ Resource Center has filled in the gaps
by supplementing student interns and co-hosting programming, according to Sarda. The Hoya reached out to the LGBTQ Resource Center for a comment, but the center declined to comment. In the beginning of the semester, Sarda was the only staffed worker left, since previous student workers had graduated or gone abroad. As a result, student interns like Sarda have had to take on increased leadership responsibilities that have usually fallen to the director, such as training new interns. This semester, however, Sarda has also had to train student workers from the LGBTQ Resource Center to work at the Women’s Center to help bridge the gap in staffing. “I definitely felt a sense of increased responsibility,” Sarda wrote. “I have had to come in at times when I’m not scheduled to in order to train them (and some new student workers at the LGBTQ Center), and have had to serve in a pseudo-coordinator position since I am the only returning student worker at either center this semester.” In previous years, the Women’s Center hosted its own leadership events, including the Biondi Copeland Lecture Series on Women in Higher Education and Women Advancing Gender Equality fellowship workshops.
The Biondi Copeland Lecture Series aimed to foster dialogue and increased visibility around issues facing women in leadership and higher education. The series was created by Kovach but was discontinued in her absence. While the Women’s Center is still providing basic resources such as pregnancy tests, pads and tampons, it has not planned independent programming this year, instead partnering with the LGBTQ Resource Center, and it discontinued hosting regular feminist roundtables and collaborations with student groups, according to Sarda. While the Women’s Center was able to continue WAGE workshops and the VOICES retreat last year because of Rondon, her departure this June left the Women’s Center without any full-time staff. Without the full-time support of a programming coordinator, student interns have been left without guidance on planning future independent programming, according to Sarda. “We are not really able to do our own independent programming, and it’s unclear how we are supposed to go about co-sponsoring events with student groups,” Sarda said. “Us student workers have no idea what the
tary Harper Thomas (SFS ’22). The board of directors’ full-body meeting, which is separate from the meeting between representatives and the board, occurred amid student demonstrations calling for the board to implement the results of the April 11 referendum. Students held “Where are your Jesuit values?” and “Don’t ignore history” posters and chanted “Respect our vote” outside of the Georgetown Hotel and Conference Center, where the meeting was held. As a student referendum, the results do not bind Georgetown to implement or formally vote on the fee. The board discussed the GU272 referendum at its June 10 meeting but did not announce any specific re-
sponses or action to the referendum after the meeting. Doherty and Lafferty, also student representatives to the board of directors, raised the topic during the meeting they attended, according to Doherty. Though the board said it plans to reach out to the GU272 advocacy group after the meeting, it did not provide a definitive timeline, according to Doherty. “We were hoping for a response different from June, and we were hoping for a concrete timeline, or something at least,” Doherty said in a phone interview with The Hoya. “Today’s meeting was basically more of the same that ‘we’re excited to See GU272, A6
STUDENT INMATE FREED
@MARCMHOWARD/TWITTER
Zack Johnson, center, a student in the Georgetown Prison Scholars Program, was freed from the D.C. Jail on Sept. 30. Story on A5.
See WOMEN’S CENTER, A6
NEWS
OPINION
SPORTS
Rapper-in-Residence Rapper Marco Pavé will work with students in the African American studies department. A5
Reassess Drinking Culture Yumna Naqvi (SFS ’21) implores student organizations to examine the discriminatory nature of drinking culture. A3
Defensive Dominance Football forces five turnovers in a 24-10 victory on the road against rival Columbia Lions. A12
NEWS
OPINION
SPORTS
Georgetown Student Freed The D.C. Jail commuted a Georgetown Prison Scholar’s sentence at a hearing to retry his case. A5
Reject Complacency John Scudero (SFS ’23) urges Georgetown students to voice their grievances against worsening facilities. A3
Second-Half Surge Men’s soccer takes down the Providence Friars 2-1 with two late goals on Shaw Field. A12
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