5 minute read

Students frustrated with university’s handling of mouse problem

MICE continued from page 1

“Two weeks [after winter break], the mice came back. … We would hear them pretty much every 30 minutes, if not more frequently,” Kellner said.

Advertisement

On Feb. 24, after seeing another mouse in her room, Costa said she began making calls to various administrators.

“I’m done with this,” she recalled thinking. “I did it the right way, I submitted a work order, the RAs know, I’m going to call whoever I can.”

Since 1047 Beacon St. is located in Brookline, Costa said she began by calling Tufts’ Boston Facilities Services phone line. The Boston line, Costa said, gave her another number to call. Costa said she called the second line twice and left a voicemail that went unanswered.

Next, Costa said she called Student Services, who directed her to speak with her RAs; when Costa asked to speak with someone higher up, she said that Student Services advised her to contact the ORLL. Costa said ORLL put her on hold when she informed them that she was calling about mice in 1047 Beacon St. before telling her they could not comment on the situation. Costa said ORLL told her to get back in touch with Student Services.

“I was really bothered,” Costa said. “I had called everybody, and they were sending me in circles [with] all these phone calls.”

Later that day, Costa received an email from residential oper- ations stating that an exterminator had set traps in common spaces and bedrooms which would be checked every one to two days and that maintenance would be checking the building and closing any holes they found.

Three days later, on Feb. 27, an exterminator sent by building management came to the building. Costa said the exterminator told her that her room was secure except for a hole in her door, but that he could not fix it as that was the landlord’s responsibility.

“I asked him, ‘When do you think that this mice problem is going to clear up?’” Costa said. “And he said, honestly, that he did not think what he was going to do was going to fix this problem. So the exterminator who’s doing the work tells me that he does not think it’s going to fix the problem.”

On March 7, ORLL notified residents that an exterminator would be sent to the building again, but as of April 1, building residents were still spotting mice.

The RA explained that students were confused about whom to call for help, attributing this to the fact that the building is not owned by Tufts, but by an external LLC.

“I think there’s a big disconnect between [Tufts’] department of facilities collaborating with the external facilities that our [building manager uses],” the RA said. “I think Tufts facilities just didn’t really acknowledge our work orders.”

Carol Fiore, the building manager of 1047 Beacon St., declined to comment.

As mice began to get caught in nonlethal traps, residents claimed they were not given clear instructions on what to do next.

“[On March 8], a mouse got caught in one of my traps and it was literally screaming,” the RA said.

According to the RA, they called Tufts’ Medford campus facilities line, but after waiting on hold, they were told that facilities couldn’t remove the mouse because Tufts does not own the building.

The RA said that when their supervisor emailed the building manager, the manager sent someone to handle the mouse. The night when the residents decided to kill the trapped mouse unfolded in a similar manner. The RA said they called Tufts facilities and the Tufts University Police Department nonemergency line, but no one would come to dispose of the mouse.

“As an RA … I took it into my own hands. I shoved the mouse on the sticky trap — which is so inhumane, anyway — into the trash bag, and then one of my residents was willing to step on it,” the RA said. “[The resident] was like, ‘It’s the most humane way because you’re ending its life quickly.’”

According to Collins, “Pest issues are typically dealt with during daytime or business hours, when pest control experts can be called to the location. Students who find pests in traps are asked to message residential life personnel, who work directly with building management to address these concerns.”

The RA described the night as “chaotic” and expressed frustration with the school’s response.

“I understand [that for] maintenance and facilities, [this] isn’t within their usual vicinity of what they’re supposed to deal with,” the RA said. “But to have a student deal with a rodent or a pest issue that’s already been terrorizing us? A lot of my residents don’t even feel comfortable sleeping in their rooms, especially [the room where the mouse was killed].”

There are still mice in the building, Costa said, noting that the amount of mouse feces has been increasing. To raise awareness and put pressure on the administration, Costa has been putting posters up around the SMFA and Medford campuses.

Costa told the Daily that ORLL offered to move her from 1047 Beacon St. into a new room on the Medford campus. Costa said she wants to remain in the area, as all of her classes are on the SMFA Fenway campus. She believes all of the residents in the building should be given a solution.

“I know the Massachusetts health code for rental apartments,” Costa told an ORLL administrator. “I have a right to live in a rodent-free apartment, you have a responsibility to fix this. I’m not moving, you’re going to fix the problem.”

Air Force One and witnessing his reactions to breaking news.

Her experiences during the Obama administration were the “most normal experience I could have gotten,” she said. “Then the Trump experience was like the exact opposite of that. It was incredibly abnormal in every possible way.”

Phillip commented that, since many of Trump’s White House employees had not been fully trained in the transition, “It was reporters like us who were telling them how it was supposed to work.”

During the Q&A portion of the event, one audience member asked Phillip if she thought the recent changes to CNN’s leadership were in any way destabilizing for the network.

“There has been a change in ownership and leadership at CNN, and a lot of things are changing,” Phillip said. “I think that’s pret- ty evident when you watch the network. … What I will say is that what I do hasn’t changed, and I think a lot of people feel that way.”

Asked about the importance of writing, Phillip spoke directly to young journalists, emphasizing “thick skin” as a key to thriving in the media industry.

“You have to build up your tolerance for criticism,” Phillip said.

“And it’s not the indifference to criticism, it’s how you take it, you internalize it, you make changes.”

Asked how she pieces together stories from the new and complex media ecosystem, including social media, Phillip defended the role of legacy media.

“Newspapers are not dead,” Phillip said. “There’s always going to be a role for The New York Times. There’s always going to be a role for CNN. It might be a little bit less of a big role, but there’s always going to be a place for those outlets.”

This article is from: