C URRENT American River College Sacramento, Calif.
Wednesday 12.12.18
Volleyball takes state Beavers place first in Women’s Volleyball State Championship
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The
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‘Everything will Disappear’ Unconventional photographer holds show at Kaneko
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CAMPUS TO OFFER PHYSICAL, MENTAL AND PREVENTATIVE CARE Title IX rule will
Photo by Ashley Hayes-Stone | Photo and Multimedia Editor
A new fee will add additional physical, mental and preventative care to the limited number of healthcare services currently offered at in the Health Center at American River College.
Fee brings new affordable health services to Los Rios
By Hannah Yates
hannahjycurrent@gmail.com On Oct. 22, the Los Rios Community College District announced the implementation of a new mandatory $20 health services fee due at registration each semester across all four colleges, beginning in spring 2019. This fee will fund new and expanded services that will be available to all
enrolled students. The spring 2019 semester will bring the starting stages of an expansion of health services at Los Rios campuses, though the full range of additions and improvements are not expected until fall 2019, according to an email sent to students from LRCCD through eServices on Oct. 22. The fee will not be applied during the summer term.
This is the first time a health services fee has been applied in the Los Rios district. While the specific plans for health services have yet to be determined, the health fee will fund services for “physical health, mental health, and wellness and preventive care,” according to the LRCCD email. The implementation of these services will be based on each individual col-
lege’s needs, “but the supports for students will generally be similar across the district.” Though it is a mandatory fee, some students will be eligible for a health services fee waiver, including certain Board of Governors fee waiver recipients, incarcerated students and students in apprenticeship programs. According to the Los Rios website, other students eligible for a fee waiver also include those “who depend exclusively upon prayer for healing in accordance with the teachings of a bona fide religious sect, denomination, or organization.” The Health Services Fee committee did not clarify when asked which groups are included for this exemption. Pam Whipple, a nurse in American River College’s Health Center, discussed growth of services and challenges that ARC’s health services fee project team will face with the implementation of the fee. “Generally, I think it’s a good idea, but with the fee and increased expectations there will also be some growing pains. Expanding services involves complex facilities, staffing and licensure issues,” she wrote in an email to the Current. “It’s going to take some time to implement, and ARC has a Project Team in place to begin this work.” Parrish Geary, ARC’s dean of admissions, is leading the Health Services Fee Committee at ARC, and spoke to the Current about plans for the fee. Mental health services are the only expanded service confirmed
itzin.contact@gmail.com American River College reopened Nov. 26 after the Los Rios Community College District issued a week and a half closure due to the hazardous air quality conditions in Sacramento. Los Rios Community College District announced through a district-wide RAVE alert on Nov. 14 that classes across all Los Rios colleges were cancelled through the rest of the week and through the following week, due to poor regional air quality conditions. The district closure came after California State University, Sacramento, University of California, Davis and Yuba College had already cancelled classes earlier in the week because of poor air quality due to the Camp Fire in Butte County. Los Rios campuses remained open since the Camp Fire started
until the closure on Nov. 14. The fire is the largest and most deadly fire in California history, leaving 85 people dead and destroying nearly 14,000 homes, according to CNN. The Spare the Air program monitors unhealthy air conditions all over the United States. The Sacramento region’s Spare the Air website, run by the Sacramento Metropolitan Air Quality Management District, explains what those conditions are in real time. Air quality index (AQI) readings are considered unhealthy if they are 150 or higher, meaning there are particles in the air that can cause health issues or exacerbate existing health problems. The air is considered very unhealthy when the AQI is over 200. At 9 a.m. this morning, Nov. 14, the AQI was 241 and at 2 p.m. it was 181, according to Sacramento region’s Spare the Air site. The decision to cancel classes
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state agencies have remained open, others like Sac State and UC Davis have chosen to close. There is no perfect solution, and either decision has potential negative impacts on students,” the district wrote in the email. “The colleges are working to mitigate negative impacts of the smoke in our buildings.”
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Shania Villafan, communications major, wears a mask at American River College to combat the unhealty air from the Camp Fire in Butte County, on Nov. 14, 2018.
followed a few hours after an email was sent to students from LRCCD Chancellor Brian King and co-signed by the four Los Rios colleges’ presidents, including ARC President Thomas Greene, addressing the district’s decision to keep campuses open earlier in the week. “While some regional organizations like K-12 school districts, other community colleges, and
By Imani Smith On Nov. 16, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos proposed a controversial new rule to overhaul how college campuses can address sexual misconduct and assault complaints, changing the definition of what constitutes sexual harassment on campus and enforcing “due process” rights for accused students. The new rule creates three separate categories for sexual harassment, including “[u]nwelcome conduct on the basis of sex that is so severe, pervasive and objectively offensive that it effectively denies a person equal access to the school’s education program or activity,” “quid pro quo harassment,” like a school administrator “conditioning an educational benefit” on a student’s sexual conduct, and sexual assault, according to the official statement released by DeVos. As defined by previous Barack Obama-era guidelines, the official definition of sexual harassment was less specific and defined as, “unwelcome conduct of a sexual nature.” The rules involve federal guidelines under Title IX, created in 1972, which prohibit gender discrimination and sexual assault on not only college campuses but also primary and secondary schools. According to the Office of the General Counsel, American River College has a zero-tolerance policy for any form of sexual violence or misconduct on campus. However, this new rule states that schools are only legally required to respond if the alleged incident occurred on campus or during campus activities and programs. Sofia Brodskaya, biology major at ARC, said that students should be able to trust that faculty on campus will help students, regardless of where the alleged incident occurred. “We should be able to feel safe on campus; we spend so much time here and we as students should be able to trust that faculty and staff will protect us to the best of their abilities,” Brodskaya said. One of the more controversial aspects to this new proposal would allow for the accused to cross-examine accusers during sexual misconduct hearings, according to the official statement released by the United States Department of Education. According to DeVos, under the new rules, hearings will be conducted by a neutral decision maker and with the presumption of innocence.
Campus closures cause ripple effect By Itzin Alpizar
change how colleges handle sexual assault
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