SPORTS
DIVERSITY
BSERVED
CWU takes pride in Hispanic Leadership Conference attendees Pg. 3
‘Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3,’ and the summer movie slate Pg. 8
Sagapolu joins USA Rugby and wins award Pg. 11
May 10, 2023
Vol. 125 NO. 6
Black history and culture See story on musical event pg. 6-7
ASCWU responds to concerns regarding role of police on campus See story on pg. 2
National shortage of therapists affecting CWU’s Student Counseling Center staffing
Transgender students face uncertainty over whether preferred names will be allowed for commencement
Megan Rogers News Editor
Morgana Carroll and Kai Kyzar News Editor and Staff Reporter
The Student Counseling Center, located in Black Hall, is currently having hiring difficulties due to the national shortage of therapists, according to Director of Counseling Cindy Bruns. To understand why this national shortage of therapists is happening, lecturer of psychology and licensed therapist Jennifer Kassing said we must look at why more people are seeking mental health treatment. “[Therapy offices] were getting full before the pandemic, but the pandemic really just exacerbated everybody's issues,” Kassing said. “People in my experience are more willing [to go to therapy]. They're also seeking more regular treatment and they're staying longer. So it keeps counselors busier.” Bruns said ideally the Student Counseling Clinic would have 1012 permanent staff members, but currently they only have seven. According to Bruns, since the start of the academic year, they have seen 622 students in the clinic and 674 students in the 2021- 2022 academic year. “In 2021-2022, students waited an average of 14 days to be matched with an individual counselor after going on our waitlist, Bruns said. “In 2022-2023, students are waiting an average of 17 days.” According to Bruns, one thing that helps bring down wait times is their partnership with TimelyCare. “Some students elect to use TimelyCare for individual therapy rather than go on our waitlist,” Bruns said. “Most students can obtain a therapy appointment from TimelyCare in 1-2 weeks. Students having choices about how they receive care empow-
ers students to make choices, based on expert recommendations, about what will best meet their needs.” “University counseling centers used to be the place everybody wanted to work and nobody ever left, and so it was really hard to get in,” Bruns said. According to Bruns, this decrease in people wanting to work in university counseling centers could be due to COVID-19 and practitioners moving to private practices because they could work from home and be in charge of their schedule. “When we're understaffed and may be not able to provide longer-term care or more complex care, which is what some of the students are really needing as they're coming to college,” Bruns said. “Maybe they either have a history of using mental health services and really need that ongoing support or [are] approaching therapy for the first time.” When you cannot meet those needs, Bruns said it can be hard for people working in college counseling. “There's so much more that we want to give students, and yet are not really able to do that in the effective manner that we would like sometimes,” Bruns said. According to Kassing, with this shortage of therapists, people are suffering longer because students may be away from home or in a new community. “They're coming in a lot of times with anxiety or depression or other sorts of things and trying to find a local mental health practitioner or even a prescriber,” Kassing said. “It just means that they're suffering longer, which then can obviously affect their academics and their social relationships and all of those sorts of things.”
If you go to register for CWU commencement and graduation, you’ll see a few options on the form. You’ll see an option to explain how your name is pronounced. You’ll see the option to share the date with your friends and family. What you won’t see is an option to tell CWU Commencement that your legal name on file isn’t the one you want announced during graduation. Transgender students on campus have reported that there was no option to apply for graduation commencement under anything other than the name CWU has on file, which in many instances is their legal name. According to Director of Executive Events Lauren Zeutenhorft, commencement doesn’t have access to student data, including name changes. “We don’t have access to student files,” Zeutenhorft said. “Any student information …applying to graduate name, changes, preferred name, all of that takes place within the MyCWU system in the Office of the Registrar. So commencement doesn’t have access.” Zeutenhorft also said there isn’t a field on the commencement form for preferred names because Marching Order, the website they use, is managed by a third party. Zeutenhortf said she is more than willing to accommodate transgender students, or anyone
with a name different from the legal one on file, and if they send her an email, commencement@cwu.edu, she will ensure that the proper changes are made. “If there are people who want to change anything, any part of their name, we have some students who want their middle name added, if they email commencement and explain to us that they would like to change their name, then we as administrators can edit that information on the back end of the registration platform,” Zeutenhorf said. Some transgender students have pointed out the hypocrisy of a university that markets itself as the most diverse college in the state not having this option visibly available. Senior in fine arts Peter James said they felt that this had to have been an issue before, so it’s strange that there has never been anything done to fix it. “There’s very little preparation for something that I know they know exists,” James alleged. “I am appalled that didn’t even occur to them. And if it did occur to them, why didn’t they say anything? Why are dozens if not hundreds of students scrambling to speak to each other about this issue? Why are alumni telling me, ‘yeah, that happened to a friend of mine. … yeah, that happened to me. I didn’t know what happened. I had no idea how to fix it. So I gave up. I had no idea how to fix it.’” James also said they unfortunately were not surprised that this is an issue.
*See Full Story Online* Student Counseling Clinic sees changes to its model. Photo by Yohanes Goodell CWU promotes itself as one of the most diverse schools in the state. PhotbyKaizr
“I am not surprised that this issue came up,” James said. “I shouldn’t be not surprised. It is kind of ridiculous that they were completely unprepared... I’m not the first trans person to attend your school. Oh, God, no, no, not even close. Why are you surprised?” Queer students said that getting deadnamed at commencement would be a substantial problem. Dead names are the name that a transgender person was given at birth that they no longer associate with. “Graduation is supposed to be a celebratory time where you’re like, ‘this is something I’ve accomplished. I worked really hard for this,’” Equality through Queers and Allies (EQuAl) Vice President Jessica Berkey said. “So to have such a slap in the face, I don’t think people know what kind of slap in the face a dead name [is].” James said that being dead named in front of thousands of people at a ceremony is not only embarrassing, it could also lead to harm. “Because if I have to have my dead name read out loud to thousands of people in Ellensburg, when there has been at least one hate crime on this campus every year that I have attended except for this year, but it’s not Pride Month yet. So you know, clock’s still ticking. I don’t want to do that,” James said. According to Zeutenhorft, she fully intends to change the form to allow preferred names by next year’s commencement.