August 30, 2019

Page 1

OUTHERN S The Student Voice of Florida Southern College

Residential students living in Holiday Inn

Non Profit Org. US Postage PAID Permit 38 Lakeland, FL

FRIDAY, August 30, 2019 VOL. 134, NO. 1

Hurricane Dorian on track to impact Central Florida Jillian Kurtz Co-Editor in Chief

Photo by Jillian Kurtz Shuttle #3 takes students to and from the Holiday Inn Express and Suites off of S. Florida Avenue. Students must call safety to request transportation to or from the temporary living community. Peter Edgar Co-Editor in Chief As students began arriving at Florida Southern for Resident Advisor training weeks, one began to prepare herself for a new kind of living situation: a hotel. Charissa Schwartz, a junior business major, moved into the Holiday Inn Express on South Florida Avenue when the school year began, where she serves as the Resident Advisor for more than 40 students. “It’s weird being a first-year RA,” Schwartz said. “It’s a cool experience, but everything after this will be different.” It was the first year at Florida Southern for all of the students initially housed at the hotel, though all of them were also transfer students or students who had stepped away from FSC for a gap of time and returned to the community. In Schwartz’s mind, this contributes to a unique community environment that combines aspects of freshman and apartment complex life. Decoration rules are similar between apartments and the Holiday Inn rooms. The hotel doesn’t allow candles, pets, or nails in the walls, but Schwartz described that the hotel allowed her fish tank, a horticulture student’s plants, and extra storage space. For privacy reasons, however, door decks are hung inside. There are a couple of other amenities provided as well. As in any hotel, sheets are washed weekly, and there is a pool, continental breakfast, office space and small gym in the building. Describing it as a “different community feel,” Schwartz guesses that because there’s only one way in and out of the hotel that she sees her residents more: in the elevator, in the hallways, in the lobby, and that there’s something exciting about being in a ‘hotel’ room from “your own room” that her residents get to experience. Holiday Inn residents are provided, for

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the time being, with a shuttle bus that runs between the hotel and campus. Though it often runs late, Schwartz said, the safety office and its officers have been extremely flexible and accommodating. “Safety’s been super super sweet,” Schwartz said. “They know we’re the Holiday Inn kids…. they’re learning all of us and our faces.” Schwartz added that because of the transportation difficulties to and from the hotel and campus, that roommates learn to depend on one another, not just coexist. International students, especially those who don’t have working phone plans in the United States, have found this to be true. “[They say,] ‘We’re both new; we both don’t know how this works; how can we help each other?’” Schwartz said. Communication issues aren’t all on the students’ end. Schwartz laments that she wasn’t able to meet with all of her residents in the first day of their residence at the Holiday Inn to explain the laundry and transportation systems. Because the rooms that FSC students live in are scattered across the four floors of the hotel, it took Schwartz two and a half hours to give those explanations. She

“I feel like I’m in the background, but they check up on me.”

- Charissa Schwartz, RA for the Holiday Inn Express

says, though, that most of the complaints that she hears are one-time issues. “Once they figure it out, and you have a problem the first time, then you figure it out the first time and it’s good,” she said. Despite these challenges, Schwartz said that she feels like students at the Holiday

Inn appreciate that they have an RA that lives among them, and doesn’t just visit the building to do check-ups. She cites her fellow RAs, Community Director Casey Yoder and Dean of Students Mike Crawford, as her supporters. “I feel like I’m in the background, but they check up on me,” she said. “Everyone’s been like super resourceful… I haven’t felt like I’m on my own at all.” Schwartz serves as the RA for a number of students that fluctuates day-to-day. Within the first week of school, several students moved into resident communities like Ledger and Lake Hollingsworth Apartments, but a few different students moved into the Holiday Inn, as well. “They’re working on more; I have two who are in the process of packing,” Schwartz said at the time we spoke. One student was going to move into a campus owned house, but found that the house needed some interior cleaning and repair when he arrived. While the work was being done, he stayed in the Holiday Inn. “It’s hard to say how long each individual student will be there,” “It just is as things open up and as things come. But, too, if we have anyone left by the end of fall semester, the new apartment complex, the first building of that, will be done in January.” Schwartz guessed that now that hurricane season has begun, it may be likely that in the event of hurricane damage to a residence community or campus-owned house, residents may be temporarily housed in the Holiday Inn. “It was originally for ‘we didn’t have enough housing so it’s for this,’ but now we’re making it more versatile in what it’s used for.” Florida Southern faced a similar housing issue last year. Rumors circulated in fall of 2018 about the potential use of the hotel services, but they never came to fruition.

@fscsouthern

Hurricane Dorian is being predicted to make landfall on Central Florida by Sunday, according to the National Hurricane Center. The college administration is aware and will be communicating with students if further precautions should be put in place. “Facilities ordered extra quantity of sandbags in the case of heavy rains,” Vice President of Finance and Administration Terry Dennis said. “I have a hurricane update on my monitor.” The storm comes with threats of hurricane conditions, storm surge and high winds as it passes over Puerto Rico, gains strength over the Atlantic Ocean and heads towards Florida within the next 48 hours. On Tuesday, the storm passed through the eastern Caribbean islands maintaining winds around 50 miles an hour. In the Florida Southern Emergency Action Plan (EAP), it is stated that “in the event of a hurricane, it may become necessary to set up a command post within one of the residence halls designed for hurricane force winds.” As of Tuesday night, it is “too early to tell the status of classes” on Friday or Monday, according to Eric Rauch, head of safety and security. In prepardeness, students should move all furniture away from windows and electronic equiptment should be unplugged from electrical sockets. In the event of a power outage, it is advised that students charge their devices and backup chargers. Hurricane Dorian threatens Florida Southern just two years after Hurricane Irma. Students were forced to evacuate the campus, but it is not expected that this measure will be taken regarding the upcoming storm this weekend.

www.fscsouthern.com

Follow this developing story on fscsouthern.com or @fscsouthern on our social media.

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