Volume 91 • Issue 4
October 7, 2022
Lacrosse team styles State Street
FSUgatepost.com
Leighah Beausoleil / THE GATEPOST
(Left) Lacrosse players Hailey Baker and Rachel Erickson, Coach Devyne Dorran, and teammates Jordan Utter, Alexis Burleigh, and Alessia Lye host a Pop-up Thrift Store to raise money for two away games in Florida over spring break.
President Niemi outlines top priorities By Sophia Harris News Editor President Nancy Niemi has identified improving Framingham State University’s enrollment and retention rates as her top priority. Niemi also identified building connections with the MetroWest community, defining Framingham State’s brand, obtaining reaccreditation for the University, and filling vacant executive positions as additional priorities. She noted all these goals relate back to her top priority of enrollment and retention. “Everything I’ve just said really fits under the umbrella of, ‘How do we define ourselves so that we can grow and be the University that we want to be?’ All of those other pieces
are a necessary part of that,” she said. A reorganization announced in August was designed to help Niemi address these goals. One of the biggest changes is creating a new division of Academic Enhancement headed by Lorretta Holloway, whose new title is vice president of academic enhancement. Holloway, whose previous title was vice president of Enrollment and Student Development, will report directly to Niemi. Enrollment now reports directly to Niemi and there are currently open interim and permanent positions for a dean of enrollment management. The restructuring was implemented to “have more effectiveness and raise the level of importance that enrollment management, student affairs and academic enhancement,
News
student success have on campus, so now all three of those positions re- TRUSTEE RESIGNATION pg. 3, 6 port to me as well as human resources,” she said. Niemi said the reorganization “took a really big structure and broke it apart so that we could pay attention to its component parts and raise INDIGENOUS LAND pg. 7 them to the level of importance they deserve.” [Editor’s Note: See “President Nancy Niemi restructures FSU administration” in the Sept. 15 issue of The Gatepost.] Her goal for the reorganization was to “re-envision” the departments and how they can better serve FSU students and the enrollment and retention efforts. Niemi’s top priority for the University is to address the enrollment and
Opinions
Sports
See PRESIDENT NIEMI page 5
Facilities plans repairs to leaks around campus By Emma Lyons Arts & Features Editor Patricia Whitney, assistant vice president of Facilities and Capital Planning, said her department is planning to fix leaks in May Hall and the Henry Whittemore Library that were discovered following heavy rains in September. However, leaks in the entryway and lobby of the McCarthy Center that occurred during the same September rainstorms are not currently scheduled for repair because they haven’t been reported through a work order, according to Whitney. “I spoke to our operations director and he does not have any current work
orders for leaks in the main entrance to McCarthy,” she said in an email. Leaks have been documented on the fourth floor of May Hall by the elevator and within May Hall 403, and in the library’s Archives Room and the Special Collections Room. During the week of Sept. 23, separate construction vendors came to campus to inspect the leaks in May Hall and the library in order to determine what repairs need to be made. The Facilities Department plans first to make a temporary repair to May Hall, then make renovations to the library, and then work on a permanent fix for May Hall. Whitney said it was determined
Leighah Beausoleil / THE GATEPOST FOOTBALL pg. 9
VOLLEYBALL pg. 10 that the biggest leak in the library was caused by water penetration through the brick wall on the “far left side” of the building. “We have to follow certain bidding procedures for anything over $10,000. So a lot of times when we have a repair, we call in a vendor - if it’s something that is beyond our capability that our own guys can do - we’ll call in a contractor and we keep our fingers crossed it’s under $10,000,” she said. These repairs to the library would cost more than $10,000, which means Zachary Sorel / THE GATEPOST Facilities will need to hire an architect EMOTIONAL WELLNESS pg. 11 to design a construction specification, which explains the work that is need-
Arts & Features
See BUILDING LEAKS page 4
INSIDE: OP/ED 7 • SPORTS 9• ARTS & FEATURES 11