Mount Holyoke News AN INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1917 MOUNTHOLYOKENEWS.COM
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2022
Student repeatedly targeted with antisemitic graffiti ceiving the support they needed in order to feel safe. According to the student, they were told to keep the targeted incident private. However, on Oct. 14, Director of Public Safety and Service Raymond LaBarre readily confirmed the second incident after inquiry from Mount Holyoke News. The College declined to comment on this incident and the support offered to the student.
BY DECLAN LANGTON ’22 & LIZ LEWIS ’22 EDITOR-IN-CHIEF | MANAGING EDITOR OF CONTENT
Content warning: this article discusses antisemitism and contains antisemitic slurs. “I might be loud and vibrant and outspoken. However, that does not give you the right to put up hate signs against me,” an anonymous resident of 1837 said. The student, a member of the Jewish community, was the repeated target of antisemitic graffiti at Mount Holyoke College in fall 2021. As previously reported by Mount Holyoke News, a Nazi swastika was found drawn on the mirror of the single stall bathroom on the third floor of 1837 Hall on Oct. 6. Since then, two further incidents of antisemitic vandalism have occurred on this floor, all explicitly targeting this student.
Student targeted with vandalism
On Friday, Oct. 8, 2021, two days after the first incident, the student was on the way to meet some friends, intending to unwind after a stressful couple of days. When they left their room on the third floor, they ran into an officer from Public Safety and Service outside of the multi-stall
Student targeted in third incident
Photo by Carmen Mickelson ’24 1837 Hall, above, has been the site of three targeted antisemitic hate crimes since October 2021.
bathroom. “You’ve got to be kidding me,” the student remembered thinking. The officer asked their name, and informed them that there had been a second incident. This time, the graffiti included both a Nazi swastika and a message targetting the student, reading, “coming for you [student’s first name].” According to Director of Public Safety and Service Raymond LaBarre, the graffiti was drawn inside of a bathroom stall. The student remembered retreating to a nearby stairwell in distress. “I just started crying,” they said. “It was heartbreaking, truly heart-
breaking … [to] work so hard to come back to a place that has a problem with you,” they described, referencing the challenging 2020-2021 remote school year. Feeling increasingly threatened by the new development, the student decided to reach out directly to the College administration concerning their safety. “The second time, I had my name tagged on it,” the student said. “So it became personal, but it was always personal to begin with.” During this time, the student was meeting regularly with members of the College administration, but felt as though they weren’t re-
On Dec. 10, 2021 Stephens announced a third incident in a letter to the community. “Earlier this week, [Public Safety] recieved reports of a hand-drawn Nazi swastika in a residence hall bathroom,” Stephens wrote. According to the student, this was another targeted message, though they were not the one who discovered it. On Dec. 8, the student heard whispers of something having happened on the third floor, but no specifics. Concerned, they reached out to Residential Life but received no reply. According to the student, it took over 12 hours for them to be contacted by the College following the discovery of the graffiti. When they did find out, it was from a detective in Public Safety. The student wondered why it took so long.
“Why wasn’t I alerted if this is about safety?” they said. According to the student, on the wall was a Nazi swastika, poorly drawn in black marker, the words “k*ke” and “miss me?,” as well as an explicit death threat including their name. In conversation with Mount Holyoke News, LaBarre confirmed that this was drawn once again in a bathroom stall. On Dec. 10, President Sonya Stephens announced the third incident in a letter to the community, within 24 hours of its discovery. Feeling as though the administration’s support was insufficient, the student turned to the Anti-Defamation League, an anti-hate, non-governmental organization that combats antisemitism in the United States, according to their website. “I need resources, I am just not keeping it to the administration,” the student said. The College declined to comment on support offered after the third incident. For this student, the ADL provided support in “going through the incidents and trying to get in contact with [the administration] which took multiple efforts,” the student said. The student also hoped the
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LITS seeks solution to Wi-Fi outages Mount Holyoke RAs negotiate for higher pay BY TARA MONASTESSE ’25 STAFF WRITER
Photo by Naomi Jiang ’25 Some RAs have formed the RA Collective to negotiate for better conditions and higher wages.
BY ELLA WHITE ’22 NEWS EDITOR
Since the fall semester, Resident Advisors have been negotiating with Mount Holyoke College for higher wages and better working conditions on campus. The RA Collective is made up of a group of RAs that have been negotiating with the College administration on behalf of many of the RAs and Residential Fellows working on the Mount Holyoke campus. Vice President for Student Life and Dean of Students Marcella Runell Hall is mediating these negotiations. Over the course of the pandemic, COVID-19 policies and staffing shortages have made RAs feel more strained, according to Mickey Pope ’23, who is an RA in Rockefeller Hall and a member of the RA Collective. RAs are expected to be first responders to mental health crises, alcohol poisonings, room lockouts and interpersonal conflicts at any given time. “I’ve had to deal with alcohol poisoning and watching people throw up on themselves, and it’s scary and traumatizing,” Pope said. “But you don’t get paid for that stuff.” The central demand of the RAs is higher pay. Mount Holyoke caps student workers at 15 hours per week but does not pay RAs at an hourly rate. Instead, they offer a yearly stipend which starts at $3500. This is less than wages for RAs at Smith College, Amherst College and University of Massachusetts Amherst. “We’re one of the few schools who don’t get any room and board, any subsidy for housing,” Pope said. “We get very little to no money and if you need to make a living off of this, you’re not.” Students at UMass Amherst are
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paid by the hour, which allows them to be paid for the middle-of-the-night emergencies RAs often deal with, as well as a partial room subsidy. At Mount Holyoke, RAs can be called to work at any time. “You are on duty 24/7,” Pope said. “You have a duty to interact with your residents, you have a duty to fix problems that they are telling you [about]. You have a duty to be involved.” If students hold a party in a given building, according to Pope, the RAs are responsible for ensuring the safety of anyone on their floor, even visitors from other dorms. Negotiations are stalled as the RA Collective waits on information on the 2022-2023 budget and wages for RAs. “If we can’t see the budget, we won’t know [if we’re] getting paid the amount we’re asking for,” Pope said. “We won’t sign the contract for next year. And we’re hoping that any future RAs or RFs applying won’t sign the contract until we see the [budget].” The Collective has not gone on strike yet, but members of the group reached a consensus that they were willing to strike under certain conditions. “Let’s say Mount Holyoke does try to fire somebody [for speaking out],” Pope said. “Then we’re all not working, because that’s not fair.” The RA Collective is also organizing a safety net fund in case of a possible strike, during which student workers would risk forgoing their pay. “You do [this work] because of the community,” Pope said. “But it makes it hard when you don’t feel like you’re being recognized for doing that hard work.”
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The first reports of campuswide Wi-Fi issues began to trickle in on Jan. 25, one day after the spring semester launched in an entirely virtual format for a two week period. Internet traffic was at an all-time high during the day as students across campus simultaneously accessed their courses via Zoom. Alex Wirth-Cauchon, chief information officer and executive director of LITS, stated in an email to Mount Holyoke News that approximately 4,500 devices were connected to the College’s wireless network during peak hours last week. The College’s two main student Wi-Fi networks — LyonNet-Encrypt and eduroam — dropped connections unexpectedly, leaving students unable to access the internet unless they had access to an alternative method of connection, such as a phone hotspot. LITS launched diagnostic and corrective efforts on Jan. 25. Between then and Jan. 28, 21 initial reports of Wi-Fi issues were received by LITS through various channels. Sara Robillard ’23 experienced internet outages on a daily basis during the virtual learning period, but was able to work around it by joining Zoom meetings from her phone. However, even that was not a foolproof solution, as this alternative used up her phone’s data plan. “One of my classes [kicked] me out, and I could not get back in, and I had already used a lot of my data plan earlier in the week connecting on my phone,” Robillard said. “I think we had 25 minutes left, and I was so fed up. I was just like, ‘All
Graphic by Anjali Rao-Herel ’22
right, I’m done, I’m done with class for the day.’” Robillard felt as though there was little class time spent catching up on the missed material, but she considers this an understandable loss. “You have to keep moving forward,” she said. The Network, Systems and Applications Support team, consisting of seven members, has played a key role in monitoring and addressing issues with the College’s network. Other members of LITS, including the Help Desk, have also contributed to addressing widespread technology issues such as the recent outages. In addition, LITS sought assistance in resolving the issue from experts at the technology firm that designed the network, as well as from the information security firm that helps to protect it and from the hardware vendor who manufactured key com-
ponents of the network. Wirth-Cauchon released an update to the community via email on Feb. 3, which identified two specific issues simultaneously affecting the Campus network. “The first issue is related to how personal devices now connect to wireless networks,” Wirth-Cauchon wrote. “Recent updates by technology providers use a randomized approach to device identification resulting in multiple requests to the network seeking an internet address from each device.” “While we have plenty of bandwidth and hardware, the address allocation system would periodically become overwhelmed with the requests for new addresses as devices request a change,” his update continued. CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
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Senate discusses campus Wi-Fi issues BY GILLIAN PETRARCA ’23 STAFF WRITER
The Feb. 8 SGA senate meeting opened with a land acknowledgment by Chair of Senate Shula Mathew ’22. The agenda for the meeting included an info session with Library, Information, and Technology Services in order to discuss the recent Wi-Fi outages on campus. Senators were asked to gather with their commission groups at the beginning of the meeting to submit questions for the info session. President of SGA Lasya Priya Rao Jarugumilli ’23 moderated the session between Alex Wirth-Cauchon, chief information officer & executive director, and David Po-
wicki, director of Technology Infrastructure & Systems Support. “Can you explain the difference between the three Wi-Fi networks?” Jarugumilli asked. Powicki explained that MHC-Public is designed for anyone who would like to connect to the internet to use, including campus guests as well as students and faculty. He explained that eduroam and LyonNet-Encrypt are essentially the same networks. However, eduroam can be accessed across universities within the Pioneer Valley and abroad. Powicki recommended choosing one of the Wi-Fi networks and sticking to it. Jarugumilli asked, “How should students go about reporting Wi-Fi outages that happen more in a cer-
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tain building than others?” Wirth-Cauchon answered by explaining that the College has made the decision to not make the entire campus wireless. This means that all of the buildings on campus are Wi-Fi accessible but many outdoor areas may not be. Students may experience connection issues after changing buildings. Wirth-Cauchon and Powicki hope that, with the new network updates, this issue will be solved. Wirth-Cauchon said, “I am hopeful after our updates to the system tomorrow we will hopefully not experience any more campuswide Wi-Fi outages.” Many students raised conCONTINUED ON PAGE 2
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