Domestic Violence Awareness Month The official student newspaper of Quinnipiac University since 1929. Proud Recipient of the New England Society of Newspaper Editors’ Award for 2015-2016 College Newspaper of the Year
OCTOBER 11, 2017
VOLUME 88, ISSUE 7
ARTS & LIFE: QUINNIPIAC GOING PINK P. 8
OPINION: IF PADDOCK WERE MUSLIM P. 6
SPORTS: QU AND ESPN P. 16
Quinnipiac’s Public Safety adopts use of body cameras By JESSICA RUDERMAN Staff Writer
With the addition of guns to arm officers in 2014, Quinnipiac University’s Public Safety added body cameras to its arsenal of advancements. Put into use in late August 2017 after Public Safety was trained and certified, the small, versatile cameras are meant to protect officers and students alike by providing visual proof of incidents, according to Public Safety Officer Bradley Bopp. At the beginning of every shift, officers are assigned a camera, according to Bopp. The officer puts it on, turns it on and goes to his or her shift. At the end of the shift, the officer returns it, then video is uploaded into cloudbased storage. Following in the footsteps of schools nationwide such as Fairfield University, Syracuse University, University of Hartford, Rowan University and Ithaca College, Quinnipiac made the executive decision to implement cameras into its daily routines to keep up with the ever-changing evolution of law enforcement. “It’s kind of the way law en-
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Sargent Greg Guerra is one of the trained Public Safety officers who wears a body camera during his shifts. forcement is going,” Bopp said. “You’re seeing them in a lot of police departments and there are several other universities that are using them as well, so it’s some-
thing we’ve been looking into. It’s obviously a cost factor.” Although the specific cost of the body cameras along with their charging and saving units was not
identified, the cost for other schools such as Syracuse University came to $1,000 a piece, according to an article by WRVO Public Media. “The cameras are inexpensive compared to the cloud,” Bopp said. “A lot of departments worry because it’s expensive to be able to maintain that.” For students such as sophomore marketing major Amanda Barbato, the pricey devices seem unnecessary in comparison to providing funds for other departments and organizations on campus. “I feel that the body cameras are a waste of money because I do not see many incidents that would happen on campus where they would be needed,” Barbato said. “Our campus is a pretty safe environment, so I don’t see them being necessary.” The Axon Body 2 camera features unlimited retina HD video, dual audio channels, WiFi and bluetooth connectivity, pre-event buffer, full-shift battery, in-field tagging, wireless activation, unmatched durability, optional mute, rapid mount locks and other fancy gadgets, according to the product’s See CAMERAS Page 4
SGA hears special appeals
Some organizations receive additional funding upon request By BRENNA DEAN
Organization Name
Contributing Writer
Our award-winning website since 2009.
Amount Granted
Accounting Society
Holiday Party With the Firms
$750
$750
Asian Student Alliance
Kpop Dance Session
$100
$100
CIS Society
Networking Events with Major Industry Compnies
$250
$100
Handprints For Sunshine
Ronald McDonald House Visit HFS Visit
$361
$361
Quinnipiac’s Big Event
Big Event Appeal
$7,550
$3,150
QU Car Club
Quinnipiac Car Club Spring Show
$1,340
$350
QU Chinese Student and Scholar Association
Chinese New Year Festival
$700
$700
QU Eats
QU Eats Budget
$100
$50
QUESO
QUESO Semi Annual Faculty Student BBQ
$500
$250
QUESO
QUESO Study Session
$300
$150
QU Fit Fam
Aerial Yoga Trip
$240
$240
Quinnipiac University Irish Club
Ceili Night
$500
$250
Quinnipiac University Irish Club
Ice Cream Social
$200
$50
Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc.
Yard Show
$1,150
$650
South Asian Society
Bollywood Fest
$1,550
$1,550
Women Empowered
Curl Con
$150
$150
Indicates an organization didn’t receive all requested funds
Indicates an organization received all requested funds INFOMATION COURTESY OF RYAN HICKS/SGA | CHART BY IAN BERKEY
This infographic outlines which organizations received all requested funds from SGA and which received part of the requested funds.
iac Big Event, Women Empowered, Quinnipiac Irish Club, Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Quinnipiac Eats, South Asian Society, Account Society, Quinnipiac Chinese Student and Scholar Association, Asian Student Alliance, Quinnipiac Engineering Student Organization and the CIS Society. To apply for special appeals, an organization needs to submit the appeal through DoYouQU
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Certain organizations at Quinnipiac were denied the funding they requested for school events last spring in 2017. The special appeals process by the Student Government Association (SGA) gave these clubs a second chance for financial support. Before November 2017, SGA is required to decide which of the 33 organizations that applied will receive funding. “We had $485,514.75 that was requested and we only had $9,336.60 to allocate,” SGA Vice President Ryan Hicks, a senior at Quinnipiac, said. “We were able to allocate the money to all of the on-campus events.” Unfortunately, SGA was not able to provide extra funding for off-campus events, such as conferences, competitions and capital expenditures. SGA has done its best to provide Quinnipiac organizations with as much funding as possible. “It is unfortunate that we are at a point right now where SGA doesn’t have the ability to fund all organizations,” Hicks said. “We can only do as much with what money we are given.” SGA’s goal is to benefit as many students as possible, but it has been a challenge due to the lack of funding from the University. With the money SGA had, it was able to fund around 14 on-campus events. The clubs and events that received some form of funding and appeals are: Quinnipiac Car Club, Quinnip-
Requested Amount
Appeal Name
and attend a meeting with the Finance Committee of SGA. Many of the organizations agreed the process was made simple and reasonable. “The written portion was pretty straightforward,” Breanna Hegarty-Thorne, junior public relations officer for the Quinnipiac
The Quinnipiac Chronicle
Occupational therapy students lobby Congress By CAITLIN FISH Staff Writer
Eleven Quinnipiac occupational therapy (OT) students participated in the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA) Capitol Hill Day in Washington D.C., where they lobbied Congress for bills related to health care and OT. Capitol Hill Day is AOTA’s annual event for OTs and students of the profession to come to Washington D.C. and speak with their representatives in the House and Senate about the issues that affect or will affect occupational therapy and consumer access to health care. It is an opportunity AOTA provides to bring the message of the distinct value of occupational therapy directly to Congressional lawmakers, according to the AOTA website. Quinnipiac OT professor Catherine Meriano, who has attended Capitol Hill Day several times in the past, accompanied the students to Washington D.C. She explained that from a teaching standpoint, the event has two goals. One is to educate whoever is sitting at the congressional tables what the practice of OT is and what it consists of. The other is to show students the importance of advocating for their profession. Meriano teaches mostly policy and ethics type courses, and she explained that right now the OT grad students are taking a health OT law course, so the trip fit in perfectly with the curriculum. She explained that within the OT curriculum at Quinnipiac, a lot of emphasis is placed on advocating for the profession. “You can’t just sit by quietly and hope that people will pay for your services,” Meriano said. Meriano said that all OT services are driven by legislature, so a lot of what they are advocating for is payment. “We’re advocating for payment, not necessarily because we’re worried about our bottomline, but because clients are getting hit with huge co-pays,” Meriano said. “If we’re not advocating, they’re going to have to pay more for our services.” She explained that each year AOTA petitions three bills. This year, the first was the therapy cap, which limits patients to $1,980 of Medicare to pay for OT services. The second one was the Medicare Home Health, a bill that would allow occupational therapists to open cases and conduct the initial assessment for rehabilitation cases in the home health setting. The third bill, Title VII and VIII of the Public Health Service Act, a would allow reimbursement to healthcare providers who work in an underserved area. OT graduate student Victoria Chapman explained that the Capitol Hill trip is something OT students are informed about before graduate school, and that students entered a raffle the semester prior to the event and were randomly chosen to attend. Chapman explained that all attendees at the event were grouped by state and each group met with their state representatives to discuss laws relating to OT.
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Interactive: 5 Opinion: 6 Arts and Life: 8 Sports: 13