THE
BLUE &GRAY
THE UNIVERSITY OF MARY WASHINGTON STUDENT NEWSPAPER
October 6, 2016
VOLUME 90 | ISSUE 5
PRESS
SERVING THE COMMUNITY SINCE
UMW’s limited budget and staff affect student experiences with the Talley Center
Talley Center Trouble
COLLEEN COSGRIFF Staff Writer
The University of Mary Washington’s mental health center, the Talley Center, has struggled to meet the increasing demand from UMW students for services due to their limited staff and budgetary issues, and often try to connect students to off-campus providers due to short staffing or severity of needs. In August 2013, Kate, the name we will use to protect the identity of the student, began her freshman year at the University of Mary Washington. Just two months later, she would pack up her dorm room and check into a hospital near her home. She says she has suffered from depression and anxiety since her junior year of high school, so she made an appointment with the Talley Center during the first few weeks at Mary Washington. Her counselor suggested she take psychiatric medication and referred her to the Talley Center’s in-house psychiatrist. Two weeks after beginning medication, Kate told her counselor she was considering suicide and had a plan. Her counselor immediately contacted the other staff at the Talley Center and it was decided Kate should be hospitalized. None of the hospitals near UMW had space available at the time, so the staff found Kate a place near her home, an hour away from the University. Her mother made the drive to Fredericksburg while Kate and the counselors waited in the Talley Center until 5 p.m., past the center’s office hours. “Our ethical guidelines say that if it is clear that a student is not appropriate for the level of care or service we can provide, we need to try and connect them to that level of service... we’re not going to be able to continue to see every two weeks knowing they’re going to continue to get worse and worse,” said director of the Talley Center Dr. Tevya Zukor. Dr. Zukor said the Talley Center utilizes community providers as much as possible. The center’s Mental Health Coordinator, Catherine Smith, maintains a list of low-cost and free providers, most no more than a mile from campus so students can walk or bus to their appointments. Some students on campus do not have insurance, or do not use insurance because they do not want their families to know they are in counseling. Kate has struggled with paying for
•TALLEY | 10
IN THIS
ISSUE
1922
Colleen Cosgriff / The Blue & Gray Press
Creative Commons
Michelle Goff/ The Blue and Gray Press
Proposal for more smoking spots on campus falls through On Wednesday Sept. 14, student senator and head of the constitutional cabinet Charbel Marche proposed to student senate of the need to increase the number of smoking spots on campus. The senators within the Student Government Association (SGA) do their best to focus their work towards the needs of their constituents. Hearing complaints from residents who struggle with the current layout of smoking spots on campus is what motivated Marche to initiate the proposal. “I have many friends that signed my petition to be a senator that are smokers and they were complaining that there are no smoking spots on campus,” Marche, a junior, said. “I am not a smoker but I was representing those that do and their concerns.” UMW’s department of Buildings and Grounds are responsible for the addition of smoking areas on campus. According to Marche and other stu-
Assistance DEBUT
MEAGHAN MCINTYRE Staff Writer
In order to put out their cigarettes and properly be able to dispose of the butts, smokers rely on having smoking poles accessible to them. The placement of these poles throughout campus has led to issues for many smokers. “The smoking poles that the university uses are all in “non-smoking areas” and most smokers do not use these unless they are smoking by the building,” Marche said. “No matter where we go, people are upset that we are smoking there,” Dubiel said. “With designated smoking spots, people would know where to avoid if they didn’t want to smell it. I think that it would help if there were spots with signs that say designated smoking areas because then I would know where to go.” While the motion to increase the number of smoking spots on campus was passed by the student senate, its momentum reached a halt during the final part of the approval process in the
“I have many friends that signed my petition to be a senator that are smokers and they were complaining that there are no smoking spots on campus.” -Charbel Marche dents, it is both the unclear rules about where smoking is allowed and the setup of the smoking poles on campus that cause problems. “The rules are too vague,” said sophomore international affairs major Maria Dubiel. “Are we supposed to be able to estimate 50 feet [from a building] exactly?”
MICHELLE’S LEAVING
•SMOKING SPOTS | 2
WRITING HISTORY
UMW Theatre’s take on becoming an adult
Why we will miss the FLOTUS
Volleyball coach gives insight to success
LIFE | 6
VIEWPOINTS | 4
SPORTS | 12