The Rice Thresher | Wednesday, January 17, 2018

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THE RICE THRESHER

NEWS

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2018

Waitlists, incentives for overcrowding end for spring housing CLAIRE CARPENTER THRESHER STAFF / CCC13@RICE.EDU

In a turnaround from the fall semester bed shortage, every residential college has reported open beds this spring. A total of 62 beds are available across campus as of Jan. 12, according to Housing and Dining Senior Business Director David McDonald. McDonald said this semester’s number of open beds is on par with past spring semesters and may still change as the semester goes on. In the fall, H&D faced difficulties providing enough beds to new students because of the unusually large size of the most recent incoming class. To open more beds to freshmen and transfer students, the university offered free housing to upperclassmen to overcrowd rooms. Thirteen students across the university overcrowded to open up seven extra beds, McDonald said. By the end of the fall semester, McDonald said 40 beds became unoccupied. As of Jan.12, there are 2,794 used beds. On-campus housing numbers constantly change throughout the semester as students move on or off for a variety of reasons. “It’s a moving target from O-Week on,” McDonald said. With no overcrowding incentives this semester, only three students will continue overcrowding, McDonald said. “I was always under the impression that we had to overcrowd the whole year,” Osmond Wen, a Will Rice senior, said. “It definitely wasn’t made clear in the original email that we had the option to not overcrowd the second semester. Fortunately, my living situation has been awesome, so I probably wouldn’t have changed anything for this semester.” In the fall, after learning of the large incoming class size, Dean of Undergraduates John Hutchinson said he asked residential colleges to freeze their waitlists of upperclassmen seeking on-campus housing in addition to H&D’s request for overcrowding. “I was No. 43 on the waitlist for oncampus housing for the fall semester

DOORS FROM PAGE 3 Duncan SMR Nick Liesle said the university saw a need for stricter enforcement after noticing an especially large percentage of students carding their doors in particular locations on campus. “I can’t speak for other colleges, but I have not noted a particular increase in door carding at Duncan,” Leisle, a senior, said. “With that said, though, I don’t generally push on random doors to check their locking status. So it’s really hard for me to tell.” Leisle said it appears that most, if not all, disabled doors have been uncarded for the time being. Duncan sophomore Mackenzie Flanagan said she understands why H&D wants the doors uncarded, but that the overall impact is detrimental to student life. “Now that our rooms are not carded, many of my friends have stated that they feel more isolated,” Flanagan said. “I feel that H&D should allow students to make the decision to card their doors and, by making that decision, students would assume responsibility of that aspect of their safety.”

BEDS FILLED & AVAILABLE Despite long waitlists and overcrowding for on-campus housing in the fall, every college now has no waitlist for the spring semester. Not all colleges could provide data for the number of beds currently available, which fluctuates throughout the semester.

NUMBER OF BEDS FILLED (OUT OF 2856)

3000

BEDS CURRENTLY AVAILABLE Sid Rich Martel Wiess Brown

2863

2823

2794

* Data subject to change and representative of colleges with available data. One bed icon = one bed available

IN SUMMARY • Out of the 13 overcrowds in the fall, three decided to remain in the spring, despite no H&D incentive

2500

Fall 2017 start

Fall 2017 end

Spring 2017 start

* Data includes 13 overcrowds for fall 2017 and three overcrowds for spring 2017

• The total number of empty beds increased to 62 from 40 at the end of the fall

infographic by christina tan

but unfortunately did not make it on campus,” Ashton Duke, a Duncan College junior, said. “The first 23 did.”

We need to be very strategic about what we try to do with buildings and remodels to see if we can bring more beds on line. David McDonald Housing and Dining Senior Business Director Duke will live at Duncan in the spring, and according to Duncan Legislative Vice President Greg Van Kirk, the college has

managed to offer housing options to all students on the spring waitlist. At Sid Richardson College, college coordinator Lisa Galloy said there are five open beds this spring. This is a common trend for Sid Richardson where fall waitlists average about 16 students and spring waitlists are typically short or nonexistent, Galloy said. Coordinators across several colleges said spring waitlists are shorter than fall waitlists. December graduates account for about 30 bed vacancies each spring, McDonald said. These graduates, along with students studying abroad, fall exchange students, students who take leaves of absence, withdrawal or transfer and suspensions and rustications, lead to the opening of beds in the spring. Even with new transfer students, returning study abroad students and new exchange students, McDonald said

spring additions never increase occupied beds in the spring to fall levels. Despite this year’s large freshmen class, McDonald said overcrowding in fall semesters is nothing new to Rice. During McDonald’s 10 years at Rice as a part of Housing and Dining, occasional overcrowding has been necessary. McDonald said what is new to Rice is H&D’s new mission to accommodate 80 percent of undergraduates. Currently, only 73 percent of enrolled undergraduates can stay on campus. “We need to be very strategic about what we try to do with buildings and remodels to see if we can bring more beds on line,” McDonald said. “A new Sid will help because it will have more beds than it currently does, so that will be a partial way there, but not all the way there. We haven’t decided what to do next, after that, but right now we’re focusing on building new Sid.”

SNOW DAY ON CAMPUS

juan saldaña / thresher

Rice University closed Tuesday and Wednesday due to icy road conditions following wintery precipitation and below-freezing temperatures. Some students stayed indoors, while others braved the cold for snowball fights.


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