Editorial: Delays in initiatives harm diversity improvements
The time spent waiting for these initiatives raises the question of how dedicated the administration is to improving the campus climate for its students.
The time spent waiting for these initiatives raises the question of how dedicated the administration is to improving the campus climate for its students.
There have been some delays in implementing diversity and inclusion initiatives at Ithaca College, including the establishment of a community review board, the creation of a body camera policy and the release of the results of the external review of the Office of Public Safety and Emergency Management.
Public Safety is investigating the report of a rape in the early morning of Jan. 22.
A grand opening was held for the Ithaca College Office of Public Safety satellite office Jan. 23 in the Campus Center.
Terri Stewart, director of Public Safety, will be leaving the college to become director of the Office of Campus Safety at Nazareth College.
With fewer than three months to meet the deadline to have body cameras on officers, questions remain about the college’s pending body camera policy.
This increase in rapes also brings into question how these rapes are being handled by the campus judicial process and Public Safety.
The Ithaca College Office of Public Safety is heading into the implementation phase of some key initiatives promised last year, spurred by student protests regarding the racial climate on campus.
The Ithaca College Office of Public Safety and Ithaca Police Department have increased their patrols and presence on and around campus this fall, due to both standard protocol and recent crime.
The Ithaca College Student Government Association executive board has laid out two concrete subjects that it sees as important to pursue this year: Title IX and voter registration. The board is also emphasizing a more flexible approach to policies and issues it decides to take on based on what is important to students.
Junior Sean Gillen repeatedly woke up with an uneasy feeling in his Ithaca College Circle Apartment the night that a stranger was outside his bedroom, stealing his television and speaker.
A popular Twitter account used by Ithaca College students — IC Crushes — was suspended the morning of April 18. IC Crushes is a Twitter account that allowed students to submit “crushes” about other students anonymously through a Google document.