Pr Crisis Management
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AN ISSUE OF SAFETY -Brief
(This paper was written by an administrator in the department of student services at California Stat University, Sacramento. This paper represents administrators and faculty on the Sacramento campus. Address: Department of Student Affairs, 6000 J Street, Sacramento, CA 95819. Phone: 916/278-8210.)
The Issue: On Campus Student Safety
Recently there has been a student death on campus caused by alcohol poisoning. The student dies during a fraternity sponsored on-campus event. The untimely death of this student has prompted other students to form a new student group EIE, Enough Is Enough. EIE has started a petition and mailing campaign demanding the removal and exclusion of fraternities and sororities from the campus.
Though the campus administration agrees with the EIEs intent of not allowing harmful influences in places of prominence on campus, the University does not agree that barring fraternities and sororities will help reach this goal. We believe that the death of this student could have happened at any on-campus event in which alcohol was involved.
Deaths, such as our students, have happened at Universities across the United States, such as Dartmouth College and MIT. These colleges did not remove all the fraternities and sororities on campus, what they did do was a proactive approach to the real problem, availability of alcohol on campus. For this reason we will follow the approach of these universities and make our campus a dry campus.
This new dry-campus policy allows students the access of student leadership that fraternities and sororities and other social organizations offer, while in a safe environment that has the #1 cause of accidental related deaths, alcohol, barred from campus. Not only will there be no alcohol allowed on campus housing and eating establishments, all student-organized events will have to by dry. These events include socials, galas, and conferences.
Along with implementing a dry-campus policy, the campus charter of the fraternity related to the death has been suspended for five years. We are also requiring all on-campus student events be to be registered with the student activities office for surprise inspections for two years.
We believe that these measures will address the issues of safety the EIE has while following California State University, Sacramentos mission statement that “leadership begins here.”
Release that Follows Breif
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
AUGUST 4, 2007
CONTACT: XXXXXX
PHONE: XXXXX
EMAIL: [email protected]
California State University Sacramento, the New Dry Campus
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (8/4/2007)
–California State University Sacramento joins colleges like Dartmouth and MIT in going dry in order to combat on-campus alcohol abuse.
Recently a student died due to alcohol poisoning at a fraternity party. The death of this student has ignited a student movement to remove fraternities and sororities from the campus. The new Student group, Enough Is Enough (EIE), started a campus petition and sent their demands to university officials.
University administrators where faced with the demands of the EIE and decides to take a more proactive an approach of combating the actual problem – the availability of alcohol at student social events.
“I feel that fraternities and sororities are getting a bum rap,” said junior Alicia Key, who also is the campus president of Sigma Kappa Sorority. “We have this image that we party everyday like it is spring break, but now one notices the good things we do. My sorority raised over $20,000 for our gerontology philanthropies, and our sorority as a hole donates over 5000 hours of service time to local charities and old folks home.”
Campus President Alexander Gonzales felt the same. “As administrators,