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Beginning this fall, upperclassmen will be able to swipe into freshman
dormitories, thanks to an initiative proposed by the Undergraduate
Council (UC) and approved by campus administrators this week.
Dean
of Freshmen Thomas A. Dingman '67 authorized universal keycard
access Wednesday after meeting earlier in the month with Randall S.
Sarafa ’09 and Matthew L. Sundquist ’09, the UC representatives who
spearheaded the initiative.
The initial legislation, approved
by the council on April 3, called for keycard access to the freshman
dorms for all Harvard undergraduates—a resolution that the UC has been
fighting for since 2003, Sarafa said.
Dingman said at a recent
meeting with UC representatives that he made the decision to “take a
risk” and forge ahead with the initiative, soliciting feedback from
administrators and others close to the situation, Sarafa reported.
UC
representatives met earlier in the year with Harvard University Police
Department (HUPD) Chief Francis D. “Bud” Riley and Sergeant Robert
Cooper to hash out security details surrounding the resolution. Riley
gave his approval, with the condition that the UC actively work to
enforce safety initiatives and promote mindfulness about potential
security issues, Sundquist said.
Beginning this fall, the UC
will begin a publicity campaign to educate students and freshmen in
particular about being cognizant of their own security and privacy.
Representatives
said they plan to distribute literature, give “safety talks,” and work
closely with freshmen-centric organizations such as Crimson Key, the
Freshmen Deans Office, and the Peer Advising Program to ensure that the
initiative is successfully implemented.
“With universal
keycard access, our hope is that upperclassmen do not feel unwanted in
freshman dorms, and it acts as a community building initiative by
destroying that invisible barrier between the upperclassmen and
freshman,” Sarafa wrote in an e-mail to the UC general list Wednesday
night.
Sundquist said that allowing upperclassmen to swipe
into all freshmen dormitories will make the Yard more central to
student life while encouraging freshmen to partake in more student
organizations and activities.
Because a tracking system will
keep precise records of who swipes into each dormitory, the universal
access system will keep undergraduates more accountable, Sarafa said.
He added that in the current system, upperclassmen and non-students may
“piggyback in”—that is, follow a freshman into a dorm—without being
documented.
UC representatives will meet with Dingman
throughout the academic year to assess the effects of the universal
keycard access initiative.
“If there is significant abuse of it, we would reevaluate it in some sense,” Sarafa added.
The
initiative follows College renovations to Yard basements, transforming what
used to be student office space into communal social areas. Universal
keycard access will allow student groups with upperclassman members to
use freshman common rooms and social spaces, he said.
—Staff writer Ying Wang can be reached at yingwang@fas.harvard.edu.
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