The lack of female representation in economics and how it is affecting the field



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By: Rachel Borntrager

The feminist movement and other social advancements have contributed to women entering fields that have been traditionally male-dominated. Despite this, women continue to be consistently outnumbered by men within the field of economics.

Since the 1980s, female representation within economics at the undergraduate level has hovered around 30 percent.

This podcast attempts to investigate the reasons behind this gender imbalance by interviewing a variety of people in the field, including students, professors and professionals.

Read the full story below.

Despite the fact that economists pride themselves on avoiding, or fixing, inefficiency, they fail to observe a potential inefficiency directly within their field. According to a 2016 study conducted by the NCES, National Center for Education Statistics, economics majors are 70 percent male. At a higher level, 85 percent of full-time economic professors are male, The Economist reported.

There are multiple theories as to why women shy away from the field of economics. One of those theories is that women, on average, do not have as much of a natural aptitude towards math as men.


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Both Donn Johnson and Linda Fisher, Quinnipiac University professors of economics, have not experienced proof of this within their classes.

“In my classes it’s not like I see a discrepancy in math skills between our female students and our male students,” Fisher said.


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“I don’t buy into the old stereotypes about math because the women that I have in classes are just as good, if not better, of students — and sometimes, disproportionately, (they are) the top of my class,” Donn Johnson, chair of the economics department at Quinnipiac, said.  

Within the past few decades, other quantitative subjects have seen increases in female representation.

Accounting, a major that used to be primarily male, is now more than 50 percent female. Economics, however, has experienced a plateau in terms of the amount of females entering the field.

After a minor increase in the 1990s, female representation has remained nearly the same within the field, the New York Times reported.

Since then, female representation at a colligate level has consistently hovered around 30 percent. This lack of representation also fails to take into account approximately 270,000 more females than males receiving bachelor’s degrees nationally, the Digest of Education Statistics reported.

With this considered, the inequality within the field of economics is even more drastic.

“So a lot of people think economics is just about making money and that appeals more strongly, it seems, to men than women, but, economics is about a lot more than that and people just don’t know it,” Linda Fisher said.

Fisher is not the only one that attributes the imbalance within economics to a lack of understanding of the subject. Londyn Zografakis, a senior economics major at Quinnipiac, agrees.

“People, especially females, don’t understand what economics is and when I say economics is my major I always get the question, ‘what is that?’ They are not able to see that you can help people knowing these theories,” Zografakis said.

This lack of understanding could be a result of the misconception that economics is a business discipline. In 2015, Quinnipiac moved economics from the School of Business to the College of Arts and Sciences. Many colleges are now making that switch because economics is nationally recognized as a social science.

Fiona Scott Morton, the Theodore Nierenberg Professor of Economics at the Yale University, believes that the debate-heavy nature of the field of economics is a potential factor that contributes to the imbalance.

“In economics, the way research works is you write a paper and you take it on tour, you visit different departments and you go to conferences and you present it orally and they ask you questions and you have to defend everything in your paper,” Scott Morton said. She then added that this expectation of economists does not fit into the societal boundaries that often restrict women today.

“In our society, it is really hard to be an assertive female because women are supposed to be nice and so being assertive and nice at the same time is a lot harder—men can be assertive and be jerks and nobody cares,” Scott Morton said. Scott Morton also served as the Deputy Assistant Attorney General for Economics at the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice.

Gender discrimination, sexual harassment, and the wage gap are arguments that seem to arise whenever there is an obvious gender imbalance in any field. However, most women that were interviewed have not experienced blatant discrimination, but many, like Zografakis, did say that they have been treated differently based on gender.

“Prior to this one male getting to know me, he just assumed that I was an airhead and I wasn’t given a fair chance to show that I was smart,” Zografakis said.

As a young female economist, Scott Morton also experienced similar treatment.

“I would go to seminars and ask a question and the speaker would kind of blow past my question […] and five minutes would go by and an older man would raise his hand and ask another version of the exact same question and get a long, detailed, and thoughtful answer from the speaker,” Scott Morton said.

Groups for female economists have emerged within the past few decades to combat the imbalance and make women feel more comfortable as a minority in the field. One group that is recognized nationally is CSWEP, the Committee on the Status of Women in the Economics Profession, which was founded in 1972 by the American Economics Association. Judy Chevalier, who will chair the committee in January, discussed her plans for the future of the group.

“I think the low representation of women in the undergraduate major is actually something I am really concerned about and something I want to work on in my term as CSWEP chair,” Judy Chevalier, who was also a former co-editor of the American Economic Review, said.

Although the reason why women shy away from economics remains a mystery, economists have proposed a few ways to attract women into the field.

“We can teach our intro classes, our big classes, and our micro classes with women instructors, so that it is abundantly clear to all the women sitting there that you can do this and this is a women’s profession,” Scott Morton said.

“I think if more women understood that we could use economics to change the world, then we would draw more women into the field,” Fisher said.

Although there is no explicit way to know whether the gender imbalance is negatively affecting the field of economics, a 2013 survey of American economists showed that women were more likely than men to support higher minimum wages, regulations, and redistribution (“Women and economics”). This survey demonstrates that women, on average, have different opinions than men.

“If we had more women economists submitting essays regarding certain public policies that affect women the most, maybe women wouldn’t be such a minority in so many different areas,” Jessica Hernandez, staff assistant for US State Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, said.

Many parts of the gender imbalance within economics remain ambiguous, such as the causes and effects of that imbalance. However, it is clear that the female voice, and opinions, could potentially be overpowered if the imbalance persists.

Homelessness in New Haven: Optimistic for the future

By Nora Scally

The city of New Haven, Connecticut is home to a world-class university and one of the top medical research hospitals in the United States. Yet, amid the center of academic excellence, homelessness for hundreds of city residents continues to baffle even the brightest academic and political minds there.

The city’s intractable problem with homelessness emerges in the math. A recent count put the number put the number of homeless at 529 people , 97 children, experiencing homelessness in New Haven. The problem persists despite decreases from its high of 625 people since 2016.

New Haven will look to two success stories toward ending homelessness. One is the elimination of homelessness among military veterans, which was a goal of the state’s outgoing governor Dannel Malloy.


Above: New Haven City Hall

Above: New Haven City Hall

Aggressive programs found homes for 766 veterans listed as homeless in 2016.

New Haven is looking at its own successful programs, which led to the decline in homelessness over the past two years, according to a state official who heads the effort to end homelessness.

“It’s probably a result of the work coming from statewide leadership,” said Robert Pulster, the Connecticut director for the United States Interagency on Homelessness, “New Haven being a community that kind of adopts and really takes advantage of that process and moves forward.”

Pulster works for the state providing materials and information on how to prevent homelessness and help with the rapid rehousing process. The state helps with creating and administering programs and finances to help within different cities all over Connecticut.

Laurence Grotheer, the director of communications for the city of New Haven, agreed with  this. Grotheer said, “ The city is working with its partners, both at the state level and its network of private sector providers to address the root causes of homelessness.”


Above: New Haven city sign.

Above: New Haven city sign.

State government provides funds to towns and cities such as New Haven to help. Emergency Solution Grant  (ESG)  is one such program that places people in homes who have recently become homeless.

Allison Champlin, Manager of Community Development Programs in New Haven, administers these grants within the city. She said that the city has found great success with this. She said,

“The City provides funding to agencies that provide services to those who are low income and/or in jeopardy of becoming homeless. Last fiscal year, we funded services such as prevention, rapid re-housing, and shelter, said Champlin, “Prevention services is used to ensure that individuals or families don’t become homeless. This can be through security deposits, rental assistance, utility assistance, moving costs, etc.”

Homelessness is an issue that touches all New Haven government departments, even the police department is involved with the problem.

David Hartman, a police officer who serves as the department spokesperson, said he and colleagues participate in forums seeking to address the issue.

“The NHPD is not directly involved in advocacy, social work or programs to mitigate homelessness,” said Hartman, “ We do, however participate in forums that do and are participants in community solution processes administered by such advocates and program coordinators.”


Above: New Haven police car.

Above: New Haven police car.

One of the major services within the city of New Haven are shelters. The Columbus House in New Haven shelters the homeless in New Haven, offering 81 beds every night. The Columbus House relies heavily on volunteers to help prepare and cook meals for the people who come through their doors.

The Columbus House works along with the city to help with prevention and rapid re-housing. “We have a very good collaborative relationship with the City of New Haven,” said Hebe Kudisch, Chief Program Office of the Columbus House, “We work in different initiatives sharing the same goal of ending homelessness. Lead, HOPWA, ESG, Overflow are some of the many programs that we are working in collaboration.”  

New Haven cares about the homeless within their city and created the Homeless Advisory Commission to help coordinate all of their efforts in re-housing and prevention. Last year alone, the city provided over one million dollars for this council.

Velma George, the Coordinator for Homelessness in New Haven, said, ““The goal of this office is to improve the quality assurance and evaluation process for emergency shelter providers and other organizations with a core mission to support the elimination of homelessness in New Haven, and to go beyond sheltering / housing, to supporting self-sufficiency in individuals, families and youth,” said Velma George, the Coordinator for Homelessness in New Haven, “ The City General Fund allocated 1.4 million dollars exclusively for homeless shelter services and support services. “

George went on to say, “The City of New Haven provides a safety net of supports and services for the City’s most fragile or vulnerable citizens – homeless singles, families and youth.”


Above: a New Haven Soup Kitchen van.

Above: a New Haven Soup Kitchen van.

Every year, the Connecticut Coalition to End Homelessness issues a Point-in-Time in cities to count the homeless population. The count takes place every January and is always looking for volunteers. If you would like to volunteer, please sign up here.

If you are interested in volunteering with the Columbus House please look at their volunteer page on their website. They also offer internship experiences for students. If you are interested in an internship with the Columbus house, please email info@columbushouse.org .

The city of New Haven looks ahead and hopes that through all of their programs and efforts, that they may continue to re-house and that they will continue to see a positive decrease in the homeless population.

Black college athletes face tangible hurdles when considering protests

By Aaron Robinson

Perspective: Quinnipiac’s Aaron Robinson offers his personal thoughts as a Bobcat athlete.

On the afternoon of Dec. 9, 2017, the Quinnipiac University women’s basketball team lined up across the free throw line of its home arena standing at attention for the national anthem, holding hands as the players always do.

Directly across from the home team, the Princeton women’s basketball team looked quite a bit different.

As the anthem played, the 509 fans that were in attendance stood at attention, hats removed, eyes locked on the flag. No one seemed to notice that a few members of the Princeton women’s team were not standing. Instead, these players knelt in protest.

“I believe that police brutality and excessive violence is an issue in our country and that the use of force and police power disproportionately affects people of color,” Sydney Jordan, a senior on that Princeton Tigers, team said.

That, she said, is why she knelt.

Sydney Jordan (No. 20) takes a knee as well as Qalea Ismail (jumpsuit) and Kenya Holland (No. 24) in a game against Rutgers University. (Photo by and reprinted with permission from Joel Plummer)

Jordan and her teammates followed the lead of former National Football League quarterback, Colin Kaepernick, who first took a knee during the anthem before a preseason game in August 2016 — a summer that witnessed a rash of police brutality against African American men.

Police officers shot and killed unarmed black men, such as Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge and Philando Castile outside of Minneapolis. Baltimore police found Freddie Gray dead in the back of a police van after he sustained injuries in custody, and an officer gunned down Terence Crutcher in the middle of a Tulsa street. None of the officers were found guilty.

These are just a few of the 855 African Americans who have been killed by the police since 2015, according to the Washington Post’s police shooting database. Of these 855 people, 90 were unarmed and another 27 were killed while possessing a toy gun.

The anger and frustration in the black community spilled into the playing fields and arenas of American sports.

“I am not going to stand up to show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color,” Kaepernick told NFL.com. “To me, this is bigger than football and it would be selfish on my part to look the other way. There are bodies in the street and people getting paid leave and getting away with murder.”

When Kaepernick took a knee, many fans and observers interpreted his action as a show of disrespect to the the flag and military.

On the other side of the issue, many maintained the action was a display of his First Amendment right to freedom of speech.

“I often think about the statement that Kaepernick and others in the NFL made and how, when limited to a single sport at a single competition level, it might appear as if other people don’t care,” Jordan said. “Thus, it was important to me to send the message that it’s not just a few successful football players who feel strongly about police brutality.”

Jordan and her teammates at Princeton, an Ivy League institution, were among few college athletes to join in what commonly became dubbed a “protest.”

Quinnipiac women’s basketball coach Tricia Fabbri stood on the sideline that afternoon when Tigers players knelt.

“I think how it’s been dealt with at the highest level just has a trickle-down effect,” Fabbri said. “You would understand young kids being nervous about what a university would think about them taking a stance. I think there are examples going on in real life that would give them real pause.”

Fabbri noted that Kaepernick, two seasons after his initial kneel, is still out of a job in the NFL. Eric Reid, who was Kaepernick’s teammate in San Francisco. only recently got signed again after a two-year hiatus from the NFL.

NFL owners came up with a policy that forces players to stand and “show respect” for the flag. And, President Donald Trump has made the athletes’ displays a rally cry, calling players who protest “sons of bitches” and going so far as to suggest they don’t belong in the U.S.

In 2018, ESPN the Magazine senior writer Howard Bryant published “The Heritage: Black Athletes, A Divided America, and the Politics of Patriotism.” The book details a history of athlete protest dating back to the 1940s, as well as police brutality against people of color reaching back even farther.

“Look at the people who speak out, they get killed,” Bryant said metaphorically. “What happened to Tommie Smith and John Carlos? They got destroyed. What happened to Muhammad Ali? He got destroyed? What happened to Colin Kaepernick? He got destroyed.”

The message, Bryant suggested, to college athletes is clear — stand or be destroyed.

Still, many see the complexity of the simple act of kneeling.

Quinnipiac’s chief diversity officer Don Sawyer, a former member of the military, said, “When we think about the people who are defending our freedom and fighting for the Constitution, they are fighting for our right to be able to protest in this nation.”

It is this culture that has been created by America and by a lot of these sports leagues that causes a lot of athletes, African American ones in particular, to exercise extreme caution when speaking out on social issues, and the pressures are magnified when examined from a college athlete’s perspective.

“I think in the college game, guys feel like they can be easily replaced and they don’t have the security to do something that could jeopardize their position,” said Taylor McHugh, a senior guard on the Bryant University men’s basketball team in Smithfield, Rhode Island. “A lot of guys fear the consequence and the backlash a little more than pros. The consequences are more severe.”

This idea of fear is one that comes up often for college athletes thinking of standing up for social justice. Ironically, most schools do not have policies that prohibit athletes from speaking out.

“We had conversations as an athletic department saying, ‘If it was to happen, what would be our reaction?; And the reaction would not be a retaliatory one,” Quinnipiac athletic director Greg Amodio said. “We are not interested in stifling anybody’s ability to deliver a message.”

Amodio said he actually hasn’t heard of policies elsewhere, either.

“When a lot of the protesting was going on, there was a lot of conversations amongst ADs saying, ‘What would you do? What would you do?’ and nothing like that ever came up,” he said.

Still, no athlete at Quinnipiac has put the lack of a policy to the test.

“I think the biggest reason is control. I think the player’s believe that they don’t have as much power as they have,” Bryant stated. “You walk in the door and they make it seem like they are doing you the biggest favor in the world. It is a matter of power, it is a matter of mindset.”

It seems fear has held the athletes in place.

“I’ve had friends who are college athletes who were thinking about protesting during the anthem, and it wasn’t necessarily, ‘If I protest, I’ll lose minutes,” said Trey Phills, a senior guard on the Yale men’s basketball team. “(Rather,) it was, ‘If I protest, this is going to detract from the team’s focus before a game,’ and the coach might have pushed against that or made them reconsider.”

College coaches and college administrators have an immeasurable impact on their players and the voice or lack thereof that their players have. Whether they explicitly state that protesting or participating in acts of activism are prohibited, athletes usually have a good understanding of what is and is not acceptable in the eyes of the university.

“I don’t recall someone specifically saying not to do it, but you could kind of feel the vibe that that might not be something that the university would like us to do,” McHugh said.

“In college, we’re young and we’re still trying to figure things out and often times you just want to take the path of least resistance just because you don’t know how that activism would affect your college career,” Phills said.

The fear of the unknown is a common theme among many college athletes. Not knowing how the coach would react, not knowing how the administration would react, not knowing how fans will react, or even potential employers.

College athletes often have worked their entire lives to put themselves in a position where they can have security in their life post college. The fear of losing all of that in the blink of an eye, as Kaepernick and many others did, is tangible.

Another factor is that NCAA student-athletes feel they are at the mercy of their respective universities when, in fact, the exact opposite may be the reality. Take, for instance, the collective action in 2015 of the University of Missouri’s football team, which threatened to boycott all football activities until the university president was fired or resigned. The football players — as well as many other students — were upset with the president Tim Wolfe’s handling of several racially charged incidents on campus. Two days after the threat, Wolfe stepped down.

“The common thread through Kaepernick, Kain Colter (who led a fight for the unionization of college football players in 2014) when he was at Northwestern, and (activist) Paul Robeson, is political education,” said Kevin Blackistone, a Washington Post sports columnist and professor of Journalism at the University of Maryland.

“They didn’t allow their colleges and universities to use them. They didn’t take study for granted — and that allowed them to understand not only their individual place in society, but the collective space people of color occupy.”

Jordan, who led the action for the Princeton women’s basketball team, got it.

“I think the comparative lack of activism at the college level can be, at least partially, traced to a feeling of uncertainty about our futures,” she said. “As college students, often without guaranteed employment, there is definitely a sense that we have not ‘made’ it yet. Consequently, I feel as if my future is very much dependent on the good will of others who want to see me do well.”

Athletes struggling with Crohn’s Disease battle more than opponents


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Photo courtesy – IPZ, Team USA, YaleBulldogs

By: Joshua Silverman

  

Former Yale University basketball forward Matt Townsend remembers hearing the diagnosis.

“Crohn’s disease.”

“Lifelong,” he recalls the doctor saying. “Daily medication.”

The doctor’s conclusion devastated Townsend, a 6-foot-7 Rhodes Scholar who graduated in 2015. 

“I just remember going home and crying in the shower,” he said. “Growing up, I can’t really remember other times emotionally crying like that.”

Crohn’s disease affects over 780,000 people in the United States. It’s an inflammatory disease that attacks the small bowel and colon. While the cause is unknown, the pain can be so bad people can’t get out of bed.

The pain and symptoms that come with it can often lead to surgery and the removal of the infected parts of a person’s intestines. On top of the physical pain, the disease often exacts an emotional toll.

Athletes are not immune to the disease’s punishment, either.

For Matt Townsend, former National Football League quarterback David Garrard, former National Hockey League wing Theo Fleury, Olympic swimmer Kathleen Baker, Cleveland Cavalier forward Larry Nance Jr. and others, Crohn’s disease, and the symptoms that come with it, are just more competition. 

Along with the emotions of being diagnosed, there is also the pain. Garrard, who has felt the punishment of NFL linebackers, could barely stand up his stomach hurt so badly.

“When I reported to the team in March of 2004, I told our trainer that my stomach’s been bothering me and it’s kind of always been a little upset,” Garrard said.

“He gave me some kind of diuretic,” he added. “I went back home later that night and threw it up and just sort of realized, ok, there is something more going on here than just an upset stomach. I went to the gastroenterologist the very next day and they did all these tests. The doctor got me in the room and said, it looks like it’s Crohn’s disease.”

He was blindsided by what was ahead. 

“I said, ‘OK, great I’ve never heard of that so it can’t be that bad,’” Garrard said. “I called my wife on the phone and told her and she started to look things up. She said, ‘Wow, David it’s a lot worse than what we thought it was.’”

When Garrard was diagnosed in 2004, he had research and technology available. That can’t be said for Fleury, whose diagnosis came in 1995

“I was searching for information and ways to cope, ways to heal, ways to cure,” Fleury said. “I was at the mercy of my doctors and having to trust them and that they knew what they were doing.”   Fleury, a perennial all-star, would continue on to score 445 goals over his 15 years career, mostly playing for the Calgary Flames.


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Townsend dealt with the disease privately.

“I think that living with a chronic illness, I never wanted to be framed by that disease,” Townsend said. “I didn’t want people to look at me differently or question my ability to perform at a high level. I guess I wanted more control over how I could shape my identity and felt more comfortable doing that without discussing that part of my life.”

According to the American College of Gastroenterology, Crohn’s disease — which has no cure — likely develops from a combination of genetic, environmental. and immune system factors.

While the disease has a lot of negatives associated with it, it also brings an opportunity to build on your foundation. 

“I think any adversity you face in life where you don’t use destructive ways to deal with whatever you’re dealt with puts you in a position of education and educating yourself,” Fleury said. “That then allows you to help other people when they reach out for help.” 

Dr. Thomas Ullman, Chief Division of Gastroenterology at Montefiore Medical Center, has seen his patients’ struggle differently depending on their lifestyle.

“While an office worker or a college student might have the benefit of working from home or adjusting their schedule in some way to account for having a chronic illness, no such luxury is afforded to the professional athlete,” Dr. Ullman said. “Anecdotally, athletes in must adopt a resilience not known to non-athletes, likely a part of their emotional make-up t given the long hours of difficult physical training that is at the core of all professional athletes.”  


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Garrard, who was drafted in the fourth round of the 2002 NFL Draft, played nine seasons in the NFL, all with the Jacksonville Jaguars, for whom he started 76 games. While he faced challenges in the NFL, his battle with Crohn’s was different.

“Crohn’s was something I had to rely on doctors and on medicine and on eating healthy for,” Garrard said. “If I can get through something like that, then the other stuff is basically minute compared to that. This is something that could have almost destroyed my whole life if I really let it and didn’t attack it head on and be positive throughout it.”

At the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janiero, Baker, an American from Winston Salem, North Carolina, won a gold medal in the 4×100 medley relay and a silver in the individual 100-meter backstroke at just 19 years old. She had already been dealing with her diagnosis for six years.

“I have an extreme appreciation for my sport and Crohn’s has made me appreciate being healthy,” Baker said. “It’s definitely built up so much mental toughness whether that be in school, swimming or just in life.”

As an autoimmune disease, Crohn’s affects people in different ways. For example, while one course of action may ease one patient’s symptoms, it may not for another individual.

“I think from a very young age I had learned to, for lack of a better word, suck it up,” Townsend added. “I don’t think that’s always the best approach to things but I think for me personally it was very helpful and focusing my effort.”

The emotional effects of the disease can hamper athletes nearly as much as the physical, too.

“When I was diagnosed, my coach told me we weren’t going to have to change any of my dreams because of this. I think that really meant a lot to me,” Baker said. “My parents really helped me through everything and really made me feel like this wouldn’t deteriorate any part of my life.”

Garrard turned to his teammates for support.

“They realized – in almost an instant – that the game was almost taken from me,” Garrard said. “They showed up when I was in the hospital when I had my surgery (to have some his intestines removed). A lot of the coaches came in and wanted to make sure that I wasn’t just there by myself — that they were there with me.” 

Fleury, who also battled addiction during his 16-season career in the NHL, leaned on his sense of humor.

“I just think that you go through periods of time where you always have to be weary of where washrooms are in every situation that you’re in because you never know what’s going to happen,” Fleury said. “I’ve had lots of accidents and lots of times when I wasn’t close to a washroom and accidents happen.”

After his diagnosis, Cleveland Cavaliers forward Larry Nance Jr. was looking for a role model. Now, he has formed his own charity, Athletes vs. Crohn’s disease.

“What is really cool is Larry is one of those kids that, when he was first diagnosed, did research on what other athletes are out there that have it and of course my name came up for him and he was like, ‘OK, this is my dude, this is my hero,” Garrard said of the 2015 first-round pick.

Nance, who is 25 years old and in his fourth NBA season, speaks publicly about Crohn’s disease, how it has affected him and how he deals with it.

“I’m proud to see that one of those kids that said I was an inspiration to him actually made it through. (He) does a lot of charity and, hopefully, I was able to be a little piece of that,” Garrard said.


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After facing Crohn’s head on, these star athletes are able to look at the disease as yet another challenge to overcome. They managed to play their respective sports at the highest levels despite the trouble that was happening inside their bodies. Taking on the disease wasn’t just enough for them, they have now become an inspiration for the next generation of kids growing up with Crohn’s.

 

Best of the Rest: 

 

Blue and gold… and green

By Ana Grosso


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College is a place of innovation, thought development and self-awareness, making it the perfect environment to educate students to fight back against climate change. But often, students’ day-to-day priorities overshadow our environmental consciousness. With the constant on-the-go lifestyle and busy schedules, student waste goes overlooked and sustainability takes a back seat.

Erin LeDrew, senior sociology major and vice president of Students for Environmental Action (SEA), set out on a mission to see just how conducive to waste the college lifestyle can be. LeDrew’s experiment, called “A Week Without Waste,” attempted to reduce the amount of paper and plastic that college students rely so heavily upon.

“I would say the biggest challenge was, especially living on York last year, they don’t have anything reusable,” LeDrew said.

Quinnipiac University’s York Hill campus only has plastic and paper forms of dish and silverware, “So, if I was reusing anything, I was bringing it from my dorm,” she said. “I definitely got looks. It was definitely a stigma like, ‘what are you doing?!’ but there was literally no other option.”

Even on the university’s Mount Carmel campus, LeDrew had limited options. She could not eat from the sushi or noodle bar as those items only come in plastic, she couldn’t grab any items to go or eat any snacks that came in packaging, or even eat anything that required toppings. The cafe independently packages everything from ketchup to cream cheese and peanut butter to maple syrup. Additionally, whenever LeDrew went to order hot or freshly-made food, she had to remember to ask the server to put it on a ceramic plate instead of the default paper one.

LeDrew brought reusable silverware and dishware with her to campus every day to eliminate single-use plastic waste. “It was so hard when I was busy because there’s no compostable takeaway containers, they’re all plastic,” LeDrew recalled. “I remember running between classes and meetings and unless I could sit down and eat, I wasn’t eating anything unless it was an apple or a banana.”

LeDrew found Coffee, tea, and water the easiest to consume waste-free in the cafe because she brought her own reusable coffee mug and water bottle. However, smoothies, iced coffee and most juices were not feasible because they only came in single-use plastic.


This is an example of two people’s waste from just a quick snack in the café. Multiply this by 7,361 undergraduate students, and those living on campus eat at least three meals per day.

This is an example of two people’s waste from just a quick snack in the café. Multiply this by 7,361 undergraduate students, and those living on campus eat at least three meals per day.


Colleges witness significant spikes in their solid waste at the end of the school year as well, according to Connecticut’s Department of Energy & Environmental Protection.

Colleges witness significant spikes in their solid waste at the end of the school year as well, according to Connecticut’s Department of Energy & Environmental Protection.

There are other aspects of the university outside of food waste that challenge just how sustainable this campus is.

Hundreds of students live within just two or three miles of each other, yet the university’s north parking lot is filled to capacity every school day.

“Nobody uses the shuttles and I just wish that people would carpool more, even just going into town or grocery shopping,” LeDrew said. Obviously, students’ schedules do not match up perfectly, but even the minor inconvenience of coming to campus a little early or staying a little later is enough to deter students from carpooling or taking the shuttle.

“Also, why wouldn’t you want to save on gas?!” LeDrew added.

This attitude of indifference perpetuates the lack of sustainability at Quinnipiac, and creates a stigma around environmental consciousness.

“I honestly think that Quinnipiac as a whole is extremely wasteful in most ways,” LeDrew said. “Just for example, I heard a girl complaining about how the default on printers is double-sided. She likes when they’re printed single-sided and doesn’t want to have to choose the option to print single sided.”


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A company called Resonate LLC. conducted a Campus Culture Report in 2014. In the report, the company wrote, “We sometimes heard students characterized as uninformed and unengaged. A related perception that we heard is that the student body generally suffers from an attitude of entitlement.”

The combination of student loftiness and poor encouragement lead to a deadly cycle of indifference towards the environment.

“I feel like people really just don’t care here,” Jen Zurek, sophomore nursing major said.

63.7 percent of Quinnipiac students agreed that most students are not really concerned about sustainability issues, according to Resonate.


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Indifference is also fueled by convenience and vice versa. Quinnipiac’s staff works tirelessly behind the scenes to ensure an efficient and enjoyable college experience for the students. The rugs and floors are spotless, but there is never a sign of anyone polishing them. The facilities department cleans every student’s bathroom who lives on main campus before they even wake up in the morning. When disposing of dishes in the cafeteria, students simply place all of their dirty dishes, trash, food, and recyclables onto a speedy conveyor belt that whisks away the mess just as quickly as it was created.

But, is environmental consciousness being sacrificed for the sake of efficiency and student service?

“It’s easier to grab plastic water bottles you can just throw out and plastic utensils you don’t have to walk to the conveyor belt for,” LeDrew said, explaining possible reasoning for such environmental indifference.


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The grass on the quad is always perfectly groomed, yet one hardly ever sees a lawn mower. In fact, when you look at Quinnipiac’s sprawling Mount Carmel campus, one of the first things you’ll notice is that it looks quite green. Ironically, that “green” look ends up doing more harm than good for the environment because of the water waste and pesticide runoff.

A running joke among students is that no matter what time of year, the grass on the quad is always green. LeDrew heard students lamenting over the fact that the university’s sprinkler system was on during the intense rain storm on Sept. 25 in which Hamden saw seven inches of rain in just one hour.

However, the university actually labels its York Hill campus as the “green” one.

At the summit of York Hill looms 25 cylindrical wind turbines that dominate the grassy mound. However, even on the windiest of days, only one or two rotate ambitiously. Students on campus often wonder what their purpose is.

“Those things have to be broken,” senior Katie Herrick said. “I literally haven’t heard anyone mention them or their purpose since I’ve been here.”

There’s a reason why.

“At the moment, the wind turbines on York Hill are decorations,” said engineering professor John Reap. “Mechanical and electrical problems rendered them incapable of producing power some time ago, and to my knowledge, the university does not have a plan to repair, replace or reconfigure them.”

According to The Quinnipiac Chronicle, “The reason the wind turbines have been almost entirely non-functional since they began to fail is because the manufacturer, Windspire, went bankrupt.”

“Anyone can see for themselves, if you look at the wind turbines on York Hill, they’re never moving,” 3+1 public relations major Leah Lavin said.  

The sprawling 250-acre campus was completed in 2010. Reap said that the wind turbines had not been working since before he arrived at the university in 2012. The turbines were originally designed to generate just over 32,600 kilowatt hours per year. That would be roughly enough power to light almost 450 light bulbs for one month.

Other efforts on York’s campus include 1,232 photovoltaic solar panels on the roof of the Crescent Residence Hall. The panels convert energy from the sun to electricity and generate about 250,000 kilowatt hours per year.

“There is so much more room for solar panels not only on York Hill, but all over campus,” Lavin said.

Reap believes that the solar system on York Hill feeds the university’s electrical grid.

Despite those steps, the campus’ cafeteria still uses single-use silverware and dishware.

Resonate LLC.’s report noted that “(t)he QU student body is viewed, by students and faculty alike, as intelligent, but generally unaware of and unengaged with sustainability… We heard several examples of students being unwilling to perform small feats of conservation, such as turning off lights when leaving a room (because ‘I pay $50,000 to go here, so I can leave the lights on if I want.’)”

“People don’t realize that they have an effect on everything,” LeDrew said. “Especially if you’re someone who’s constantly buying way more than you can eat, or just buying plastic water bottles every single day just to get rid of your meal plan.”


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Mandatory meal plan is another factor that prompts wastefulness on the university level. “I think that people have no concept of what they’re wasting because a lot of people have $600 left and will just buy whatever they want,” LeDrew said.  

Resonate’s Campus Culture Report also stated that, “Students expressed views about fellow students saying, “They don’t recycle at all,” and “In the dining hall, they throw everything away.”

Lavin also noticed that, “The trash cans are not only overflowing with stuff that could have been reusable, but also food that could have been donated or put into a compost system which would be really helpful for our environment.”

Quinnipiac has not drawn much attention to the campus culture reports.

Political science professor Sean Duffy said, “As with many ‘studies,’ this one seems to have lived primarily on a shelf somewhere – it’s never really guided any action on the part of QU.”

Even at a local level, Resonate LLC. noted in its Sustainability-Focused Curriculum Report that, “Other benchmarking metrics show that QU lags behind a majority of the Peers/Aspirants in broad-based sustainability performance recognition, as well as involvement in industry organizations. We note, however, that the Peers/Aspirants have among them some very high performers with respect to sustainability.”

LeDrew would be one of those performers. She interns at the Albert Schweitzer Institute in the

Food Systems & Sustainability division, and is working to change people’s mindsets towards waste. “It’s such a disconnect for people,” she said.

“The Albert Schweitzer institute is a huge advocator for environmentalism on campus, and it’s very much overlooked. Not many people know what it does at all actually,” Lavin remarked. Duffy is the executive director of the Albert Schweitzer Institute and hopes to create an official space there specifically for environmentalism.

One of the things LeDrew is working on at the institute is a hierarchy with food waste. “The idea behind the hierarchy on campus is that the first priority with excess food is donation. The next option is composting or reusing, and disposing is the absolute last resort,” she said. She is also hoping to put a large scale on the wall of the café to make students more aware of the effect their waste has.

LeDrew is not alone in hoping that these efforts come to fruition. Reap chairs the university’s sustainability committee, which has roughly 24 faculty members, but welcomes students as well. At the bi-semester meetings, the members discuss green opportunities across campus such as local farmers markets, the greenhouse on the North Haven campus and composting opportunities on Main Campus.


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Perhaps these initiatives inspired the university to further their sustainability efforts. Quinnipiac is offering environmental studies as an independent major this year, and Anna Ciacciarella is taking full advantage. She is a sophomore English & environmental studies double major and on Oct. 3-7, she and fellow sophomore Sabrina Escobar attended the Society for Environmental Journalists conference in Flint, MI.


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At the conference, Ciacciarella and Escobar learned how to bring issues of social justice as well as wastefulness to light at a local level. “I think people here feel like they don’t need to care about the environment because it’s not directly impacting them. If they were in a community such as Flint, Michigan, they would be feeling the effects, and they would realize they have to make a difference,” Ciacciarella said. “A lot of students go for the window shopping of environmentalism… but the way we’re going to get things done is with the students realizing we have to make true change, not just change at face value.”

If the university continues to engage students in sustainability efforts, perhaps that would in turn inspire students to engage other students.

Donating debunked

By: Kelly Ryan

Driving down streets in Hamden, Wallingford and other surrounding towns, you may spot a handful of big, metal bins settled in corners of parking lots at gas stations, laundromats or car washes.

On the side of each bin printed in big letters may read “Clothes & Shoes.” There is probably a big “THANK YOU!” stamped somewhere on it too.

There may be a pile of stretched out pajamas shoved in the back of your bottom dresser drawer or a bag of too-small t-shirts in the trunk of your car. The first place you may think to drop your unwanted clothes may be in one of these bins.

But have you ever put any thought into where the clothing you may drop in ends up?

Where does all of it go?

Read more at Shorthand.com.

Northern Hamden’s lack of sewers may be holding development back

By Aron Fried

HAMDEN, Conn. —  South of Quinnipiac University, Whitney Avenue is lined with restaurants and shops and is considered Hamden’s central hub.


Green areas are connected to the sewer. On the map on the right, the area north of “Mill River” is all on septic.

Green areas are connected to the sewer. On the map on the right, the area north of “Mill River” is all on septic.

Drive north, past Quinnipiac and Sleeping Giant State Park, and sidewalks disappear a few miles out. Businesses become scarce, and the spaces between buildings start to resemble football fields.  

Charles Hague, a business owner on that stretch of road, thinks sewers, of all things may play a role in creating those stark differences. Specifically, the fact that there aren’t any.  

His restaurant and bar, Aunt Chilada’s, has been there 25 years. It’s a popular spot among Quinnipiac students and like almost every other business and home in northern Hamden, it has a septic tank.

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It’s an extra burden and an extra cost
— Charles Hague

“It’s an extra burden and an extra cost,” Hague said.


Cement lids of Aunt Chilada’s septic tank.

Cement lids of Aunt Chilada’s septic tank.

Buried underneath Aunt Chilada’s front lawn, the septic tank doesn’t look like much above ground, just nine cement disks in a row. Hague calls it ugly. For a restaurant owner, he knows an awful lot about how septic tanks work. He needs to.

Septic tanks are domestic wastewater treatment systems, built underground and usually made of concrete, fiberglass or plastic. The tank collects both liquid and solid waste and filters the water to the surface.

The water moves through a pipe and into to a leaching field where it disperses. The solid waste is pumped out periodically and transported to a treatment facility. The diagram below shows the basic functionality of a septic tank.


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Septic systems differ from the more common sanitary sewer, which is an interconnected system of underground pipes that carry sewage directly to a wastewater treatment facility.  

Sewers are generally publicly owned, while individual septic tanks belong entirely to the property owner, and — as a result — he or she is forced to face the entire cost of maintenance and repairs.

“It’s costly, and you basically put people that are not in the sewer business in the sewer business,” said Tom Sgroi, the director of engineering at Greater New Haven Water Pollution Control Authority (GNHWPCA), the wastewater treatment facility that has served Hamden since 2005.

It’s a predicament that could be unattractive to potential new business owners, especially those who want to open restaurants, which produce a lot of waste.  

A standard septic tank for a three-bedroom home holds about 1,000 gallons and the solid waste needs to be pumped every three to five years, according to EPA recommendations. Hague’s tank holds 5,000 gallons and it gets pumped four times a year by different private companies.

Hague said it costs him thousands of dollars annually, but he would not be specific.

By comparison, pumping a standard 1,000-gallon tank generally costs between $150 and $300. In the case of complete system failure, the cost to replace the tank also falls entirely on the owner, which could be anywhere between $3,000 and $7,000 or sometimes even more, depending on a wide variety of factors.  

While the cost of the septic tank didn’t deter him from opening Aunt Chilada’s on Whitney Avenue, Hague said most businesses would rather not have to take the risk.

Brad Macdowall, a district representative in Hamden, is concerned about the town’s ability to recruit new businesses, especially considering its current economic situation.  

A 2018 report by the Yankee Institute for Public Policy, a conservative think tank, found Hamden to be in the worst financial condition of all Connecticut towns.  

Macdowall acknowledged Hamden’s struggles, but made sure to point out the partisan nature of the organization. He also stressed the importance of turning Hamden into a place that could sustain business growth.

“We’re not going to see the kind of new business expansion that we need to see if we’re not offering the kind of infrastructure that those kinds of businesses need,” Macdowall said. “Why would a business expand there if they can go elsewhere with the sort of infrastructure that they’re looking for?”

Apart from the lack of sewers, the location — just minutes away from Quinnipiac — which has grown tremendously in the past couple of decades, couldn’t be better for business.  

Despite that, the area remains largely underdeveloped — much to Hague’s surprise.

That section of Whitney Avenue hasn’t changed much since Hague has been there. He has begun to believe it will not change.


Aunt Chilada’s exterior and interior.

Aunt Chilada’s exterior and interior.

Hamden resident Paul Ferraro feels similarly and thinks new businesses could liven up the town.

“Businesses have been in and out, which is strange considering the amount of traffic from the school,” Ferraro said. “I’d like to see more come to stay.”

Macdowall wants more business in this area. To do so, he believes the Town of Hamden must expand the sewer system to cover at least Whitney Avenue all the way north to Cheshire.

The expansion is part of Macdowall’s vision to reduce the long-term financial burden on business owners and residents and allow them to forget about their sewage.

However, it’s a lot more complicated than Hamden just signing off on new infrastructure development since the GNHWPCA owns the sewers and would have final say on any new additions to the existing system.  

Right now, Hamden is having early discussions about putting together a plan, according to Mark Austin, the town engineer.

“I heard some chatter going on about it recently,” Austin said, but chose not to elaborate.

Macdowall confirmed that the Town of Hamden administrators are taking some of the first steps.

“We’re doing the research and we’re doing our due diligence so that we can show the water authority why this would be beneficial,” Macdowall said.

According to Section 4 of the GNHWPCA’s Sewer Ordinance, the governing body of the municipality has to approve the project before proposing the expansion.

Sgroi calls it a “chicken and egg” situation, because the GNHWPCA generally doesn’t care if a town wants to connect or add to its sewer system as long as it has the capacity at the plant, everything works properly and it doesn’t impact any of the existing system or its existing customers.

This puts the pressure back on Hamden, which, though it does not own the sewers, would have to ensure any new infrastructure meets the requirements of the treatment facility.

The uneven terrain makes matters more difficult. Running into rock, for example, presents a real risk and, Austin said, “that gets really expensive really quick.”

Hamden is already deep in debt, and while Austin said the Town of Hamden would have to pay the initial cost for installation, Macdowall is confident Hamden wouldn’t end up paying for anything. In reality, he said, the cost would show up in residents’ water bills.

Austin added, “As people connect to the new sewers, they pay their portion of the cost to put it in. So ultimately, the cost goes to the user.”

In the long run, connecting to the sewage system could still be cheaper.

Hague, for one, would welcome the change.

For him, it would mean no longer having to worry about the upkeep of a septic tank, and he would appreciate not shouldering that burden as, he said, business owners do prefer sanitary sewers.

Macdowall doesn’t think projects with the potential to stimulate the economy can wait, either.

“Quite frankly, I think we can’t afford not to do it,” Macdowall said. “If we keep using initial cost as a reason to not continue to develop, then we’re going to stay behind. We’re going to continue to fall behind and stay behind.”

Podcast: The state of juvenile justice in Connecticut is “in the sauce”

By Ryan Ansel

Juvenile justice reform is a job that will never be completely done. But thanks to activists, advocates and lawmakers, the state of Connecticut has seen some progress in recent times. Better knowledge in trends and statistics turns into better implemented practices in the fight to reduce crime and incarceration rates among the state’s youth.

It’s a known fact that some kids are born into circumstances that leave them at a disadvantage compared to others. With the help of lawmakers and advocates molding equity into an innately inequitable system, the state’s most troubled youth have a support system working in their best interest.

Hear the experiences of those affected by juvenile justice reform, from those who pass laws, to the ones who were incarcerated as children.

These are the voices of juvenile justice in Connecticut.

Saving face: Why the NCAA mandates full face shields in hockey

By: Justin Cait

Chase Priskie exercised his patience and waited for his name to be called at the 2016 NHL Entry Draft.

After going undrafted in his first two years of eligibility, Priskie, a college hockey defenseman from Pembroke Pines, Florida, felt his nerves settle in the sixth-round of the draft when he was selected by the Washington Capitals.

A freshman at the time, Priskie watched his name pop up on the draft board from his home in Hamden, Connecticut and with his Quinnipiac teammates by his side. Suddenly, he had to make quick and drastic changes to his summer plans.

Read more at Shorthand.com