Hamden council members divided over alleged police misconduct

UPDATED – Feb. 15, 2019

By Michaela Mendygral


(Photo Credit: Hamden Police Department Facebook)

(Photo Credit: Hamden Police Department Facebook)

A proposal to create a civilian review board to oversee police conduct has split the Hamden Legislative Council, with six members formally backing the idea and one in opposition, according to Facebook posts by councilors Wednesday, Feb. 6.

Council members proposed the idea Wednesday night in the wake of revelations that Hamden Police Officer Andrew Lipford threatened to report a suspect to ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement), prompting an internal investigation by Police Chief John Cappiello, Mayor Curt Balzano Leng wrote in a statement Wednesday morning.

The controversy emerged after footage of Lipford’s bodycam was leaked to WTNH news Tuesday, Feb. 5. The video showed the events after Hamden resident Victor Medina allegedly ran a red light and led officers in a chase until he reached his home in February 2018.

Lipford threatened to call ICE after pulling Medina over and threatened to shoot Medina if he did anything he was not told to, in the bodycam footage.

“A civilian review board would hold the police department accountable and prevent incidents like this from happening,” At-Large Councilwoman Lauren Garrett said in a statement on Facebook Wednesday, Feb. 6.

Garrett has said that her main concern about the current proposal of an investigation is that the issue is not being handled seriously.

“I think that any time you are investigating wrongdoing the person should be put on leave,”Garrett said.

Hamden Police Department confirmed Lipford is still on active duty.

“We feel that an internal investigation is not an appropriate way to investigate these matters,” 9th District Councilman Brad Macdowall.

Although a majority of council members have signed onto the Facebook statement, not all 15 members agree on the idea of a civilian review board.

“Our talks have, at this point, been limited to the need for a civilian review board that is independent from the police department and has subpoena powers,” Macdowall said.

Seventh District Councilman Michael Colaiacovo opted out of the joint statement and instead released his own in a Facebook post.

“Everyone, including police officers, are entitled to due process,” Calaiacovo said. “I am saddened that Mayor Leng and some members of the council felt such a strong need to publicly pass judgement on this situation before an investigation was completed.”

Hamden has not sought a civilian review board in the past, Macdowall said. So it is unclear to the six council members what they would want a Hamden Civilian Review Board to look like or how members would be appointed, Macdowall explained.

“[Civilian review boards] vary in structure and power, ranging from only making recommendations to police directors about disciplinary action to having the power to subpoena officers,” according to the Journal of Public Health.

But whatever form it might take, Garrett said that having a police review panel in place could have an impact on future police-civilian interactions like that involving Lipford.

“If we had a review board, maybe something like this wouldn’t catch us flat-footed,” she said.

UPDATE – Feb. 15, 2019

Ronald Suraci, regional director with United Public Service Employees/COPS, showed his confidence in the officers being cleared in a statement he made Thursday.

“It is apparent to me that the media and other individuals affiliated with the Town of Hamden are jumping to conclusions about the appropriateness of the officer’s conduct without the benefit of a complete and thorough review of the facts and circumstances leading to the arrest of Victor Medina on the night of February 8, 2018,” Suraci told the New Haven Register. “Town leaders and the public should reserve judgment and comment of the officers until such time as the results of an untainted and unbiased investigation are revealed. I am confident that when such an investigation is completed that the officers will be cleared of any wrongdoing.”

HQ Press will continue to have updates as the story progresses.

Football fans call Super Bowl LIII the “most boring ever”

ATLANTA – The New England Patriots’ 13-3 victory over the Los Angeles Rams in Super Bowl LIII on Sunday was a record-breaking night, but it won’t go down in history as a very memorable one.

Among the Super Bowl records set: fewest points by both teams (16), fewest points by winning team (13), most consecutive drives ending with a punt (8 by the Rams) and longest punt (65 yards).

The story of this game, however, wasn’t defined by what did happen, but what didn’t.

The defense-dominated game started off slow, with the Patriots settling for two field goal attempts for a 3-0 lead going into the half.

“Yeah, it was tough,” Patriots quarterback Tom Brady said, of going into halftime. “We just couldn’t make the big play, we just couldn’t stay on the field on third down. We just knew we had a whole half to go, defense set the tone.”


Photo courtesy of David J. Phillip, AP.

Photo courtesy of David J. Phillip, AP.

Maroon 5’s halftime show offered fans no relief: from a shirtless Adam Levine to Big Boi’s brief appearance to Spongebob Squarepants’ cameo, fans took to social media to express their disappointment in what used to be one of the biggest nights in music.

“The halftime show was super boring,” Quinnipiac senior Urushi Madani said. “And the game didn’t get exciting until the end.”

When the Rams finally got some points on the board in the third quarter, Greg Zuerlein kicked a 53-yard field goal, falling just one yard short of the longest ever in a Super Bowl.

Though the Patriots found some scoring opportunities, they couldn’t close out until the fourth quarter.

Pats rookie Sony Michel finally broke through the end zone with seven minutes left in regulation, scoring the game-winning touchdown.

“Finally we kind of broke through in the fourth quarter,” Brady said. “We kind of needed that.”

The Connecticut Open is heading to China

By Owen Meech

After 21 years of hosting the Connecticut Open, New Haven is forced to say goodbye to professional tennis.


Former WTA world number one Simona Halep at the Connecticut Open in 2014.

Former WTA world number one Simona Halep at the Connecticut Open in 2014.

The WTA Premier tournament, which took place annually at the Connecticut Tennis Center at Yale, is now moving across the globe to its new home in China.

Since the conclusion of the final tournament in 2018, the Tennis Foundation of Connecticut (TFC) board conducted an analysis of the financial model of the Connecticut Open and deemed it is no longer viable without a title sponsor.

The TFC Board decided after an extensive sponsor search to sell the Premier WTA sanction to APG, a leading Sports and Entertainment company prominent in Asia. The tournament will now take place in September in Zhengzhou City.

The Connecticut Open was the third best attended women’s-only WTA tournament in 2018 and has generated more than $10 million annually in economic impact for the City of New Haven and State of Connecticut.

Taking place every August, the tournament has long served a warmup for the US Open, attracting top female players from around the world, such as former champions Venus Williams, Caroline Wozniacki and Petra Kvitova.

“It has been an amazing 21-year run for women’s professional tennis in New Haven and we are truly grateful to all the fans, volunteers, players, media and sponsors involved,” Tournament Director Anne Worcester in a statement. “While we remember our great champions, we are most proud of the benefits the tournament has brought to the local community.”

Worcester never could find the help she needed to continue funding the tournament, approaching 88 companies about becoming the title sponsor before 2012.

Under Gov. Dannel Malloy, the state eventually purchased the event for $618,000 and turned it into a 501(C)(3) nonprofit, guaranteeing it would remain in Connecticut.

The goal was for the event to become self-sufficient, but instead time and money expired.

Ian Leichter, a senior at Quinnipiac University, is one of many feeling nostalgic about the end of an era, as the Connecticut Open provided him with his first internship experience.

“I met some great people and learned a lot about the real world,” Leichter said.

Despite the event’s conclusion, New Haven Mayor Toni Harp added a glimmer of hope for tennis fans across the state.

“The Connecticut Open has had an undeniably positive impact on New Haven over the past 21 years,” Harp said. “We remain hopeful that professional tennis will return to New Haven in the very near future.”

IRIS’s annual Run for Refugees 5K draws thousands

By HQ Press staff

Multimedia by Lee Colon

NEW HAVEN, Connecticut — As temperatures climbed into the mid-40s, about 3,000 runners filled the streets of the East Rock neighborhood Sunday morning to raise funds for Integrated Refugee and Immigrant Services.

The Run for Refugees 5-kilometer run, which is held each year on the morning of Super Bowl Sunday, raises tens of thousands of dollars for the non-profit and draws local and state politicians.

About eighty Quinnipiac University students and faculty joined a yellow-clad team representing the Global Public Health programs.

Wendy Sewack, assistant director of global public health, helped organize the team.

“Especially because we work in global public health, this is something all our future health care practitioners are going to need to see and be a part of, so we wanted to show our support,” she said.

Sewack said 2019’s IRIS Run for Refugees is the third time QU Global Public Health has sponsored a team.

Polar Vortex 2019: Hamden warming centers are open as temps dip below zero

By HQ Press staff

As the wind chill temperature dipped into negative double digits, the Town of Hamden opened six warming centers where people can go to escape the cold.

Citizens are reminded that warming centers are not shelters and do not provide beds. The spaces, which are located at fire stations, the police station and the Miller Library Complex on Dixwell Avenue, are open 24 hours, however.

Connecticut 211, which serves as a one-stop phone connection to state and local services, has provided links to warming centers beyond Hamden, as well as information for renters without heat, safety tips regarding carbon monoxide and more.

The high temperature on Thursday afternoon is expected to be 16 degrees, while the lows will plummet back to 5 degrees before sunrise Wednesday. Temperatures are not expected to reach above freezing until Saturday afternoon, the Weather Channel reports.


Students at Quinnipiac University brave the below-zero wind chill temperatures as classes carried on as normal Thursday, Jan. 31.  Photo by Molly Yanity/HQ Press

Students at Quinnipiac University brave the below-zero wind chill temperatures as classes carried on as normal Thursday, Jan. 31. Photo by Molly Yanity/HQ Press

College athletes attempt to balance their mental health

By Shane Dennehy

From the outside, a college athlete’s life seems like it would be all glitz and glamour but their lifestyle can be stressful.

“Athletics and specifically college athletics has always been my escape for me,” Mason Johnson, a former member of the Quinnipiac University women’s rugby team said. “Rugby was a place to get away from the rest of life’s problems. Focusing on my goals gave me confidence and taught me how to deal with my stress in a healthy manner.”

Johnson realized his freshman year that he was transgender and during the preseason of his sophomore year he told his team. Although this created relief for him it also caused problems with his anxiety and depression. Johnson had to give up his last two years of rugby in order to become the person that he wanted to be.


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“It’s heartbreaking to be put in a position of choosing between who we are and what we love doing,” Johnson said.

College athletes have to manage practices, games and class if they want to succeed but they also have to balance their mental health as well. Many athletes do not pay attention to this part of their college experience but other athletes are unable to avoid it.

The National Collegiate Athletic Association most recently conducted research in 2015 that found that college campuses were seeing an increase in the number of students that were experiencing mental health issues like anxiety and depression.

Past research done by psychologists showed the athletes were less likely to experience problems with mental health as compared to everyday people. More recent research, like research done by Matthew Bird who holds a doctoral degree in sports psychology, said that athletes are just as likely to experience mental health issues as people in the general population despite their outsider status relative to everyone else.

“It was originally thought that athletes were less likely to experience mental health issues when compared to the everyday person,” said Bird. “We are now starting to see that (athletes) are equally, if not  more likely, to experience them.”

Although college students typically have to balance their social life and school work, college athletes are doing both of those along with having to perform at a high level which only adds to their stress.

“With student-athletes, they have all the additional worries of a college student,” said Bird. “Then they have to deal with their athletic commitments too.”

Part of being a college student is about finding out who you are as a person and what you want to do with the rest of your life. College students will often mess up in some capacity but everyday college students do not have to deal with the public consequences that come with messing up as college athletes do.

Imani McGee-Stafford, who played college basketball at the University of Texas and currently plays for the Atlanta Dream of the Women’s National Basketball Association, said she believes that college athletes are constantly in the spotlight.

“Being a student-athlete is hard because you are shaping the person you want to be but most (college students) do not have their failures broadcasted,” said McGee-Stafford in an interview.

Many everyday people do not feel comfortable talking about their struggles with mental health and college athletes are often the same. People impose this stigma around that often scares them from sharing their problems with the people around them.

“Stigma surrounding mental health issues and mental health help-seeking have been seen as a problem among athletes for a long time,” said Bird. “However, I think that as more athletes talk about their issues this is starting to be reduced.”

According to a study conducted by the University of Michigan in 2014, only 10 percent of college athletes sought help from health services. In 2014 the NCAA released a study that said 69 percent of the male athletes surveyed knew where to go if they had mental health concerns, while 81 percent of female athletes knew where to go.

McGee-Stafford is one of those athletes is choosing to share their story about the role that mental health has played in their life.

“I’ve chosen to live an open life about my mental health,” McGee-Stafford said. “(If I did not share) nobody would know and I would be ok.”

McGee-Stafford is not alone. Kevin Love, a forward for the Cleveland Cavaliers of the National Basketball Association, detailed his struggles with mental illness in an August 2018 interview with ESPN. Another NBA player, DeMar DeRozan, likewise has recently disclosed his battle with depression and anxiety in an article by USA Today. Darius Miles a former NBA player recently shared his story about mental health in The Player’s Tribune.

McGee-Stafford parents got divorced when she was three years old and she ended up living with her Dad because her mother was playing basketball professionally. She said she was sexually assaulted by her stepbrother when she was 8 years old. The assault persisted for years afterward, she said. McGee-Stafford later found out that she was assaulted when she was just an infant which led her to attempt suicide when she was 10 years old. She attempted suicide on three different occasions by the time she turned 15.

McGee-Stafford eventually started playing basketball like her mother Pamela McGee, who is a WNBA Hall of Famer and a member of the United States 1984 Olympic Gold Medal winning team. McGee-Stafford’s stepbrother JaVale McGee currently plays for the Los Angeles Lakers.

McGee-Stafford’s inevitable success on the court led her to the University of Texas where she excelled on the court.

According to a study conducted by Bird, athletes are more likely to receive help for their mental health when referred to by a family member as compared to being referred by a teammate or a coach.

Johnson said she believes that the culture forged by a coach can encourage athletes to disclose mental illness, thus leading to treatment.

“I think it depends on the college, the coach and the individual players on the team,” Johnson said. “I was blessed to be a part of a team where I felt comfortable being vulnerable. I was able to talk to my teammates and coaches without fear of judgment.”

In the 2015 study released by the NCAA 73 percent of the athletes surveyed said that they feel that their coaches care about their player’s mental health. 40 percent of those athletes also said that they were satisfied with the help that they got from their team or college personnel.


Screenshot of the NCAA website and some of the resources offered to NCAA athletes.

Screenshot of the NCAA website and some of the resources offered to NCAA athletes.

The NCAA offers a number of programs for student-athletes to find resources to treat mental illness. Although the NCAA is getting better, athletes still believe that it could get better.

“I think colleges and the NCAA could always do more,” Johnson said. “There are a lot of athletes out there under immense pressure who could benefit from help.”

The NCAA does not offer a clear path to these resources, Johnson said.

“I was able to find therapists and do the things that I needed to to get help,” Johnson said. “But it wasn’t a clear-cut path. The process would have been a lot easier had there been clear steps to follow or if I knew which staff member to reach out to.”

Some athletes choose to be open and share their struggles with mental health openly while others choose to only talk to a few people but Johnson has advice for college athletes.

“My advice to college athletes is to voice your struggles,” Johnson. “Tell a teammate, a coach or a therapist. There are resources out there to help. Don’t struggle on your own because being a student-athlete is difficult enough already.”

People around the world continue to experience problems with their mental health every day and athletes are no different. College athletes are constantly balancing school, their sports and social lives as well as mental health. The NCAA is continuing to search for a way to better its help for its athletes. McGee-Stafford had simple advice for athletes who do struggle with mental illness.

“It’s okay to not be okay.”

The real effects of student loans

An incredible number of students at American colleges and universities take on student loans to complete their education. This is no different at Quinnipiac University, where 66 percent of undergraduate students have taken out loans.

The state of Connecticut has the highest average student loan debt in the U.S. at $38,510.

Unfortunately for the class of 2017 at Quinnipiac, they surpass that state average at $48,894.

According to Mark French, Director of Student Financial Aid at the Connecticut Office of Higher Education, this increase in student loans comes, in part, because of Connecticut’s fiscal problems. Over his 30 years working in financial aid and student loans, he says the state’s economic problems and the continuing increase in school tuition have forced students and families to turn to taking out more loans.

“Our financial aid budget has declined by almost 50 percent,” said French. “We were at about $60 million or so when I started and we’re down to about $32 million now in state grant aid that’s available. What do students do to make up that difference where years past on average twice as much of the award they’re getting today? Well, if schools can’t step up and provide the grant money, they’re turning to loans certainly.”

Christina Vittas, a junior advertising and integrated communications major at Quinnipiac fears how the stress of having tens of thousands of dollars owed will take a toll on her.

“My own personal loans scare me immensely,” said Vittas. “I know that I’m going to have the pressure of having to pay them back over my head for a very long time and I am worried what that stress will do to me over time.”

For many students, when they sign the dotted line for their loan, they aren’t thinking about paying them back just yet. Vittas, however, can’t stop thinking about the pressure these loans bring.

“To me it’s not about starting to think about paying back student loans, it’s how can I stop thinking about having to pay them back,” said Vittas. “Before I was even accepted to Quinnipiac my father estimated how much potential debt I could be getting myself in, and that made me so emotional.”

Vittas is aware of her debt after graduating, but the majority of students aren’t looking at the big picture. Associate vice president and university director of financial aid, Dominic Yoia, has seen this first-hand more times than he can count.

“How could anybody in their right mind at age 17 know that, ‘I’m going to borrow 20, 30, 40, 50, 60 thousand worth of loans and is this a good thing or a bad thing?’ because they’ve never done it before,” said Yoia. “I will tell you by the end they realize when we’re presenting all that information it all starts to sink in because payments are 6 months down the road, not 4 years and 6 months down the road when they first started doing this.”

Upon graduating, students will start having to pay back their loans.  New graduates begin to struggle when they have to start paying back these loans on the salary of their entry-level job. Stephanie Cunha, who graduated from Quinnipiac in 2004 as a journalism major, had this exact experience.

Cunha is first generation born American to two Portuguese parents. She credits her drive and determination to go to college for her career and adult successes, even though her parents never counted on her going to college. Cunha worked hard from the time she was a teenager and took out student loans, along with receiving a scholarship, in order to attend Quinnipiac.

“I come from a pretty hard working background where I was working since I was 14 for pretty much everything that I ever needed, so clothes, computer for school, car insurance, you name it,” said Cunha. “It’s kind of been my reality from a financial standpoint that I always have to work my ass off, right? So when it came time for college I knew that I wanted to go to school because it was my own investment in myself.”

Cunha ended up graduating from Quinnipiac with $75,000 worth of student loans. Working her first job in broadcast journalism, Cunha struggled to make these payments.

“When you go into broadcast journalism and your first jobs are paying you $11 and $12 an hour and you take out that much in loans it definitely impacts you. I definitely lived at home for a lot longer than I wanted to,” said Cunha. “In a time period where you’re an independent person, fiercely independent, but you’re still going home to the same bed that you grew up in as a little kid, it did take a lot of an emotional toll.”


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In order to have more stability and upward mobility in her job and be able to be more financially comfortable, Cunha made a career change.

“I took myself soul searching after my fifteenth quarter life crisis and just started to question, where was I going, was I in an industry that was expanding or was I in an industry that was contracting, and I realized that there wasn’t as much of a growing potential as I wanted in broadcast journalism, so I took the leap over to [public relations],” said Cunha.  

Cunha admits the debt put both a financial and emotional strain on her, but after paying back  those loans in 12 years, she now looks back at it as a necessary evil for her education, career, and future.

“It’s a necessary evil because you have to pay for [college] to get you the opportunities later on in life, so I just had to work on getting a balanced perspective on it, Cunha said. “It could feel pretty cumbersome at times, but I did have to work a lot harder in my 20s to have a balanced perspective.”

Many students worry how their debt can affect their future. Students have worries ranging from not being able to buy a house, to having to work a job they aren’t passionate about.

“I mostly fear that I will have to work multiple jobs and not be able to live my life to its full potential, or sacrifice my own happiness in order to not pour all of my income into paying back my student loans,” said Vittas. “At the end of the day I know I will be able to pay my loans back, but I worry that it will be much later than expected and I won’t be able to experience all that life has to offer at this young point in my life due to the pressure to pay off my loans.”

Students aren’t wrong in thinking their debt can hold them back. Andrew Guyton, a financial advisor and principal at The Guyton Group, has had clients who have had to put off certain milestones in life, like buying a house, getting married, and starting a family, because they are stuck in the debt of their student loan.

“You have to pay them back, otherwise you have all sorts of issues with your credit and things down the road,” Guyton said.  “So look if your student loan balance is so high that you’re eating ramen noodles and beef jerky, and renting a 4-bedroom place that has 6 people living in it just so you can keep up with your student loan costs, then you’ve got an issue there.”

Cunha, like many other American students, broke the rule of thumb that is followed by experts in financial aid.

“The general rule of thumb we tell students is that if you take all of your student loan debt and add it up it should not exceed your first year’s salary fresh out of college,” said Yoia. “So if you happen to be a business major and you’re going to start at an accounting firm, let’s say you earn $55,000, you’ve got $35-$40,000 worth of loans, it sounds like a lot but, really, relative to the amount of income you have, it’s not.”

Fabio LoNero also hadn’t thought about paying back his student loans until he graduated from Quinnipiac in 2006.

“I knew that I’d hopefully get a job upon graduation where I’d be able to make the payments,” said LoNero. “The thought and planning really came into play upon graduation and after the deferment period was over. I also didn’t have the means to start paying down the loan while I was still in school.”

LoNero, a journalism major and currently an adjunct professor at Quinnipiac and a marketing and promotions producer, writer and editor at WTNH-TV in New Haven, graduated with $40,000 in debt from student loans that he is still paying off today.

“There was and still is a bit of stress because of the loans after graduating,” said LoNero. “You’re always wondering, especially fresh out of school, whether you’ll be able to make the monthly payments. Some of my interest rates were a little high as well, adding to the stress. The loans are still a source of stress for me as I’m still paying for them and will be for the foreseeable future. It’s a good chunk of change, almost like a small rent or mortgage payment that I could be putting to use elsewhere, such as saving or putting money aside to buy a house.”

After graduating LoNero had some personal setbacks that led to him paying back his loans slower than he would have liked. He advises that those in college now expect the unexpected and have back up plans if life gets in the way of paying back loans.

“It’s always nice to assume you’ll be able to pay more, or pay off the loan in a few years, but always be realistic and have that Plan B or C available so you have different scenarios as to what you’ll be able to do,” said LoNero. “Expect the unexpected. Life happens, and you can’t stop it. Job losses, emergencies, etc. And student loans are something you must pay back, no matter what, so you’ll have to take it all in stride. It can be a struggle, but I found it worth it to help get me through college, start and progress in my career.”

LoNero suspected he would be able to pay back his loans quickly, but many students today don’t make that same assumption.

And as college tuitions continue to rise, the loans students are applying for continues to increase. College tuitions have been skyrocketing and there is no ceiling in sight.

“When I first got here, quite honestly, the tuition and fees were much different,” Yoia said. “The tuition and fees to come here were $24,690. That was the tuition and fees, room and board in 1999. Fast forward now to 2018 its $62,500.”

As years passed, Yoia thought people would refuse to pay the steep price tag and turn to state schools for their education, but there hasn’t been a decrease in enrollment at Quinnipiac. Actually, there has been an increase.

“The numbers, the enrollment, the freshman class size has still been growing,” said Yoia.

At this point, Yoia says, he is unsure where the limit is for college and university tuition.

To combat costs, experts suggest other ways to save money and cut loan expenses.

“Working a little bit while you’re in school is helpful just to take the sting out of it a little bit,” Guyton said. “Making sure that when you pick your major and you’re taking out all this debt that it’s something that can sustain the debt on the tail end.”

“You can become an RA and get a room and board stipend, you can serve in student government, you can serve in several leadership positions on our campus that come with stipends as well as other colleges have similar opportunities, so let’s not just look to loans to cover your costs,” said Yoia. “I’ve got an outside scholarship book out front. See if you qualify for any of that. Here are some websites to go to. Here are things you can be doing. You can be working.”

Many students, like Vittas have done just that.

“I am currently an RA on campus so that significantly lowered the amount of loan money I was borrowing,” said Vittas. “Also by applying for as many scholarships as possible I could decrease the amount of debt I have.”

French said there is no easy fix to student loan problems, but he believes in a three-pronged solution that focuses on the student’s family, the government and the schools. Families need to better save and prepare for their child’s college expenses to to avoid having to borrow money down the road.

“Families need to do a much better job researching, understanding how much it’s going to cost for college, and knowing how much they need to save for college because every dollar a family can put aside while a child is young is potentially a dollar less they’ll have to borrow when that child’s in college, so families really don’t save the way they should,” he said. “They tend to look at other priorities in their lives and spend their money that way.”

Finally, French said, the government must allocate more money for student grants and financial aid. Schools need to slow, or cap, their tuition increases.

“It’s, for the most part, a political process. If legislatures at the federal and state level don’t hear from the students and families that the aid that’s provided is not sufficient, the legislatures definitely won’t do anything,” said French. “They need to hear constantly from families and students. Same with the schools. Although it’s not a political process per se, it still is that students and families need to be more vocal, I think, with their schools about controlling cost, controlling tuition increases and putting pressure there.”

No matter how big the student debt, though, there is always a light at the end of the tunnel. Cunha summed up her emotions upon paying off her student loans.

“The best day of your life is probably gonna be marriage, when a kid is born, and when you pay off your own student loans,” she said.

Podcast: The view on how immigration is handled in the U.S.

By Randy Del Valle

America is divided by many issues from income inequality to gun control but one issue more than some others strikes at the core of the nation’s history and beliefs: should illegal immigrants be deported? Deportation has affected families, most notably parents and their children from being separated.

Numbers gathered and provided from the federal Department of Homeland Security showed that the U.S., government actually deported fewer immigrants in 2017 under president Donald J. Trump than it did under former president Barack Obama in 2016.

Although, the figures showed a decline in deportation, under the Trump administration in 2017 there were more arrests of those with no criminal histories.

Kica Matos, director of immigrant rights and racial justice at the Center for Community Change talked about the issue in an article back in April 2018 saying that, “It appears that ICE in the Trump Administration is focused on anyone they can find easily and not people who represent any sort of risk. And the number of deportations looks like it’s only set to grow.”

Hear from people who are close to the situation, currently dealing with the issue, the reason why people don’t want illegal immigrants in the country and if the deportation of illegal immigrants is going to get better or worse in the future.

Concussions and the effects on local football

By Kyle Levasseur

Over 300,000 football related concussions occur annually, according to the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

Quinnipiac University professor, Richard Hanley, has studied football throughout his life after playing in college. He says if the sport was created today, it would be banned in the United States.

“Football is a game with a penalty called unnecessary roughness,” Hanley said. “That implies that the nature of the game has necessary roughness.”

Former football player, Andrew Grinde, felt the roughness of the game by suffering multiple concussions while playing for Yale University. He decided to retire from the game when he heard about the possible effects on the brain, after talking to his older brother who studies neuroscience.

“[Football] takes away excellence from the brain. It’s a simple as that,” Grinde said.


Courtesy: University of Alabama at Birmingham

Professor Todd Botto teaches athletic training and sports medicine at Quinnipiac after working as an athletic trainer for the football team at Southern Mississippi University. He says that concussions will never go away from football, because while helmets are ideal for protecting against skull fractures, they cannot stop the brain from hitting the inside of a player’s skull which can happen in a collision that has plenty of force.

However, doctors at the University of Alabama at Birmingham are working on developing helmets that dissipate the forces that players put on one another’s heads. The experts are using crash test dummies to simulate collisions, so that each specific position on the football field has a helmet best suited to the hits they face.

Despite the possibilities of concussions in football, there are still players and coaches that point to the positives of football. Connecticut native and Boston College defensive end, Zach Allen, is projected to be signed in the first round of next year’s National Football League draft, according to a CBS mock draft who placed him at eleventh overall. He says money is not the only benefit of playing the game he loves.

“Football teaches people what it means to be part of a team,” Allen said. “The lessons you learn in football – the camaraderie, I think it’s definitely worth it.”


“I get to play the game I love and also put my family in a good position.” -Zach Allen

“I get to play the game I love and also put my family in a good position.” -Zach Allen

While people may have differing viewpoints on whether or not people should play football, Americans are still watching the sport. Through 12 weeks, NFL games are averaging 15.8 million television viewers, a 5% increase from 2017, according to ESPN.

Sustainability at Quinnipiac: The issues and solutions

By Nhung An

Since 2017, Hamden has been trying to become more sustainable. First, by joining Sustainable CT with 400 other municipalities. With the financial and networking help of Sustainable CT, Hamden will have a set list of action plans in the spring of 2019.

Kathleen Schomaker, Hamden town’s energy efficiency coordinator, said that Hamden is pushing to limit food waste and recycling. There will be a separate bin for soft recyclable like clothing and bedding.

But for now, Hamden is still putting together the list of action to get going next year.

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We gotta get our ducks in a row first.
— Kathleen Schomaker

Hamden is looking to be certified in 2019.

For members of Quinnipiac University, the road to sustainability is a long journey. In 2010, the College Sustainability Report Card gave Quinnipiac University a D. The school was graded based on administration, climate change and energy, food and recycling, green building, student involvement, transportation, endowment transparency, investment priorities, and shareholder engagement. Among these criteria, Quinnipiac failed at three, and got the highest grade of B in food and recycling.

Even in 2018, members of the Quinnipiac University can see that the school is not sustainable.

The solutions must start from recognizing the three R’s of recycling: reduce, reuse, and recycle. Once these issues are addressed, awareness is the next first step.

Some of the major issues include recycling, food and plastic waste.

Quinnipiac students are among the most proactive members on this journey to help QU recycle waste.

QU ISA during a food drop trip

Quinnipiac International Student Association (ISA) helps donate food from Quinnipiac main cafeteria to local communities in Hamden.

Quinnipiac Student for Environmental Actions (QU SEA) raises awareness with “Weigh the Waste,” asking students to scrape the left over on their plate as they leave the cafeteria.


QU SEA’s food waste bin for Weigh the Waste

QU SEA’s food waste bin for Weigh the Waste

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