Editorial | A change in culture

Campus alcohol policies should focus on opportunities for dialogue, rather than legal punishments

· February 18, 2010, 4:46 am

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It’s no secret that college students engage in underage drinking. And, unfortunately, students often drink too much alcohol and become sick.

But the way to instill healthy behavior in students is not to be tough on crime, but rather to create a culture where discussions about unsafe alcohol consumption frequently take place.

As Dartmouth College handles alcohol-related issues, we hope they focus on engaging students, administrators and law-enforcement officials in a dialogue. The college is taking a positive step by delaying the Hanover, N.H. police department’s plan to send people posed as underage partiers to frat parties and the development of more student and community efforts to discuss alcohol abuse. By bringing students more into the fold and allowing them to play a bigger role in policies, Dartmouth can establish an atmosphere where people feel comfortable talking about these important matters.

Still, there is more the Big Green community could do to keep students as safe and healthy as possible. Dartmouth students could face legal action if they are hospitalized. While student influence might be limited because the Hanover police department is independent from the school, students and administrators should persuade law enforcement to think twice before making arrests. Not only can arrests leave a mark on students’ criminal records, but the threat of criminal charges can prevent ill students from seeking the help they need. If the first priority is health, students shouldn’t have deterrants from getting healthy.

Comments (1)

A Parent

February 18, 2010, 11:08 pm

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Editor: I fear that DP itself may be condoning an unhealthy culture of college underage and unsafe drinking in some students by not confronting the underlying root causes. Two recent articles on the snow-days permitted an anonymous student to admit to being wasted (why not publish the name?) and a vendor to repot that some students were tipsy (why not facts?). Prior articles on campus sexual assault revealed that college males commonly view females who imbibe as covertly inviting sex. Orientation sessions on alcohol and sex now exist but is this nexus highlighted and underlined? Plus, is there a need, as is done during medical school orientation week, to devote a full day on helping students cope with stress without turning to alcohol? Too bad Penn does not apply pre-admission screening tools to weed out individuals who cannot promise to avoid underage alcohol use. Alcohol is illegal for a reason. Once on campus, discussions seem fruitless when many alcohol users choose to alter their cognition. Please provide truly healthy messages, DP.

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