
By Canton Winer
We are taught the words the moment we arrive on campus. “We are Fordham.”
Yet, somehow, this becomes all too easy to forget. We think that Fordham is the administrators sitting in their offices. We think that Fordham is the campus. We think that Fordham is 441 East Fordham Road.
In the past few weeks, this internalized powerlessness (epitomized by the phrase “that’s Fordham”) showed significant signs of cracking.
A recent string of articles — featured in this publication and others — has shown that students are frustrated with many of the current policies facing the university.
The complaints cover a good amount of ground. The Office of Student Leadership and Community Development (OSLCD) seems to impede students more than it empowers them. The Office of Residential Life instills a climate of fear and distrust in its employees. Fordham administrators seem more interested in controlling students than listening to them. Even students in United Student Government (USG) and Campus Activities Board (CAB), arguably the two student organizations with the most power and access to sway university opinion and policy, complain that Fordham often acts more as a road block than as a spring board.
The unifying thread of these complaints is actually quite simple: Fordham is not taking student’s complaints seriously.
Certainly, there are some exceptions, perhaps most notably the formation this academic year of the Sexual Misconduct Task Force and the (mostly ignored) gains made by SAGES. But these are exceptions, not the rule.
Formal complaints to Human Resources from Residential Life employees appear to have resulted in no change. USG’s repeated attempts to loosen Fordham’s free speech policies have failed. Countless student initiatives have been suffocated in their cribs by an overbearing university administration.
The 2014-2015 school year may be ending, but the tide appears to be shifting in a lasting way. We need to make sure that students’ anger will not melt away over the summer.
For too long, Fordham has failed to take students’ concerns seriously. The solution is simple: we need to show them that we are serious. As the individuals who make Fordham the institution that it is, we need to make our anger, indignation and frustration clear.
My fellow seniors are beginning to experience the beginning of Fordham’s 2015 Senior Class Gift campaign. Fordham is asking each member of the class of 2015 to donate $20.15 as we bid the campus farewell.
Personally, I will not be donating to Fordham. Not yet.
I am incredibly proud of this university, the education I have received here and the amazing people I have met in my time here. But when Fordham asks me for money in the coming weeks, I will be telling them no — and I will be telling them why.
I am not donating a penny to Fordham until administrators show significant signs that they are willing to work seriously with students to draft and enact meaningful, lasting reform. I encourage all of my fellow senior Rams to do the same, and to make sure that Fordham knows why.
Administrators may not take massive student complaints seriously at first. But they will pay attention when their actions (or lack thereof) affects their bottom line.
We must ensure that administrators never forget the people who make Fordham possible: the students. Seniors and graduates can do this by withholding their donations. Underclassmen can do this by returning to Fordham in the fall ready to take the school to task.
What we need to prove is simple. We are Fordham. We are angry. And we demand that our university do better.
Canton Winer, FCRH ’15, and former Managing Editor of The Fordham Ram, is an American Studies and Sociology major from West Palm Beach, Florida.
Gerry Heintz • May 2, 2015 at 1:25 pm
If you really want to experience the lack of free speech at Fordham, try espousing a conservative point of view. You’ll be mocked and vilified.
Olivia Cooley • Apr 15, 2016 at 2:30 pm
By that logic, you’d be suppressing the freedom of speech of those who are “mocking” and “vilifying” you by openly criticizing them for what they’re saying.
Canton Winer • May 1, 2015 at 9:53 am
I strongly encourage anyone who agrees with this article to sign this petition telling President McShane we won’t be donating until we see real signs of change. https://www.change.org/p/fr-mcshane-president-of-fordham-university-we-won-t-donate-until-fordham-works-with-students
Bri O'Brien • May 1, 2015 at 7:28 am
Students at Saint Mary’s College and Alumnae definitely empathize with your article and the sentiments of your community. We are pushing for similar progress with our administration, without much response…I shared your article in hopes of inspiring more students to start speaking up! I’ve had many students express fear of backlash, which is not unfounded. I wish you the best of luck with this, and know that many of us at SMC are rooting for y’all! Thanks for posting this piece!
brian • May 1, 2015 at 12:00 am
The disdain for the Administration (specifically in Student Affairs and Res Life) is widely held by alumni, as well as within current students, and extending all the way to current and former employees. We each have our own story, and Fordham has consistently turned a blind eye and refused to acknowledge any of these pain points in a meaningful manner.
The more news, press, and ultimately dialogue that emerges from publications and contributors like yourself, the better off we will be in having these issues come to light and resolved. Keep up the great work and hopefully we will have real change in the near future.
Class of 2011 • Apr 30, 2015 at 12:14 pm
I hate to say it, but once you graduate, the only thing that will matter to you is that you get a good job with your Fordham degree, and you will forget about this. This is also likely why change doesn’t happen…because alumni stop caring once they’re out of the situation.