Pubdate: Fri, 19 Sep 2008 Source: Chronicle, The (Duke U, NC Edu) Copyright: 2008 Duke Student Publishing Company Contact: http://www.dukechronicle.com/contactus/ Website: http://www.dukechronicle.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2269 PUBLICIZE RLHS ROOM ENTRY POLICY What students don't know won't hurt them. At least, that's the message that Residential Life and Housing Services seems to be sending with its recent failure to publicly release its newly codified room entry policy. Students should know that the new protocol outlines, among other things, the conditions under which Duke University Police Department officers may enter a student's room without consent. The police are required to issue a warning through the door if the student is not present or refuses to respond, but residential staff members are permitted to enter the room should suspicions of drug use resurface later in the year. As the policy currently stands, residents have a right to a first-time warning but are vulnerable to an unauthorized inspection of their room afterward. Given this fact, it is clear that special emphasis must be placed on informing students as soon as such a warning is issued, and before a second attempt at confrontation takes place. Also, as a practical provision for students not in their rooms at the time of a DUPD visit, the policy should stipulate a minimum time window between the first and second attempts, in addition to the e-mail notification from an RLHS assistant dean. According to Terry Lynch, RLHS assistant dean for staff development and Central Campus, the protocol is intended to provide clarification to residential hall staff rather than introduce policy changes. But this is hardly justification for not releasing the new guidelines to the general student body after introducing them to the RAs during general training in August. Policy clarification is not a privilege exclusive to RAs and RCs; common sense dictates that it is a right that should be extended to all students. On its face, the so-called clarification is a retroactive attempt to clear up some of the confusion surrounding the raid that took place in Randolph dormitory last Spring, and perhaps quell what remains of the controversy about the legitimacy of the search and seizure of student property, some of it apparently leafy and green, and all of it legal. As incidents like the Randolph raid suggest, the establishment of clear guidelines may go a long way in preventing students and residential hall staff from being unfairly placed into compromising positions in the future. But what is at issue is RLHS's failure to publicize the approved protocol or provide students with direct access to the details, calling into question not just the impetus behind the policy's creation but more importantly, the focus in its implementation. Put another way, RLHS's disregard for student opinion makes it unclear whether it is actively looking to protect the best interests of students and the community at large, or cooking up policies primarily to avoid another embarrassment involving bags of oregano and powdered sugar. RLHS's handling of the room entry policy, as well as quiet hours and loft regulations, makes for three strikes in three weeks. In a bizarre twist on a disturbing trend of not gauging student opinion prior to implementing policy changes, RLHS seems to have most recently dispensed with informing students about policy changes after the fact. Something must be done. And it goes without saying that students should be told when it is. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath