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ResLife Shakes It Up With Co-Ed Experiment

Kate King

Issue date: 11/26/07 Section: News
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Living on-campus at UConn has always meant same-sex housing, however a new pilot program introduced by ResLife this year is allowing some students to live with roommates of the opposite gender.

The pilot program for gender-neutral housing consists of six students, who live in a co-ed suite in Garrigus Suites according to Vu Tran, a 3rd-semester business major and a participant in the program. The suit consists of two rooms connected by a bathroom with three women living in one room and two men and one female occuping the other.

ResLife has been talking about gender-neutral housing for a couple of years, according to Maureen Armstrong, coordinator of housing assignments for ResLife at UConn. This is the first year UConn has tried this type of undergraduate housing.

"One of our goals for the 2007-2008 academic year was to try to develop gender-neutral housing to meet a variety of needs," Armstrong said.

Some students have requested to live with cousins or siblings of the opposite sex for religious or cultural reasons, according to Armstrong.

Another need that Reslife is hoping to address in particular is that of the rising transgender community at UConn, according to Armstrong. In the past, UConn has dealt with the housing needs of transgender students on an individual basis.

The problem with this process was that it forced students to approach housing services with their needs, Armstrong said. The hope with gender-neutral housing is that it will give students an opportunity to live in the situation that is most comfortable for them without having to explain why.

Besides transgender students, others from the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) community can also benefit from gender-neutral housing.

"Gender-neutral housing would be a safe environment for some people in regards to gender identity and expression," said Fleurette King, the director of Rainbow Center at UConn.

King is a recent addition to the Rainbow Center staff, joining in August. Because she is a new arrival, she was not part of the development process for this year's pilot program, although she has been contacted by Reslife and expects to be part of the process in the future.
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cypher66

Red

posted 2/14/08 @ 1:40 PM EST

This is idea is pretty ridiculous. Could you imagine asking you cousin or sister to free up the room for the night so you can have your girlfriend over. (Continued…)

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