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HEART Interns Describe Future As 'Bleak'

Brittany Dorn

Issue date: 5/2/08 Section: News
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Dr. Janice Wilbur, former coordinator of the HEART House.
Media Credit: Ryan Sayers
Dr. Janice Wilbur, former coordinator of the HEART House.

It's been a tough year for the HEART Program.

Over the summer, the program - which uses peer education and intervention to cut back on drug and alcohol abuse - lost its house in the center of campus and was transferred to apartment and office space in South Residence Hall. Vice President for Student Affairs John Saddlemire said the house was in violation of several fire codes.

Then, during winter break, the two HDFS classes that offered credit to students who interned with the program were cancelled. Saddlemire said the classes were cancelled because Janice Wilbur, the program's coordinator - who was a staff member, not a faculty member - was spending too much time teaching. He also pointed to mismanagement and improper collecting of fees as reasons to cancel the classes.

And then - in what some considered the sharpest blow - Janice Wilbur was fired from the university in February. Dean of Students Lee Williams and Director of Alcohol and Other Drug Services Tom Szigethy held an impromptu meeting to discuss Wilbur's dismissal, but would not provide details about it, because it was a personnel issue.

So what is the current status of the HEART Program?

In an e-mail response, Saddlemire seemed optimistic.

"I am sure that portions of the overall prevention and intervention efforts of the university will continue to morph and improve," he said. "This is a time of transition and opportunity. The future looks very bright."

Students provided a bleaker view.

Asked how the HEART Program is currently running after a long year of setbacks, three former interns and self-proclaimed "HEART activists" offer a sobering answer: it isn't.

"As a collective group, we're not a program anymore," said Juliana Lujan, who will be graduating with a degree in sociology next week. "I still think of myself as a HEART intern, but now I think of myself as a former HEART intern."

"It sucks," said Emily Lapidus, a graduating senior majoring in human development and family studies. "Last year I went to the HEART House every single day. I met my roommate at the HEART House."

"There is no HEART program anymore," adds Judy Castaneda, who is graduating with a master's degree in elementary education. "We've all stopped going."
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Gino

posted 8/11/09 @ 9:55 AM EST

Brittany, has there been any further developments on this story? I finished from UCONN in 95 and I too owe much of my success to the HEART program. I am sad to see that has happened. (Continued…)

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