
08-28-2009, 04:49 PM
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Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: U.S.
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Sprinklers at Nebraska Wesleyan (Alpha Gamma Delta, etc.)
Two Nebraska Wesleyan sororities -- one NPC and one old well-established local -- now have sprinklers. The installation was possible thanks in part to a special loan program set up by the school. An AGD representative is quoted in the news report:
http://www.journalstar.com/news/loca...cc4c03286.html
Excerpts
Members of two Nebraska Wesleyan University sororities are living in safer quarters this year, thanks to a new loan program Wesleyan is offering its Greek organizations to help with the costly process of installing sprinklers.
This summer, Alpha Gamma Delta and Willard sororities became the first to take advantage of the Greek Fire Safety Program, which offers Wesleyan's privately owned fraternities and sororities 20-year, interest-free loans up to about $67,000 to install sprinklers.
Wesleyan's four remaining privately owned Greek houses -- three fraternities and a sorority -- have pledged to follow suit by Sept. 1, 2012.
At that time, all university-approved housing will be fitted with sprinklers. It will be a milestone for Wesleyan, which stepped up its commitment to sprinkler installation following a fraternity house fire in 2006 that killed one student and critically injured three others.
"We want to send a message that we take fire safety very seriously," said Clark Chandler, Wesleyan's vice president for finance and administration.
"And that we value the Greek community."
. . . Equal safety for all students was their top concern, but it's also important to give peace of mind to prospective Greek recruits and their parents, said Elizabeth Halvorsen, treasurer for the Alpha Gamma Delta Housing Association.
"How can you honestly say you're just as safe as you are in a dorm if you don't have sprinkler systems?" Halvorsen said.
So the university agreed to set aside $400,000 for loans to be divided equally among the six [privately-owned] houses.
"We didn't want to wait," Chandler said. "This was a way we could get it done in a time schedule that people would think is reasonable."
Houses must meet the fall 2012 deadline or risk losing their status as university-approved housing, Chandler said. That's critical because virtually all Wesleyan students are required to live in university-approved housing for their first three years of school.
. . . Members of Alpha Gamma Delta and Willard and their families, meanwhile, have a renewed sense of security as they begin the school year.
"It's just such a wonderful thing to have it done," said Nora Hinrichs, Willard's corporation president.
"We know the girls are safe."
Last edited by exlurker; 08-28-2009 at 06:43 PM.
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