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  #1  
Old 11-21-2003, 04:41 AM
moe.ron moe.ron is offline
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As Students Power Up, Colleges Rewire

By JAMES HANNAH, Associated Press Writer

OXFORD, Ohio - Steve Leslie's dorm room at Miami University has 20 plugs sprouting from the walls. They power a color TV, stereo, compact disc and DVD players, video game player, desktop computer and laptop, printer, scanner, refrigerator, microwave and two fans. Then there are rechargers for a cell phone, hand-held computer, camera, electric razor and toothbrush.

"I just keep adding stuff," said Leslie, 20, a junior who shares the room with another student. "I fill up my car and my dad's truck. Some of the bigger stuff, like the speakers, have to wait for the second trip."

Today's collegians are part of a generation raised on electronics, and colleges are having no choice but to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to upgrade electrical systems. Often, the upgrade costs are getting passed on to parents and students in the form of higher fees.

"It looks like Circuit City in some of those rooms," said Dan Bertsos, director of residence services at Wright State University near Dayton.

New and renovated dorms at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth are being wired to handle the increasing load.

"Kids used to come to college with an AM radio and an electric razor. Now they arrive with every electronic device there is," said Roger Fisher, director of residential services. "They come to campus in a U-Haul, and Dad follows in a Suburban."

The average freshman at Miami University takes 18 appliances to campus, according to a March survey by the school.

As part of a $7 million renovation of one dorm, Ogden Hall, the university spent $212,548 in 2000 to add building substations, electrical distribution panels and electrical outlets. The 7,000 students who live on campus pay an extra $100 a year in housing fees to cover the renovation costs.

"These days the students' lives are quite changed. They need more appliances," said Takashi Kawai, a 64-year-old Dayton-area man whose son lives in a dorm at Miami.

In a renovation a few years ago, Wright State doubled to four the number of electrical outlets in each of the 162 rooms at Hamilton Hall, increased the number of circuit breakers, installed new electrical-switch gear and rewired fuse boxes and student rooms. The cost was about $500,000, or $1,000 per student.

At Penn State University, electrical consumption in October was 33 million kilowatt hours, up from 27 million in October 1996. The school's electric bill is about $1 million a month. Paul Ruskin, with the university's physical-plant office, said power use by the 13,000 student residents contributed to the increase.

Some officials say higher energy costs, campus expansions, lighting and the addition of computer labs and other energy-eating facilities are more to blame for increased power demand than student appliances.

And upgrading electrical systems in new and renovated dorms is often required by law under newer, more demanding building safety codes.

Andrew Matthews, of the Association of College and University Housing Officers-International, said many dorms were built in the 1950s and 1960s and don't have the electrical capacity for power-dependent students.

The higher amp load has some schools setting limits and conserving.

The University of Dayton had to stop installing air conditioners in the dorm rooms of students who requested them for such things as allergies and asthma. Craig Schmitt, executive director of residential services, said the school will be able to accommodate those students next fall in a new, air-conditioned dorm.

Miami University has been replacing incandescent lights around campus with more efficient fluorescent ones.

But conservation alone is oftentimes not enough.

Maryville College in Maryville, Tenn., decided to tear down one residence hall last year and build a new dorm at a cost of $7 million.

"If too many women turned on their hair dryers in the morning, the circuit breakers would blow. That was happening daily," said Bill Seymour, vice president and dean of students.

___

On the Net:

Association of College and University Housing Officers-International: http://www.acuho.ohio-state.edu/


http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmp...orm_overload_2
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  #2  
Old 11-21-2003, 05:06 AM
bethany1982 bethany1982 is offline
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I am sooooo glad that I have never had to live in the dorms.
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  #3  
Old 11-21-2003, 06:44 AM
TigerLilly TigerLilly is offline
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Lucky you. My roommate and I blew the circuit for half the rooms in our hall one time when we both blowdryed our hair at once with the TV also going. Oops, people were NOT happy with us, but at least then everyone knew not to do that.
I think we had power strips plugged into every single outlet in the room, to give us more plug-ins.
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Old 11-21-2003, 10:51 AM
mu_agd mu_agd is offline
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it's about time Miami started doing something about that! my sophomore year, my roomate and i had what we nicknamed "fire hazard corner" in which we had power strips plugged into power strips since there weren't enough outlets. she also lived in "ogdog" after the renovation and it was definitely much better!
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  #5  
Old 11-21-2003, 11:18 AM
GeekyPenguin GeekyPenguin is offline
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This is a great idea - in our dorms at Platteville there were 8 outlets. Not so great when you and your roomie each had blowdryer, secondary hair apparatus, computer, computer speakers with subwoofer, and printer. Then there was the fridge, the microwave, the TV, the Gamecube, the SuperNintendo, the alarm clocks, the desk lamps, and of course Christmas lights!

My off-campus housing, an unofficial GPhi house, was actually worse. Our slumlords didn't ever update the house - we had 3 electrial outlets in our bedroom that worked - for a while. Then we were reduced to two. We had to get the adapters for grounded outlets, and then had daisy chains - I had NINE power strips in there to get everything turned on.
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  #6  
Old 11-21-2003, 01:34 PM
Kevin Kevin is offline
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Our old dorms at my campus are like concrete shells with some bricks thrown up on the outside. The electrical system is probably the same one from circa 1950. There are fires in the dorms but the worst damage I've ever seen was a burnt up mattress.

What kind of frightens me is these new campus commons they built. They threw these things up in like 3 months. Pretty large buildings. Wood frames, 4 stories in one area, 3 in most others. These places meet strict fire codes, sprinklers and all. However, I can't even imagine what these things will be like in 20 years. I hear many things are already starting to fall apart.

If you ever hear your school is going to contract out its dorm arrangements and you have any kind of say.. Just say no.
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Old 11-21-2003, 06:40 PM
moe.ron moe.ron is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by ktsnake
Our old dorms at my campus are like concrete shells with some bricks thrown up on the outside. The electrical system is probably the same one from circa 1950. There are fires in the dorms but the worst damage I've ever seen was a burnt up mattress.

What kind of frightens me is these new campus commons they built. They threw these things up in like 3 months. Pretty large buildings. Wood frames, 4 stories in one area, 3 in most others. These places meet strict fire codes, sprinklers and all. However, I can't even imagine what these things will be like in 20 years. I hear many things are already starting to fall apart.

If you ever hear your school is going to contract out its dorm arrangements and you have any kind of say.. Just say no.
I've seen a few of those new dorms in the late 90s. They don't look very sturdy at all.
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Old 11-21-2003, 06:54 PM
aephi alum aephi alum is offline
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Freshmen were usually crowded in our dorms - 3 people in a double, or 4 people in a triple. Picture this: Three women in a double, each with her own computer, monitor, printer, hair dryer, curling iron or other styling implement, desk lamp. Now add in a space heater, a couple of fans, telephone and answering machine, and two stereos. Consider that the dorm was built (and the wiring done) in the 1970's, and the wiring in that room was only intended to support two people's stuff, and it's a wonder we didn't start our own nice little electrical fire. Thankfully we had a kitchen to put the microwave and toaster oven in!
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