PC Students, Faculty Rally Against Racial Profiling

Tuesday, May 05, 2015

 

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The main gates of the Providence College campus were crowded with members of the campus community on Monday, May 4, protesting racial profiling by campus security officers, a demand to fire Safety and Security Director Jack Leyden, and an end to college events at the Renaissance and Hilton hotels because of their anti-union stance.

Cedric de Leon, associate professor of sociology, led the protest, which was held in a response to a growing backlash against the cause for diversity and racial justice on campus, he said, He added that the college has yet to enforce a racial profiling policy established in 2013.

De Leon said that he faces racial profiling daily on campus. 

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“I just wanted want to make sure you weren’t a terrorist,” de Leon said he was told when a campus security guard stopped him and saw the faculty decal on his car.

Professor, Students Decry Profiling

De Leon said that despite repeated talks with the college’s administration, nothing has been done to investigate the complaints, security officers have not been disciplined, and that Leyden should be fired because of this inaction.

Julia Jordan-Zachery, one of three self-identified black female professors at PC, said that she has been profiled eight times on campus and that it is a response to the stories of the past. 

“For seven years I’ve been the target of racial profiling. The expense to my mind and body is extensive. I have no control over the color of my skin,” she said.  

Jordan-Zachery said that there is now an obvious shift in language when being profiled by the security officers. They also ask where she is going.

Jordan-Zachery said she’s brought her plight several times to her dean and the college president, and each time the answer was, “Julia, I am sorry this is happening to you,” she said.

Because of the failure to enforce college policy, de Leon said, Leyden must be fired and the officer responsible for profiling Jordan-Zachery must be disciplined.

“Each time one of us is profiled, it has an effect on all of us,” Jordan-Zachery said.

College Officials React

Steven Maurano, associate vice-president for public affairs and community relations, said that he believes the policy is being enforced and that no complaints were made before Jordan-Zachery filed a formal complaint in October 2014.

Maurano added that there would most likely be additional training for the officers going forward. “We’re all learning on a regular basis,” he said.

Graduating PC senior Binyam Tsegaye spoke about his frustration at being questioned yearly by campus police officers. He said that those students of color now coming into the college would have to deal with what he did.

“They don’t want me. They just need me,” for the diversity quota, he said.

 De Leon said, “This is all apart of a broader problem of institutional racism.”

De Leon continued the protest against holding college events at Providence’s Renaissance or Hilton Hotels, both owned by the Procaccianti Group, because of the owners’ failure to respond in a legal manner to the workers’ efforts to organize a union. He demanded that PC refrain from any business with the hotels until management grants the workers a fair process to decide on unionizing. Workers organized over two years ago, but the hotel chain executives have yet to discuss the matter. 

About 50 students clapped, cheered, and held signs of protest throughout the 35-minute rally. 

The rally ended with a call by de Leon for full participation for all members of the college community and a march around the campus.

A security officer at the campus entrance’s guard station was asked his opinion of rally, but refused to answer, saying that the officers are not allowed to comment.

 

Related Slideshow: RI 4 Year Colleges & Universities with the Highest Student Debt

Seven in 10 college seniors (71%) who graduated last year had student loan debt, with an average of $29,400 per borrower, according to a new report released by the Institute for College Access and Success. According to the Institute’s Project on Student Debt, Rhode Island has the fifth highest student debt in the country, but what about the state's individual institutions? Check out the slides below to see the average debt graduates accrued at Rhode Island colleges and universities.

Note: All data is based on four-year or above institutions for students graduating in the 2011-2012 academic year. Johnson and Wales University and the Rhode Island School of Design are not included in the data below, because they did not report the average debt of their graduates.

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#7 Rhode Island College

Average Student Debt: $23,110

Percent of Graduates with Debt: 79%

Non-Federal Debt, Percent of Total Debt of Graduates: 11%

Bachelor's Degree Recipients: 1,307

Full-time Enrollment Fall 2011: 5,794

In-State Tuition and Fees: $7,268

Total Cost of Attendance: $18,964

Percent Pell Grant Recipients: 36%

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#6 Brown University

Average Student Debt: $23,521

Percent of Graduates with Debt: 37%

Non-Federal Debt, Percent of Total Debt of Graduates: 45%

Bachelor's Degree Recipients: 1,603

Full-time Enrollment Fall 2011: 6,114

In-State Tuition and Fees: $42, 230

Total Cost of Attendance: $56,150

Percent Pell Grant Recipients: 14%

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#5 Providence College

Average Student Debt: $26,832

Percent of Graduates with Debt: 70%

Non-Federal Debt, Percent of Total Debt of Graduates: 21%

Bachelor's Degree Recipients: 914

Full-time Enrollment Fall 2011: 3,804

In-State Tuition and Fees: $40,975

Total Cost of Attendance: $54,840

Percent Pell Grant Recipients: 16%

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#4 Univ. of Rhode Island

Average Student Debt: $30,387

Percent of Graduates with Debt: 77%

Non-Federal Debt, Percent of Total Debt of Graduates: 31%

Bachelor's Degree Recipients: 2,614

Full-time Enrollment Fall 2011: 11,672

In-State Tuition and Fees: $11,366

Total Cost of Attendance: $25,311

Percent Pell Grant Recipients: 24%

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#3 Roger Williams Univ.

Average Student Debt: $38,550

Percent of Graduates with Debt: 66%

Non-Federal Debt, Percent of Total Debt of Graduates: 39%

Bachelor's Degree Recipients: 872

Full-time Enrollment Fall 2011: 3,834

In-State Tuition and Fees: $30,908

Total Cost of Attendance: $47,568

Percent Pell Grant Recipients: N/A

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#2 Salve Regina Univ.

Average Student Debt: $39,996

Percent of Graduates with Debt: 80%

Non-Federal Debt, Percent of Total Debt of Graduates: 33%

Bachelor's Degree Recipients: 436

Full-time Enrollment Fall 2011: 1,904

In-State Tuition and Fees: $32,800

Total Cost of Attendance: $47,100

Percent Pell Grant Recipients: 24%

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#1 Bryant University

Average Student Debt: $44,580

Percent of Graduates with Debt: 88%

Non-Federal Debt, Percent of Total Debt of Graduates: 53%

Bachelor's Degree Recipients: 831

Full-time Enrollment Fall 2011: 3,211

In-State Tuition and Fees: $34,624

Total Cost of Attendance: $50,153

Percent Pell Grant Recipients: 17%

 
 

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