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Coed
suites now an option for seniors
May/June 2010
by David
Zax ’06
Harmain
Khan ’11 was among the dozen or so students who bundled up and pitched tents on
the snow-covered Cross Campus on March 3, 2009. Despite six layers of clothing
and the countless hand warmers he stuffed into his socks, Khan didn’t get any
sleep that night. But he wasn’t there to rest; the group had assembled to make
a point, dubbing their protest a “sleep-in.” A sign fashioned from a cardboard
box sarcastically declared the small camp “The Only Gender-Neutral Housing at
Yale.”
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Gender-neutral housing is “a non-issue” at the other Ivies and Stanford.
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The
group had met to oppose a decision announced by Yale College dean Mary Miller
’81PhD the day before. Yale was by then one of only two Ivies—Princeton was the
other—without some form of housing in which undergraduate men and women can
share suites, despite the fact that a Yale Daily News poll showed 76 percent of Yale
College students in favor of such housing. Affiliates of Yale’s Lesbian, Gay,
Bisexual, and Transgender Cooperative had become especially vocal about the
need for reform: if the reason for single-sex housing was to prevent couples
from living together, they argued, then the current policy seemed to ignore the
existence of gay students. But more importantly, says LGBT campus leader Rachel
Schiff ’10, gender-neutral housing would simply allow “students to live with
people they feel most comfortable with.” That might apply to students with
unusual ways of expressing gender, but might equally apply to a man who simply
happened to get along better with women, or vice versa.
Despite
these arguments, Dean Miller’s March 2 announcement said that “a system-wide
change at Yale would be premature” until a task force investigated its
implications. Would romantic couples exploit the option of gender-neutral
housing? Would conflicts brew and erupt? Yale College associate dean John
Meeske ’74 was one of the people assigned to investigate how other schools had
fared. After researching gender-neutral housing’s implementation at the other
Ivies and Stanford, he sent a report to Dean Miller and President Richard Levin
’74PhD listing the problems other schools had reported: none. “The story I kept
getting,” says Meeske, “was it was just a non-issue. People anticipated there
would be problems, but they didn’t materialize.”
In
late February of this year, Yale announced a new gender-neutral housing option,
starting in September, for seniors only. Mixed-gender bedrooms within suites
will not be permitted, and students in intimate relationships are strongly
discouraged from rooming together.
Not
everyone is happy about the recent decision. It “will marginalize the few
conservative students left on campus,” says Isabel Marin ’12. Advocates of coed
housing, meanwhile, are disappointed by the fact that the new policy does not
apply to sophomores or juniors. Though the committee had initially recommended
the policy apply to juniors, Meeske says “it seems reasonable to try with one
foot and see how it works.” He adds that he doesn’t “personally think this was
a giant step for Yale,” which has for many years allowed women and men to live
on the same floors and share bathrooms.
Despite
the freezing night he spent over a year ago on behalf of mixed-gender housing,
Harmain Khan won’t be taking advantage of the new policy. “I never thought this
would pass,” he explains, “so I signed a lease to live off campus with a girl
before gender-neutral housing passed.”
Readers respond
The Yale of My Day
I read with interest about gender-neutral housing on campus at Yale.
In the mid-1980s, Calhoun College had a policy that permitted coed suites. As I recall, special permission was required. The suites had to be roughly evenly split between men and women, and romantic couples weren’t allowed to live in the same suite. The policy was not limited to seniors. At the time there were very few coed suites, and no one really paid much attention to the issue.
I will be interested to learn how a campus-wide system operates more than twenty years later.
Paul Rothstein ’87
Falls Church, VA

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