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Wednesday, July 15, 2009 2:38 p.m.

EMeRG will not run for rest of summer

EMeRG, the Universitys student-run emergency medical service, will not run again until late August because of a lack of resources. Shown here, one of the services two ambulances, parked outside the Marvin Center. Joe Ginarte/Hatchet photographer

EMeRG, the University's student-run emergency medical service, will not run again until late August because of a lack of resources. Shown here, one of the service's two ambulances, parked outside the Marvin Center. Joe Ginarte/Hatchet photographer

EMeRG, the University’s student-staffed emergency medical response service, has ceased operations for the rest of the summer and will not run again until late August because of a lack of resources.

The program, which has run during the summer for the past two years, was in operation for the 2009 Colonial Inauguration sessions, but will not take calls until Aug. 23, when it will resume regular service for the academic year.

EMeRG coordinator David Fifer said the decision to cease summer operations stemmed from limited finances and volunteers.

“In the past we experimented with trying to cover the summer with our resources and what we found was that we’re not able to do that in a way we’d like right now,” Fifer said. “We didn’t have enough staff to provide the sort of quality services that the university community has come to rely on. But also general resources as well, we wanted to make sure we’re concentrating them on when call volume is the highest, which is during the academic year.”

During the last two summers, EMeRG ran limited coverage in the evening, Fifer said.

Though students were interested in working over the summer, Fifer said not enough volunteers were available to run shifts. Providing housing for members was not an issue, he said. Excluding the CI dates when EMeRG was in service, the calls EMeRG would typically handle have been directed to D.C. Fire and Emergency Medical Services.

During the school year, EMeRG provides 24-hour emergency medical service to students, something Fifer said is a goal for next summer.

“It’s a big goal of mine as a coordinator and it’s a big goal of the membership to be able to provide 365-day per year coverage to the GW community,” Fifer said.

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Over the course of the four summer Colonial Inauguration sessions, one incoming freshman received an alcohol violation during the three-day-orientation period, said Tara Pereira, assistant dean of students and director of Student Judicial Services.

Another incoming freshman was taken by EMeRG to GW Hospital while staying with a friend before her CI began, said Robert Chernak, senior vice president for Student and Academic Support Services.

“The Class of 2013 has had two students found to have violated the alcohol policy and their admission has been rescinded or deferred,” Pereira said in an e-mail. “One of these two incidents occurred at CI.”

Getting caught drinking at CI is not taken lightly by the University, and each specific case is reviewed in detail before a decision to rescind a student’s admission is made, Pereira said.

“If an offer of admission is rescinded or deferred it is because we are truly concerned about that student’s readiness for college and the ability to successfully transition to GW and make sound decisions about their own alcohol use,” Pereira said.

Chernak said that despite these two incidents, the students who attended the four summer CI sessions were mature and well behaved.

“We’ve had minimal problems,” Chernak said. “This has probably been the best behaved class that has come through CI since I’ve been here.”

Major changes were made to CI this year, including reducing the number of summer CI sessions from five to four. Chernak said despite the larger class of incoming freshmen this year – more than 2,500 students registered for CI – the smaller number of CI sessions worked out well.

“Of all of the years that we’ve had summer orientation, this one [alcohol] situation is the fewest I’ve ever, ever been aware of,” Chernak said, adding that on a percentage basis the small number of alcohol violations is even more dramatic.

“I’ve been very impressed with this group of young people,” Chernak said. “They are a terrific young group of people. They are very mature, they are communicative, they are bright and they’re engaging in conversation.”

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