The House and Neighborhood Development (HAND) program, long overlooked in the war between the administration and students over public service, has quietly made changes in an effort to revamp its program.
But HAND's unwillingness to make waves may have caused the organization to lose valuable space to the more contentious Phillips Brooks House Association (PBHA).
HAND alum and former Adams House public service tutor Jessica D. Steigerwald '90 has been hired to run the program full-time, replacing the three central student coordinators, a change many members say has facilitated dialogue and promoted stability within the organization.
HAND, which was established in 1982, is a community service program in the houses that matches each house with a Cambridge neighborhood and public school.
For this school year, HAND has added its own 13-member board in an effort to retain student leadership over the program while handing off administrative duties to a full-time staff person.
The changes come as part of the decision of the College to overhaul public service programming following the 1994 Report on the Structure of Harvard College.
This restructuring has included the elimination of the positions of former PBH executive director Greg A. Johnson '72 and Office of Public Service director Gail L. Epstein, as well as the appointment of Assistant Dean of Public Service Judith H. Kidd.
PBHA has waged a two-year war to protest the restructuring. Over the summer, PBHA and the administration signed a compromise that grants student autonomy over programmatic concerns. As part of this agreement, the administration retains oversight of financial and liability issues.
Students in HAND have embraced the changes, despite Epstein's departure, because of the addition of Steigerwald.
Students say Steigerwald provides a better link to the community than did the three student representatives because of the permanence of her position.
"Jessica is amazing to work with," says Amanda H. Bigelow '97, the co-chair of HAND. "She is a positive force for HAND."
The Space Issue
HAND's unwillingness to confront the administration, however, may have cost the group a home on campus.
As a result of a decision of the University to grant more space to the Bureau of Study Counsel, HAND lost The University did not make other space available to the group this year. Bigelow says she was left looking for space until Eliot House Masters Stephen A. Mitchell and Kristine Forsgard stepped in and offered two rooms in the Eliot basement for this year. Read more in NewsRecommended Articles