06-03-94 Students have new advocate for off-campus services 6-3-94 OHIO STATE STUDENTS HAVE NEW ADVOCATE FOR OFF-CAMPUS SERVICES COLUMBUS -- The new director of Off-Campus Student Services at The Ohio State University said her office plans to do a lot more than help students find decent apartments. Ruth Sallee Gresham, appointed to the post in February, said she wants to help students learn how to be safe, how to be good neighbors and how and where they can get help when they need it. "We're helping students get the skills to learn how to solve problems and learn to live off campus," said Gresham. "Basically, they're learning how to live independently and responsibly." This is especially true in the University Area, where students are often pitted against permanent residents and landlords. Students often are viewed as unruly and noisy neighbors, while students who move in see the substandard apartments, crime and trash as a reflection of a "who cares" attitude and act accordingly. Attitudes on both sides need to change for conditions to improve, she said. Landlords and permanent residents must learn to accept students as a fact of life east of High Street, and students must learn to live as true neighbors, not as careless transients. Only by working together can the area be improved. Off-Campus Students Services, formerly known as Commuter Student Affairs, will be a clearinghouse, she said, not only to solve problems, but also to steer students to clubs and events that will enrich their university experience. Because only 20 percent of students live on campus, the remaining "commuter students" may be missing out on university life, she said. To resolve problems, Gresham said an environmental assessment is currently under way in the area. Complaints brought to her attention, such as excess trash, are taken to the proper city department and monitored to see how long it takes for the problem to be resolved. Tenants having disagreements with landlords anywhere in the city are given suggestions as to what steps the law allows them to take. Areas with high crime rates are identified on a map that Gresham has prepared for the office. Highlighted in red is the area east of High Street and south of Chittendon Avenue. The map also shows yellow "caution" zones and green "safe" zones, based on crime reports. When students come in to ask about rentals, they will be shown the map so they can make their own decisions about which areas would be the safest places to live, Gresham said. "Students who come into this office usually don't know anything about this university," she said, so it is Ohio State's repsonsibility to make them aware of the dangers. "We don't bring students here so they can learn the hard way." Two of Gresham's long-range goals for the office are to offer incentives to property owners who cooperate in providing safe housing and to set up a program to train resident managers. Gresham came to her current position with 20 years of experience at the university. Recruited from the University of Illinois, she joined Ohio State in 1974 as assistant director of student and staff development in the Office of Residence and Dining Halls. She subsequently was director of recruitment and placement in the Office of Minority Affairs, special assistant to the executive officer of human relations, and affirmative action consultant in the Office of Affirmative Action. Off-Campus Student Services is located in room 211 of the Ohio Union, 1739 N. High St. Phone banks are available free to students looking for apartments. Hours are 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday. For more information, call 292-0100. # Contact: Ruth Sallee Gresham, 292-0100. Written by John W. Frees. [Submitted by: STERRETT (sterrett@ccgate.ucomm.ohio-state.edu) Fri, 03 Jun 1994 18:02:28 -0500 (EST)] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.