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Acadia alumni group wants to revive program to change university's drinking culture

Acadia alumni group wants to revive program to change university's drinking culture

CBC
Saturday, December 03, 2022 02:18:19 PM UTC

Acadia University's alumni association wants to change the drinking culture at the school.

The group is trying to relaunch the Blue and Red Crew, which began in 2012 after an alcohol-related death of an Acadia student.

It wasn't maintained because of limited resources. The program aimed to help students manage their relationship with alcohol.

A four-year pilot project would create a peer-to-peer support network with full-time staff and funding for programming to improve education and behaviour. 

"It's an initiative to bring forward to the campus community and the student body as a whole," said Kelton Thomason, who is on the alumni association's board of directors.

One of the goals is to grow the initiative so that most students are either involved or know someone who is. 

Members of the crew wouldn't have specific duties or work shifts. They would be trained to help students who have unsafe drinking practices.

Thomason said the the project is not a response to the recent parties that led to students being arrested and property damaged in the residential area around the school in Wolfville, N.S..

He said alumni just want to support off-campus students.

"That's what this program is," Thomason said. "From the alumni perspective, it's about giving our students the greatest opportunity for success and I'm proud the association was interested, at least, in the preliminary discussion around this initiative."

Students would be engaged regularly throughout the project to help it succeed this time, Thomason said. 

"What's really exciting to me about the possible relaunching of Red and Blue Crew, and, I think, adapting it from what it was originally introduced as, is just centralizing student support," said Sadie McAlear, president of Acadia Student Union. 

"I mean really emphasizing harm-reduction practices and introducing them on a more peer-to-peer level."

McAlear said the narrative of university drinking culture is not unique to Acadia, but it may get more attention because the university is in a small community.

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