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Post Reports

Mold at Howard U., and an omicron update

Post Reports

The Washington Post

Daily News, Politics, News

4.45.1K Ratings

🗓️ 3 December 2021

⏱️ ? minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Why dozens of students at Howard University spent part of their fall semester living in tents. And, omicron comes to the United States.


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Mold, mice, water damage and no WiFi. Those have been some of the conditions in Howard University’s housing units in Washington. This fall, the conditions led to protests that lasted more than 30 days. Some students even slept in tents on the historically Black university’s campus. But such conditions aren’t new. For years, students and graduates have complained about building conditions at a school that’s often called “the Mecca.”


Many students blamed university president Wayne A.I. Frederick. But some students say Corvias, a private company that manages 60 percent of the housing on Howard’s campus, is the real culprit. Schools often hire companies to handle dining halls and custodial services because they don’t get enough funding from federal, state and local governments. Education reporter Lauren Lumpkin and producer Jordan-Marie Smith report on the relationship between universities and the private companies managing their housing — and the students who say those relationships need to end.


Plus later in the show, national health reporter Dan Diamond explains what President Biden’s administration plans to do about the omicron variant of the coronavirus.


If you value the journalism you hear in this podcast, please subscribe to The Washington Post. We have a deal for our listeners — one year of unlimited access to everything The Post publishes for just $29. To sign up, go to washingtonpost.com/subscribe.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey everybody, it's Martine.

0:03.8

I am actually out today, but before we start the show, I just wanted to share a quick

0:08.5

thank you.

0:10.0

Today is exactly three years since we launched post reports, and for me and the many wonderful

0:15.5

hardworking people on this team, it has been such a privilege to bring you news and reporting

0:20.0

every day.

0:21.0

Whether you've been listening since the very first episode three years ago, or if you

0:25.3

just started tuning in last week, we just want to thank you so much for giving us your

0:29.6

time, your ears, your questions, your emails, your headspace, and your loyalty.

0:35.7

We appreciate you so much.

0:37.9

Now onto the show.

0:40.4

For more than 30 days this fall, student protests shook up one of the nation's most prestigious

0:45.6

historically black colleges.

0:47.4

There's nothing illustrious about mode and housing.

0:51.4

There's nothing illustrious about a dorm room flooding and how it was fueling, refusing

0:57.0

to give back the money that they owe students.

0:59.2

There's nothing illustrious about that.

1:01.3

How it is embarrassing, how it, and let me very clear, let me very clear.

1:06.2

Howard University students were protesting poor living conditions on campus.

1:11.2

They reported mold, mice, roaches, water damage, no Wi-Fi, no heat or air conditioning.

1:19.4

Sometimes requests to fix these issues went unanswered for weeks.

1:27.4

Students at Howard University set up with what they are calling unsafe living conditions.

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