Houston Chronicle

UH closes building for the semester

Student deaths at Agnes Arnold Hall concerning

- By Samantha Ketterer

The University of Houston has closed an academic building for the semester after a student apparently died by suicide there on Monday, raising fresh concerns about the mental health crisis among college students as the death is the second such in that building in six weeks.

The deaths have devastated community members who wonder why UH had not taken earlier steps to secure Agnes Arnold Hall, which has reportedly been the site of multiple suicides over the years, including one on Feb. 15 and another in 2017. In addition to concerns about building safety, questions are being asked about access to mental health services at UH.

“Students are hurting on our campus: It is clear they do not have access to the resources they need,” Student Government Associatio­n President Joshua Martin said in an Instagram post. “We must have an open discussion where students have a safe space with administra­tion to hear their concerns so that together we can develop a path forward.”

The university notified students of the death on Monday, immediatel­y closing the building Tuesday and pointing students to various campus mental health resources — including UH Counseling and Psychologi­cal Services, the Academic Student Assistance Program’s 24/7 access to counseling and individual crisis interventi­on, and the National Suicide Prevention Hotline number, 988.

UH President Renu Khator also announced that she is setting up a task force to address mental health and suicide prevention at UH, using the help of the school’s College of Medicine and city experts.

“I recognize mental health is posing serious challenges on all campuses nationwide, including our own,” she tweeted.

“Clearly, we need to go deeper into our system and do more,” Khator wrote in another post. “This is devastatin­g. Let’s

pull together and help one another and find long-lasting solutions.”

Colleges and universiti­es are at a flashpoint in mental health care as more college students are reporting suicidal thoughts since the pandemic, said Norma Ngo, director of UH Counseling and Psychologi­cal Services, or CAPS. That possibly stems from difficulti­es re-emerging to a different world after long periods of social isolation, she said.

In 2022, 41.8 percent of UH students who triaged at the school counseling center stated they had experience­d suicidal thoughts, according to the university.

Visits to CAPS dropped during the pandemic, but use is climbing again, although not to pre-pandemic levels, Ngo said. She added that she believes ample resources are available to students for short-term help, but some still don’t know about them or decide not to seek service because of stigma. Many university counseling centers like UH’s aren’t built for longterm treatment and lack specialist­s who can provide more intensive care, Ngo said.

“A lot of the desire that we’re hearing from our students is to be able to see us more often,” she said.

Heather Butina-Sutton, a Ph.D. candidate, said she had a good first appointmen­t with CAPS several years ago but struggled to get an appointmen­t with the same counselor a second time. She said she imagines that people in similar situations wouldn’t always take the time to find care off-campus, especially if they struggled to seek help in the first place.

“For those first appointmen­ts with CAPS, that is a big first step for students,” she said. “It can be difficult to do those assessment­s because essentiall­y you say, ‘I have a mental health problem.’”

UH is currently collaborat­ing with the JED Foundation in a four-year process to build on mental health, substance use and suicide responses, and officials around the university this week affirmed a commitment to bolstering student mental health. A counselor was made available Tuesday and Wednesday at the Office of Human Resources to speak “informally” with people affected by the student deaths.

“We want them to know there is at least one, if not many, people that they can talk to,” Ngo said. “If they could find a way to connect with one person ... we can talk with them and help them to have a plan for every minute. We don’t have to plan too far in the future, but literally taking one step at a time.”

Freshman Gabrielle Palermo said she has struggled to walk past Agnes Arnold since the death on Feb. 15. The building closed for the remainder of that day.

“It just reeks of death and sorrow,” she said. “And now it’s doubled.”

Palermo was one of many students on Tuesday who came by Agnes Arnold to stop and reflect. She dropped off pink wildflower­s and sat for a while on a nearby bench, looking up.

Others passed by in the normal course of their day, even walking on an outdoor path that traverses through the building. No caution tape remained, although university officials said that they enhanced the presence of security on Tuesday afternoon.

Provost Diane Z. Chase told the university community in an email on Monday that administra­tors were working to determine the use of Agnes Arnold in the long term. Classes, testing and student organizati­on activities will meanwhile be relocated for the rest of the spring semester.

“We are considerin­g all options,” she said. “Once a plan is finalized, it will be shared with our community.”

As of Tuesday afternoon, more than 1,800 people had signed an online petition calling for the university to close the building and retrofit it to restrict easy outdoor access from higher levels. Freshman Hunter Foster said he feels the building is a problem.

“My initial response walking by, I was like, I already know what it is,” he said. “It is so awful.”

Butina-Sutton, who received her undergradu­ate degree at UH, said she returned for her Ph.D. program and was surprised to see so many renovation­s around campus but not at Agnes Arnold. She has attended seminars and taught at the building.

“These tragedies are something that I think the people who work in Agnes Arnold have to carry with them, especially the faculty who have been here a long time,” she said.

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