Chancellor Holden Thorp rejected an initiative on Monday that would have allowed students of the opposite gender the option to live together in UNC’s residence halls, starting next semester.
Thorp said his decision on the proposal, which gained support from hundreds of students and a wide variety of campus groups in the fall, does not mean that he is opposed to it.
In a memo Monday to Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Winston Crisp, Thorp said the reason for the rejection was that UNC’s “stakeholders off campus” had not been adequately educated about the proposal.
“This is an important thing, and it deserves my effort for people outside the University to understand that it’s about student safety,” Thorp said in an interview.
Terri Phoenix, director of UNC’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Center, said those supporting the plan were “tremendously disappointed.”
“The people who currently feel unsafe will be disappointed as well,” Phoenix said.
Thorp acknowledged that the Board of Trustees was among the “outside stakeholders” he referred to in his memo.
Board chairman Wade Hargrove did not respond to calls for comment.
Thorp took weeks to deliberate on the proposal.
“Obviously, he’s been wrestling with it for some time, so I thought it could go either way,” Crisp said.