Phi Theta Kappa - Honor Society

Phi Theta Kappa Announces Plans for Hurricane Relief Funds

Phi Theta Kappa will use the Society's Hurricane Relief Fund to help community college students stay in school.

Phi Theta Kappa will work with affected colleges' Financial Aid offices to determine students' needs. The Society hopes to continue the relief effort through 2006 to ensure that students who entered these five community colleges this past fall will have the resources to stay in school and complete their degrees by spring of 2007.

"We cannot afford to see these students 'stop out,"' said Phi Theta Kappa Executive Director Rod Risley, "because statistics show - if they do 'stop out' they most likely will not earn a degree."

After a tour of storm-ravaged south Mississippi, and discussions with education leaders in Louisiana, where colleges remained closed, Risley announced that funds being collected by members - "students helping students" - would be available for tuition assistance, book fees and even to offset high gasoline prices, a concern to commuting students.

Risley recently led a team of Phi Theta Kappa staff members and International President Arthur Vargas on visits to three Mississippi two-year college campuses severely affected by Hurricane Katrina: Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College, Pearl River Community College and Jones County Junior College.

Delgado Community College and Nunez Community College in Louisiana remain closed.

Since the hurricane 1,150 students have dropped out of Jones Junior College according to college president Dr. Ronald Whitehead, who said that a 100 percent refund for the semester was extended to students in spite of the college's normal withdrawal policies.

"The impact of Katrina, the mental stress of it all, is cumulative -- you can't drive out of it. The destruction is everywhere and it impacted student's homes, their workplaces, and their relatives' homes," Dr. Whitehead said of the reasons why students have left the community college. "Parents lost jobs that enabled them to send their children to college. Students with part-time jobs helping to pay for their tuition and expenses lost those jobs. Forestry and poultry, the two largest industries in our area, were greatly impacted."

Risley said the purpose of the visit was to listen to students - Phi Theta Kappa members and non-members alike - whose lives have been turned upside down as a result of Hurricane Katrina.

"For most students, their lives are in a state of flux. Many are being forced to sell their property and move," Risley said. "Some students, however, are determined to stay and complete their degrees."

Now Phi Theta Kappa has a message for these students: "Stay in school and earn your degree."

"We are asking colleges and Phi Theta Kappa chapters to hold a fundraising activity to provide funds to help these students - both Phi Theta Kappa members and non-members who are one semester from graduating - stay in school and earn that degree," Risley said. "Funds will be used to buy books and computers, pay for tuition and housing - whatever resources are needed by the student to stay in school this next spring."

More than $15,000 has already been raised, Risley said, from chapters across the Society.

"When the hurricane struck I still felt devastated despite the fact that I live in New Jersey," said Phi Theta Kappa member Kaitlyn Mulligan from Middlesex County College. "I wanted to help but was unsure how - then I learned Phi Theta Kappa had created a relief fund."

Mulligan and other members raised $500 for hurricane relief by holding a bake sale. "It is nice to know this will go to a two-year college student just like me, and that Phi Theta Kappa is there for all of us," she said.

To support Phi Theta Kappa's "Students Helping Students" initiative, send contributions to:

Phi Theta Kappa Honor Society
c/o Hurricane Relief Fund
1625 Eastover Drive
Jackson, MS 39211

Learn more about Phi Theta Kappa Hurricane Relief efforts.