Matt Boone/SPPSPaul Deyerle, senior psychology major and director of LGBTA's new resource center, answers e-mail on July 28 in the office's new location.
The grand opening for the resource center will take place on Aug. 29, the first Friday of the fall semester. The opening will include university administrators, faculty, staff and students.
"The resource center itself as a space is not a new conception," said Mary Grace Campos, assistant director of multicultural programs and services. "The notion of the center has always been on the radar screen."
Paul Deyerle, a senior psychology major from Roanoke and director of the LGBT resource center, said the idea for the creation of the resource center came up at a Board of Visitors' gathering two years ago.
A task force was created, in a year-long process to review the need for a LGBT resource center, and, said Deyerle, "it concluded that there needed to be a resource center."
Because of budget cutbacks, however, it took a long time for the center to come to fruition. Currently the funding for the center comes from surplus funds from last year's LGBTA budget.
Currently, LGBTA is in charge of administering the center.
"The vision of what it should be has been a student initiative, entirely," Campos said.
The new resource center will be located on the third floor of Squires Student Center. The space has been a constant project over the summer for Deyerle and for Jacob Vuiller, a senior economics and Spanish major from Richmond, and public relations officer for the LGBT Resource Center.
"There have been lots of late nights," Vuiller said.
Part of the difficulties will be getting the word out about the center, and also making people realize that the center is there for educational purposes and open to student, staff, faculty and members of the surrounding community, Deyerle said.
The center will be student-run, with a majority of the staffing provided by board members of the LGBTA, said Deyerle. There are plans for the center to make key partnerships with other student organizations.
"We still have our hardest obstacle yet to face," Deyerle said.
The resource center is already starting to work with VT Engage to become involved in the community, but is also getting volunteers from VT Engage to work in the resource center. The main task of these volunteers would be to manage the library resources in the center.
According to a press release from the LGBT Resource Center, this is the first center of its type in the New River Valley, and "will help to promote the Principles of Community at Virginia Tech, as well as, support the Board of Visitor's 1998 decision regarding the establishment of Safe Zones."
The primary focus of the center will be to provide a space for gay and lesbian students to study and socialize as a community, but it will also contain a resource library, with pamphlets, books, DVDs and other materials on important LGBT topics, such as coming out, safe sex and HIV/AIDS, according to the press release.
The resource center has partnered with Newman Library to make the resource library searchable from the library's main page. There are hopes to partner with departments across the university.
Campos said the center could also serve as a meeting space, and ideally, a space that can be used by all, regardless of sexual orientation.
"Need not be one of the letters in the center to enter," Campos said.
Another challenge for the future, according to Deyerle, is taking on the resource center after the founding board leaves.
"It is time consuming, and a labor of love," Deyerle said.
Another concern was people not being educated about the issues that the center raises, and "not understanding what it means to be a gay Hokie," Deyerle said.
The center, overall, is about overcoming stereotypes, Deyerle said.
Campos echoed this concern, citing the need to prove the usefulness of the center on campus and garner support for the maintenance of the center.
"We are cautiously optimistic. With the right people, great things will happen," Deyerle said.
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