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Students demand silence, noise complaints grow

Library considers bans for loud students, no noise toleration

JOHN MICHAEL GUERRERO MULTIMEDIA EDITOR

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The Salvatore G. Rotella Digital Library and Learning Resource Center is one of many key places at Riverside City College that students can visit for various resources, a place to study or a place to mingle.

Recently, the library has gained attention for how noisy it can get at the food lounge on the first floor. Students have said librarians are threatening to ban noisy patrons.

“I have heard it gets pretty loud and that (students) haven’t been able to focus on the ‘quiet floor’ which is located on the second floor of the Digital Library,” Chloe Spartos, a student at RCC, said.

Linda Joannesing, library technical assistant II, said the college assumes students will read the Student Handbook to learn about the Code of Conduct. She said the noise is a product of how crowded the building is.

“If there are a lot of people, it can get noisier, but with fewer people, it is usually not an issue,” Joannesing said.

Librarians have continued to warn students that they may be asked to leave if the noise level in the library becomes too loud.

This has been a frequent issue this semester compared to the previous semesters following COVID-19, according to Jacqueline Lesch, department co-chair and librarian faculty.

She said that many of the current rules and regulations students are

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