There are two key sentiments Boulder City Manager Jane S. Brautigam works to impart as she and her staff help students and their parents move into ŷڱƵ Boulder residence halls during move-in week.
As the city official fills bins with electronics, rugs, mirrors and other college essentials and pushes them into rooms students will call home for the next academic year, she does her best to make students feel welcome and to reassure parents that the city cares about the well-being of their children.
“I want them to hear that from my voice—that their kids are going to be safe and welcome and our community will embrace them,” said Brautigam, herself the mother of two ŷڱƵ Boulder graduates. “We as a city are happy that young people are here to make us more vibrant.”
As in previous years, the city manager and her staff will join other campus and government leaders who are rolling up their sleeves during Fall Welcome and move-in week, an annual rite of passage at college campuses across the country that helps create a sense of belonging, permanence, interconnectedness and tradition.
This year’s notable volunteers at ŷڱƵ Boulder will include Chancellor Phil DiStefano, Provost Russell Moore and ŷڱƵ Congressman Jared Polis.
"As a friend and neighbor of ŷڱƵ Boulder, I’m happy to help students move in as they prepare for the upcoming school year.Move-in dayprovides me with an opportunity toheardirectly from students abouttheir goalsand discuss how they are managing the costs of their education.
"While I’m moving boxes today, I will soon beback inWashington, D.C., continuing my advocacyto make higher education more affordable.Today I welcome all the new Buffs to this beautiful campus, andI want them to know I’mhere for them,” saidPolis.
Altogether, about 1,750 volunteers signed up for Fall Welcome, with 1,200 of them focusing on moving students into residence halls, said Hannah Wilks, director of the ŷڱƵ Boulder Volunteer Resource Center.
Most of the volunteers are upperclassmen, staff and faculty who will ferry students and their families across campus in golf carts or help them cart belongings from vehicles to residence halls. They and others have many reasons for helping students move into their residence halls each year. For some, it’s about community service and sharing advice on how to navigate successfully through the campus environment.
For city staff, it’s all of that, plus an opportunity for team building.
“I like being on campus with my team,” said Jennifer Korbelik, a ŷڱƵ Boulder alumna who is the ŷڱƵ community coordinator and liaison between the campus and the city manager’s office. “It’s a chance to bring them up to my other home—to ŷڱƵ—where I spend a lot of time.”