COWBOY RELIEF EFFORT CONNECTS MCNEESE STUDENTS WITH RESOURCES AT OTHER UNIVERSITIES

More than 200 McNeese State University students have registered for the Cowboy Relief Effort, a Ƶ initiative that connects students displaced by Hurricane Laura with resourcesat the eight other System member institutions.

Capitalizing on the geographicdiversityof the System, the System president along with the nine universitypresidents signed a Memorandum of Understanding agreeing to provide McNeese students with access to campus resources such as Wi-Fi, libraries, computer labs, rec centers, campus dining options, counseling, and other health services.

“The McNeese community is strong and resilient, and they are already on the path to recovery,” Ƶ President and CEO Jim Henderson said. “This effort is an opportunityto provide a sense of normalcy for these students whose semesters, already impactedby COVID-19, were turned upside down byHurricane Laura. Coming together in support of our ownis avaluedstrength of thisSystem.”

The relief effort, launched two weeks ago, has attracted 213 students including Ashlee Sebren, a senior studying agricultural education at McNeese. In the past couple of weeks, Sebren, a Jackson Parish native, has accessed campus resources includingthe libraries at both University of LouisianaMonroe and Louisiana Tech University.

“The universities have been so welcoming and accepting, and I actually feel like a college student again thanks to them,”Sebrensaid.

She also credits McNeese faculty and administrationfor putting students first while navigating the aftermath of the hurricane.

McNeesestudents resumed classes remotelySept. 18. Classeswill remain fully onlinefor the remainder of the fall semester.

Hurricane Laura made landfall on Louisiana’s southwest coast on Aug. 27. The storm’s eye passed directly over Lake Charles and McNeese State University causing catastrophic damage. McNeese plans to welcome students back to campus in January 2021.