12 | THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WWW.KANSAN.COM | NEWS | WEDNESDAY, JULY 25, 2007 Documents left behind after construction could leave students' private records vulnerable STORY BY TYLER HARBERT tharbert@kansan.com Editor's note: During the ongoing construction at Wesoe Hall, Kansan reporter Tyler Harbert recovered papers from several empty first floor offices. The papers turned out to be graded blue books and essays, along with add/drop forms. All documents contained student information, some including grades and identification numbers. The story below is Harbert's account of how the materials were left in public and the University's response. As of Tuesday evening, all documents were returned to the University for disposal. When construction began on the first floor of Wescoe Hall several weeks ago, doors were flung wide, furniture hauled out and debris scattered. Left to the wave of office remodeling was anything the former occupants didn't deem worthy of saving. Some of those items included blue books, graded student essays and schedule change forms containing student names and identification numbers. "We regret it," said Lynn Bretz, director of University communications. "It shouldn't have happened." A number of private records can be accessed with a student's school identification number. Calls were made to several offices, including the Bursar's Office, Watkins Memorial Health Center and the Office of the University Registrar, in an attempt to access records over the phone using only the reporter's name and identification number. The Bursar's Office released financial information, including tuition balance as well as scholarship and financial aid information. The Office of the University Registrar said an online form would need to be filled out to get a transcript copy. The reporter said he could put his address, name and student identification number on the form, but that he had lost his Social Security number. The office said the student number would suffice for a copy of his transcript. The health center referred questions to an online authorization for use disclosure of information form at www.studenthealth.ku.edu. Joe Gillespie, associate director of Information Management at the health center, said the center doesn't expect a Social Security number when records are accessed, but it does need a student's birth date and identification number. "We take this very seriously," Gillespie said. "There have been times we've had a concern and we say to the person, 'We need to see your face.'" "We do compare signatures," Gillespie said. "If we have any concerns we call that person ask them to come in and show identification." He said students trying to access their records do not have to go to the center in person. About a dozen of those items were recovered from several offices on the first floor of Wescoe before a new white wall and a sign that read "Danger construction site authorized personnel only" blocked the entries to the construction zone. Aaron Childers, a supervisor with Olathe-based RMT Construction Co., which was contracted for the Wescoe remodeling, said all of the desks and materials that could be salvaged from downstairs Wescoe were kept or recycled. "Basically when we took this space our contract said anything here was ours to dispose of;" Childers said. He said all of the notebooks and paperwork were taken to N.R. Hamm Quarry Inc., 16920 Third St. The documents that weren't taken to the quarry have remained locked in The Kansan newsroom and removed only to contact the students they belong to. "Honestly, I don't know what it was doing there in the first place," said Rachel Hoge, Olathe senior, when told that a schedule change form belonging to her was recovered in Wescoe. More on WESCOE on 15