False Alarm: Unanticipated Fire Alarms Raise Concerns Amongst Students and Staff

Melody Tang and Jocelyn Barton
ONLINE EDITORS

Three fire alarms were triggered in the span of one week during late September, impacting the schedules of both students and faculty at Andover High School.

Principal Caitlin Brown has dealt with countless fire alarm procedures over her three years at AHS. “A lot of it is human error (such as accidental triggers),” Brown observed. However, for the three alarms triggered in the last week of September, the causes are undisclosed. “Because it involves students, there’s a privacy piece,” stated Brown. “Faculty can’t really get into detail about what happened in order to protect [the] students [involved].”

Discipline is unavoidable for those who purposely trigger the alarm. Brown notes that students who are at fault are subject to both school discipline and legal consequences as seen appropriate. Because the fire department would be occupied with the fire alarm instead of another emergency, false alarms also jeopardize the safety of the Andover community. “If there was a fire, the fire department would be responding to us and not something that is happening in the community,” explained Brown.

Many students at AHS have spoken up about how the fire alarms in late September have negatively impacted their schedules. “Fire alarms totally disrupt my day,” senior Amelia Hanscom commented, elaborating that the alarms “interrupt the flow of class” and that “it’s always so annoying to hear [it] go off.” 

In a similar position as Hanscom, Junior Zara Hayat expressed her discontent towards the alarms. “One of my tests was disrupted during these fire alarms and I was unable to finish,” Hayat informed, adding, “[The alarms] keep getting set off, so it’s just annoying now…and I’m pretty sure everybody knows what to do in terms of a fire.”

Fire alarms have also affected students who are part of the Bridge Program, a “self contained classroom primarily for students with autism that require intense behavioral support [and] academic intervention.” Jason Gillespie, head of the program, mentioned that flashing lights and loud noises are the primary causes of discomfort for the students. Furthermore, those in the Bridge Program often have scripted, pre-planned schedules that help with smooth transitions between daily events. When unanticipated events like fire alarms occur, it can be difficult to recover from. “For [students in the program, fire alarms are] extremely disruptive,” stated Gillespie. “We understand the necessity for it…but if it is just someone playing pranks, then that’s disruptive and potentially dangerous for our guys.” 

In order to lower the rate of unintended or malicious triggering of fire alarms, faculty members assure to find those who are responsible, making sure to “address the situation as it happens.” Brown implemented this strategy three years ago, when unanticipated fire alarms were also being triggered sporadically, with no major problems occurring since then.

In the long run, students’ safety is the biggest priority for Brown. “My ultimate goal is to keep [students] safe all the time,” Brown commented. “I would run into walls for all of you, seriously. That’s our job.”

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Spanish Department to Host Day of the Dead Fair
  • November 12, 2025

Areeta Faiz || Social Media Editor

A cultural fair celebrating the Day of the Dead will take place during H Block this Thursday in the cafeteria.

The fair will include a variety of hands-on activities, music, and food, allowing students to explore several popular Mexican traditions. The event has been organized by students from the Spanish Conversation Club led by teacher Sylvia Danos and AP Language and Culture classes taught by Indira Garcia. This will be Andover High School’s first year hosting this celebration.

“Students from all world language classes will have the chance to experience one of Mexico’s most meaningful and beautiful traditions,” said Danos.

Stations will include the traditional ofrenda (altar), calaverita (mini skull) painting, papel picado (colorful, decoratively cut paper), the classic Mexican game Lotería, and a chance to try traditional Mexican sweet treats.

Students can participate by signing up for the H3 block with their world language teacher, who will then bring them to the cafeteria where the fair will take place.

“This celebration reflects the values of love, memory, and cultural identity that are central to many Latin American traditions,” said Danos. She added that experiences like this help students appreciate the richness and diversity of the Spanish-speaking world while fostering empathy and global awareness.

Traditionally celebrated in Mexico and other Latin American countries on November first and second, Día de los Muertos honors deceased loved ones through family, music, food, and art. A key tradition is the creation of an ofrenda, or altar, decorated with photos, candles, and offerings to remember loved ones who have passed.

AHS has showcased the student-made ofrendas for the last seven years as a part of the World Language Department curriculum. This year, Danos and Garcia decided to go all out, believing that it is essential for students from other language programs to learn about this celebration.

Danos is excited to see students from diverse language backgrounds come together to celebrate culture, creativity, and diversity: “Enjoy music, crafts, food, and culture, all in one H Block!”

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Funding the Future of Science: Proposed NIH Funding Cuts Throw US Biomedical Research Into Uncertainty
  • November 4, 2025

Anushka Dole || Online Editor 

In the sunlit Orkin Lab at Harvard Medical School, lab technicians diligently carry out their experiments, pipetting meticulously into Eppendorf tubes. Next door, in a darkened room, a team of researchers are  huddled around a fluorescence microscope, tracking how gene‑editing tools can restore crescent-shaped red blood cells into their healthy state—a pathway the Orkin team helped pioneer.

Like the Orkin Lab, countless biomedical research labs across the United States engage in lifesaving research every single day. Their research is now in jeopardy. Funding inconsistencies in the National Institutes of Health (NIH), including proposed cuts to indirect costs and the halt in federal funding due to the current government shutdown, threaten to stall progress and could have lasting detrimental effects on both the ongoing research and the communities that rely on it, including Andover.

In April, the NIH cancelled $800 million in grants that it had already approved because the projects didn’t align with the Trump administration’s policies. In July, a federal judge then ruled that the cuts were unlawful, which restored research funding. According to the Boston NPR station WBUR, the US Supreme Court ruled that the NIH can withhold the grants in August.

In addition to withholding the grants, the Trump administration is proposing to significantly reduce funding for “indirect” costs of research, supported by the narrative that the funds “were largely administrative bloat, unrelated to the costs of research.” According to the Harvard Crimson, these indirect funds include costs such as lab construction, research equipment, hazardous waste removal and “countless other very real and necessary costs of research.” For institutions in our own backyard, the impact is tangible: Harvard University stands to lose hundreds of millions of dollars, a blow that could ripple across its affiliated hospitals—including Boston Children’s Hospital, Brigham and Women’s hospital, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Massachusetts General Hospital, and many more. Across the country, other US institutions stand to lose billions more.

To fully understand the effects of the funding cuts, it’s important to start at the source: with the research itself. Research is a long, iterative process, full of ideas that start small and experiments that may or may not work. Unlike labs and experiments in school, where the outcome is clearly defined and predetermined, research can be filled with dead ends and uncertainties.

It often begins with something as simple as an idea. Dr. Nathan Crook, an associate professor in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at North Carolina State University, described a project’s start as the moment you first think of a concept, and the end as the moment you stop actively working or thinking about it

“Normally, you or someone in your lab has a flash of insight… at these early stages, you usually don’t have dedicated funding for it,” he said. Early experiments are often small-scale pilot tests that can be supported by seed-funding (typically around $10,000) from the university, or a research foundation. More senior researchers may have access to discretionary funds – “rainy day” funds to use on early projects that aren’t bound by any specific research question.

Dr. Sara Smaga, an AAAS Congressional Science and Engineering Fellow and former Executive Director at the NSF Center for Genetically Encoded Materials, added that this initial stage is the beginning of a longer iterative process.

“In academia, faculty choose what topics they want to study…often a student will collaborate to design their project within their advisor’s topic area,” she explained. “The results of each experiment generate new questions, leading to further hypotheses, even if the initial result is ‘nothing happens!’”

Each experiment can quickly expand into multiple interconnected projects. Each project requires more resources, which are obtained by funding, typically in the form of research grants.

“Let’s say the pilot test goes well, and you get some interesting data,” Crook said. “You will then likely apply for a ‘normal’ research grant using those results as preliminary data. Usually the cool projects are kind of crazy, and the grant reviewers won’t believe that you will be able to do what you are proposing unless you have some sort of proof-of-concept that it is working.”

These grants can come from a variety of sources, including private foundations (such as the Gates foundation or the Chan Zuckerberg Institute), federal funding, internal university funding, state grants, or industry funding. 

“Generally, a Principal Investigator (usually the senior faculty member overseeing the lab), will craft a proposal describing what they’d like to study and why, and submit to a funder,” Smaga said. “After submission, proposals are reviewed by a panel of experts in the field, who evaluate each proposal for feasibility and impact. Not every proposal is funded, and sometimes it takes multiple tries to write a proposal that gets chosen for funding.”

If a proposal isn’t funded right away, researchers often continue the project on the side, refining their ideas and re-applying for grants until they can secure official funding. Once secured, labs can expand, hire more researchers, and pursue the project in earnest. Ultimately, the most significant source of funding for research projects—especially in academia—comes from federal funding, typically the NIH.

“Most of the funding in every lab I’ve ever been a part of has come from federal funding,” Smaga said. Crook agreed, stating that “the most important [source of funding] by dollar amount, are federal grants,” and that “federal grants have funded 77 percent of the research in [his] lab.”

This reliance on federal support means that any disruptions in the grant cycle—whether from delays, government shutdowns, or the proposed cuts to indirect costs at agencies like the NIH—can ripple far beyond the walls of a single lab, outpouring from academia to industry, and eventually, impacting the lives of citizens. The money from NIH funding is a key part of funding early-stage projects, like projects being worked on by Smaga and Crook, laying the foundations for industry to develop novel therapeutics. 

“Just one example: NIH-funded research on bacterial immune systems gave us gene editing, which is now being used to cure sickle cell and rare genetic diseases,” Smaga said.

Jackie Thompson, who works on targeted cancer treatments at Takeda Pharmaceuticals in Cambridge, agreed. “My current work involves developing cell and gene therapies for cancer,” Thompson said. “These treatments rely on decades of foundational research…that was often NIH-funded.”

For communities like Andover, where students and educators are deeply connected to Massachusetts’ vibrant research ecosystem, those losses hit especially close to home. Sarepta Therapeutics, a biotechnology company with an office in Andover, develops gene therapies that depend on the same fundamental research NIH grants have long supported. 

At AHS, the BioBuilder club gives students hands-on experience with synthetic biology research, and the opportunity to work on projects that can be published in a student research journal. While BioBuilder opens doors for aspiring scientists, those doors exist within a larger research ecosystem that relies on consistent federal funding.

“It’s not something that you can just reinstate the funding and think that things are going to pick up as normal,” said Dr. Lindsey L’Ecuyer, the advisor of Andover High School’s BioBuilder club. “When people set up a lab somewhere else, they’re not coming back… it’s going to make it really hard for us to come back from that.”

L’Ecuyer sees the loss trickling down to high school classrooms, mentorship programs, and the students who might have been inspired to pursue science in the first place. “It feels like we’re losing a whole generation of people that would be coming to do research in the U.S.,” she said. “America has been a leading country in scientific research, and it’s going to make it really hard for us to come back from that.”

Crook agreed. “Other countries certainly aren’t reducing research funding, and guess where top scientists—even US citizens—will go? It really hurts our country’s economic…and actual…security to reduce research funding.”

Smaga also worries that America could lose a generation of scientists, and she’s already seen the early signs. “This past cycle, we saw graduate programs responding to funding freezes and future funding uncertainty by admitting fewer students,” Smaga said. 

Biomedical research supports far more than scientific discoveries and the university labs that make them: according to the nonprofit United for Medical Research, every dollar of NIH funding generates about $2.56 in economic activity. The stakes of losing consistent funding are clear in places like the federally funded Orkin Lab at Harvard, where gene-editing research is already transforming lives. The lab is a clear example of how federal support fuels the discoveries that save lives, and it continues to inspire students and scientists to pursue the next breakthroughs. 

“It’s a challenging time to be in biomedical research, but I’m still optimistic about the field,” Thompson said.

“For students who want to get into science, the advice is simple: start early, get involved, and follow the questions that excite you,” she said. “Even sending an email to a professor whose work interests you can open doors. Despite the obstacles, the next generation of scientists has a real shot at making a difference—and it could be your curiosity that drives the next big breakthrough.”

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