It's Monday, so perhaps my cognitive processes are just slower than usual, but...
Does that imply that condom distribution is a student, but not a staff, wellness issue?
That staff and student condoms will be distributed separately, by HR and by Student Health?
That it's a wellness issue for all, but Student Health will distribute the condoms because of privileged access to the toilets and other loci of condom dispensers?
Any combination, including the empty set, of the above?
In my corner of the universe, condoms are always in short supply. I haven't spotted condom dispensers in the Beattie Building, but then the academic activities and departments are being progressively squeezed out by Faculty Administration, so that's perhaps inevitable. But the condom dispensers in the Arts Block have not had condoms in them in living memory. And I suspect it's not because the staff and students in Arts use them up particularly quickly. The coffee outlets are rather far from Arts, which would indicate low levels of demand.
I think if we're going to have HIV/AIDS awareness messages and condom dispensers, it helps to have condoms in them. Imagine you rush into the toilet in teh heat of passion, to stock up your pockets, before a hot session on the Beattie fire escape stairs - and then discover there are none. Do you cancel your study plans? Cancel your tutorial and decide to go home to your spouse rather? Retreat to your office to read your email instead? Not likely - you continue, but without your raincoat.
If we're going to have coffee outlets, we need dark staircases... but we also need well-stocked condom dispensers. For staff and students, and for those red-and-grey ghosts that flit into our offices and make it all beautiful and clean when we're not looking, but are not (our) staff. We trust that the new arrangements for managing HIV/AIDS issues on Campus include such practicalities.