For the college student who can't or just won't do laundry, there's a way to unload it.
For a price, students at the University of St. Thomas' St. Paul campus can drop a bag of dirty duds into a locker, and a local company will pick them up and wash, dry, fold and deliver clean clothes within 48 hours. Depending on whom you talk to, the service is either encouraging a generation of students to be coddled or freeing them up to make better use of their time.
A story about the new service on the student-run online news site generated nearly 5,000 likes in two days. But overwhelmingly, commentators shook their heads over the idea that college kids couldn't do their own laundry.
"This is a joke … right?" Amanda Lutes posted.
Bryan Helminiak, university residence life associate director, said the idea sprang from inquiries from parents who wanted to know if the campus had a service where students could send out their laundry. Laundry rooms are in all the dorms and on-campus apartments. A fee to use them is included in housing costs so students don't have to scrounge up change.
"We've had parents who've said, 'Well, my son or daughter has never learned how to do laundry,' " Helminiak said in the student-written story posted Sunday.
On Tuesday, he clarified. "It may not be that their student doesn't know how to do laundry, but that they don't trust that their student does laundry well — or at all," he said.
So the university partnered with Laundry Doctor, a St. Paul company.