Word: fee
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...slim majority of candidates for Undergraduate Council president this year support Dean of the College Harry R. Lewis' decision to seek a unilateral term bill raise, even though a student referendum to raise the fee failed narrowly last year...
Lewis announced last week that he will seek to raise the term bill fee, even without a referendum of student support. He will propose the increase at next week's Committee on College Life meeting...
...term bill fee that funds a plethora of student groups has not been changed since 1983. Because of inflation, the purchasing power of this term bill fund has eroded. Furthermore, incoming class sizes have remained relatively constant while the number of on-campus student groups has rapidly increased. This has meant that money is spread across the campus more thinly than ever. Only raising the term bill fee will enable the council to allocate student group money effectively...
Nevertheless, we are made uneasy by the way in which this goal is being accomplished. Last year, the campus rightly voted to downsize the council but, unfortunately, narrowly rejected a proposed term increase. Although we agree with the underlying intentions of Lewis' decision, we would have preferred that the fee be raised with a larger degree of student acquiescence. In particular, the council should have done more to prove to the rest of the campus that it deserves that extra money--so that a term bill fee increase could have been re-proposed on the ballot in the coming general...
Lewis has said that he will not press forward with the increase in the face of student outrage. If some students are indeed angry, they can simply opt out of the term bill fee, as they have always been able to do. While this is a valid way for them to express their opinions, it unfortunately deprives worthy student groups of essential funds. We all benefit from the efforts of many student organizations; they deserve more money, not less...