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Students pay more, college gets less

Prices of semester parking permits will soon rise

Published: Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Updated: Thursday, February 25, 2010

Students will soon shell out more money to park their wheels, but they will be able to buy semester passes online and use debit/credit cards for the machines.

Beginning this summer, the price of a semester parking permit will rise from $35 to $40, while daily passes will cost $3 instead of $2.

The fee hike was approved 4-1 by the governing board Dec. 9 over the objections of board member Tomi Van de Brooke and student trustee Christina Cannon, who does not have a vote.

Although the district’s budget crisis was cited as a reason for the increase in presentations to student leaders, 75 percent of the $5 increase in semester passes ($3.75) will go to an outside company to manage the online and debit/credit card purchases, according to a report given to the board before the vote.

The new rates were supposed to take effect this semester, but district spokesman Tim Leong said DVC still needs to “work out the bugs” before students can pay for day passes with credit or debit cards.

Citations, however, increased as of Jan. 1, with a parking ticket now costing $40 instead of $35.

In addition to providing a new service, Police Chief Charles Gibson told student leaders the parking fee increase would ease $235,000 in budget cuts to his department, which includes police aides and maintenance of campus parking lots.

But Lindsay St. Hill, president of the Associated Students of DVC, accused the district of not being completely honest about the need for this fee increase.

“I feel like they were using the budget cuts as a good time to pass it,” she said. 

St. Hill said the fee was presented as a tradeoff to laying off students police aides who patrol campus parking lots.

But according to Gibson, this was not the case. He and Vice Chancellor Kindred Murillo said the increase was prompted by the need for a more efficient way for students to buy parking passes.

“If you can register [for classes] online,” Murillo said, “why can’t you buy a parking pass online?”

Although some new revenue would go toward parking maintenance and paying student aides, Murillo said these were “secondary” to online parking permits. 

Cannon, the district student trustee, declined to be interviewed by the Inquirer, but district board member Van de Brooke said  she made a “compelling case for not raising fees we have control over” at the Dec. 9 meeting.

“We should be looking at more creative options,” Van de Brooke said. 

Cannon presented the board with several ideas, such as increasing fees only for “priority parking” or charging faculty and staff to park.

Chancellor Helen Benjamin said Cannon’s suggestions are receiving attention, although she said some may be … hard to implement.”

Governing board President Sheila Grilli called the parking fee increase “minimal.”

“If a student owns a car and buys insurance and gas,” she said, “he can surely pay to park it.” 

 

Contact Oksana Yurovsky at oyurovsky@theinquireronline.com

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1 comments

Gregory M.
Wed Mar 3 2010 01:21
I find that the quote by Governing board President Sheila Grilli to be a little outrageous. With money as tight as it is these days and jobs so hard to find, I believe whole families are paying the brunt of whatever costs the District tries to throw at students. My situation is probably different from most families, but my mom is the only one who is working in my family, and she is the one who pays for insurance, gas, and school expenses, not to mention everything else my family needs. Now parking permits go up, and the district seems to assume that everyone has money to spare, I guess. I parked off campus to avoid paying for parking in Summer and Fall semesters of 2009 because I couldn't afford a parking permit - money was that tight! This semester (SP10) I go to Contra Costa College to save gas money (and did buy a parking permit), but with parking permits going up for Fall semester now, I might contemplate parking off campus again.

I especially find it crazy that the CCCDistrict decides that now would be a good time to raise parking fees (it sounds like) just to cover an online system for ordering them and a system for using debit cards. Doesn't it make sense that if you need a parking permit, you will be on campus multiple times during the semester, so you'll be able to stop by the bookstore and get one? And I think that nearly everyone would agree to still pay cash at the daily parking pass boxes if it would save them a buck.

I just find the reasons for the parking increase absurd. The District should hold off on this technology until the recession is well over. Or at least be honest and/or come up with a better excuse for raising parking fees.







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