Courtesy of SGA
Reallocation creates travel fund, changes student programming Kylie Hubbard News Editor Next year’s student programming fund will be reduced by $190,000 to fund a student organization travel budget after the SGA senate took a unanimous straw poll on March 6 in favor of the reallocation. The student programming fund is money from opt-in students set aside for student organizations to request funding to bring speakers and organizations to campus. The university charges every student an $15.46 student programming fee, but in order to protect students from funding events they do not support, students have two options for deciding how the university spends the money. Students who choose to opt in, option 1, allow the university to use the fee for student programming on campus, and in turn, those students receive free access to all student programming such as Vol Night Long and guest speakers. Students who choose to
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opt out, option 2, tell the university to use the fee for initiatives and events that are not student led. “We are supporting student organizations to the same capacity, just in a different way,” SGA president and senior in college scholars Morgan Hartgrove said. “I don’t see this having a strong affect for reducing programming on campus. However, it will cause us to be more intentional with our funds.” The decision came after a noticeable shift in demand for funding from hosting events to traveling for related conferences, Hartgrove said. “The chess club doesn’t need to bring in a speaker about how to be better at chess,” Hartgrove said. “They want to travel to compete in a chess competition.” Travel funding will allot money for student organizations to travel to conferences, contests and leadership development events. “We have a fund (housed) in CLS (Center for Leadership and Service) which is only
for leadership development, and we have more request(s) than we can accommodate,” Hartgrove said. “This shows me that there is a need that isn’t being fulfilled.” Along with the reallocation of funding, larger student organizations such as Campus Events Board (CEB) and the Black Cultural Programming Committee (BCPC) will present each event request separately to the Student Programming Allocation Committee (SPAC) as opposed to presenting an entire calendar as they have in the past. Student programmers expressed their concern for the reallocation in a Senate open town hall Tuesday evening. Around 50 students from various organizations including CEB, Sexual Empowerment and Awareness at Tennessee (SEAT), Women’s Coordinating Council (WCC) and the Issues Committee met in filled Haslam room 103. Dylan Douglas, chair of the Campus Events Board’s issues committee and senior studying political science, said student pro-
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gramming organizations did not know of the budget cuts until after they had been finalized. “The complete lack of consideration for informing students and certain administrators about this change is very troubling,” Douglas said. “SPAC funding has been highly-politicized in the past, and given what was changed (both the budget cuts and new procedure changes) and how they changed it, without informing anyone effected, I can’t help but feel this is another extension of that.” Douglas was not the only student organization member who believed the reallocation was a political attack. Cole Tipton, SEAT executive board member and sophomore majoring in sociology and women’s, gender and sexuality studies, cited the defunding of the first annual Sex Week and the organization’s scramble to gather funds a week prior to the event. See PROGRAM FUNDING on Page 2
Thursday, March 29, 2018