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| Bryan Williams |
Ever wonder why at the end of every quarter, a student has six 24
packs of Mountain Dew, 10 board games, 10 bags of chips, three
mega Goldfish containers and six pints of ice cream in his dorm
room? Or why you hear at the end of the quarter, “Who wants to
go to Ben & Jerry’s? My treat!”
Food Debit rules require all students living in the dorms to spend a minimum
of $1,281 on food, to be bought only on campus. In addition, food
debit is not available as a form of currency at every campus eatery. Java’s,
a coffee shop that facilitates meetings, studying, and student collaboration,
does not accept food debit as a form of payment. Therefore, while
food costs are high, many are still unable to spend the roughly $16.67 per
day allocated to them.
As a result of these regulations, students are often challenged to find
creative ways to spend extra debit rather than wasting it. Many volunteer
organizations take advantage of the surplus by holding drives for various
non-profit organizations. These drives, held at the end of each quarter, can
be found every night in front of Sol’s or the Corner Store. They help fuel
the wacky spending sprees that have become legend. Students may clear
out their debit by buying 30 cans of Campbell’s soup, 30 bars of candy,
10 boxes of cereal, and 40 Ramen packs, sometimes to donate and other
times for their dorm rooms. Ever wonder why only chicken soup is gone,
or why there is no shampoo left?
Rather than encouraging students to learn budgeting, saving, and smart
financial management—important skills that students need to master in
order to succeed in the workforce—these regulations actually cause and
encourage illogical and erratic spending sprees. If RIT wants students
to be more responsible with their money, all they have to do is provide
incentives that already exist in a real world setting.
Many colleges allow food debit to be reduced, rolled over, or even returned
to the students at the end of the school term. If this occurred at RIT, students
might even be able to use their remaining debit to buy RIT gear at
the bookstore, or even try to offset the outrageous costs of new books. But
the price of textbooks is just a bone to pick on another day. For now, a lot
of us would simply like more flexibility in food debit.
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