On Student Fees

Monday, March 9th, 2009
by Matt Beato

I’m glad to see CJ implicitly accept my second tenet for the necessity of student government. I expected the first to be more contentious, so I’d like to elaborate my views further.

Viewpoint neutrality and Downs’s Argument
Professor Downs, who is cited in CJ’s argument, writes an essay that — on its surface — might be critical of student fees. In fact, Downs brings up one of the best arguments in favor of the student fee process — viewpoint neutrality. Essentially, this means you can’t discriminate event-by-event based on viewpoint. My student government can’t, for example, legally fund pro-choice groups while denying pro-life ones. 

Downs is absolutely correct that “the Court provided no guidelines on what constitutes viewpoint neutrality or discrimination”; this is what happens when new caselaw is created. As more caselaw is created, the guidelines will become clearer, but until then we know one thing — if a student government corruptly discriminates, it is illegal and anyone can take recourse in the courts. Is a recourse like this ideal? Of course not. Is it good to have a check and balance above student governments? Of course.

“A microcosm of a bad democracy”
 
I agree that student governments can be prone to low turnout. That being said, my student government at William and Mary has much higher turnout than local elections in our community of Williamsburg, VA, so I’m not just going to accept that this is a problem that must exist. If people that they have a choice and feel that the issues affect them, they will vote. I also agree they can be prone to corruption, but again, I’d put my student government’s funding process among the least corrupt of any government I’ve seen. Corruption and cronyism don’t have to happen; on campuses with high voter turnout and a strong press I would view these as very rare, and when they do happen they can be dealt with quickly.

I don’t really agree with the institutional memory issue. We have a faculty advisor who provides advice on allocating student fees who has been around for 10-15 years, and many students stick around student government for four years.

Alternatives
As it is right now, CJ seems to provide no alternative whatsoever to student government, or any mechanisms for how it can be reformed. I’d be interested in hearing them, since the alternatives I can see are quite undemocratic and authoritarian.

tagged under:
Facebook | Digg | Del.icio.us | Stumble | Reddit

ABOUT THIS AUTHOR

Matt Beato is a senior at the College of William and Mary. He is a member of W&M's Student Assembly Senate and chaired that body for a year.

Leave a Reply