by munchingfoo on Fri Jan 30, 2004 3:13 pm
I think perhaps combining all the thoughts on this thread may bring us to an amicable conclusion.
Firstly, no outstanding protest until talks fall through(or are an unnaceptable deal)
Second, someone with accounts knowledge look through the accomodation accounts. Just taking into consideration the running costs. Remember, when a building is built at a cost of £27 million that money is not lost, it is just another form of capital and can be sold or traded with almost as freely as money. Also summer revenues should be taken into consideration. As long as we are fair and remember that some of the older halls have huge repair bills.
Third, like rennie says, a group willing to take action meets, discusses and draws up plans from there. Disorganised complaining will only cause iritation, nothing else
Fourthly, we have to remember that if EVERYBODY refuses to pay the new increase there is NO way the uni can keep them up. A boycot, or even a threat of one, if carried out by seven thousand people, will make them run back grabbing for the eight and a half million they already get. We hold all the cards, the consumer votes with their feet. We are that consumer. No government or the general public is going to allow SEVEN THOUSAND people to lose their degrees over this issue. If the accounts have been bias(which all good accountants do!) the uni isn't going to want external sources looking through them is it?
So no immediate action, it will be a long-hall(bad pun) but we can do it. Just keep remembering that you are a customer.
My e-mail is ag56 if you guys want to start getting things organised.
Andy Grayland
I'm not a large water-dwelling mammal Where did you get that preposterous hypothesis? Did Steve