FIRE Fights "Fee Speech" On College Campuses
Joseph Cohn writes at the site of the campus civil liberties defenders theFIRE.org:
Last October, FIRE intervened to protect student speech following a disturbing incident at Catawba Valley Community College (CVCC), where student Marc Bechtol was kicked out of classes mid-semester and banned from campus for two additional semesters for violating the school's policy prohibiting any "offense which, in the opinion of the administration or faculty, may be contrary to the best interest of the CVCC community."Bechtol's offense? He criticized an agreement between CVCC and financial service company Higher One that required CVCC students to carry Higher One debit cards that would also serve as their student IDs. FIRE quickly came to Bechtol's aid, and his shocking case garnered national media attention. (See this article, this article, and this article, and while you're at it, check out this one from The New York Times, too). After FIRE intervened, CVCC abandoned its punishment of Bechtol-but unfortunately, the college has refused to reform its unconstitutionally vague policy banning action that "may be contrary to the best interest of the CVCC community."
...Last month the United States Department of Education issued guidance about problematic university deals with banks--confirming that Bechtol isn't alone in his concerns about college/bank partnerships. The Department of Ed's worries are shared by others, too. For example, last week, the U.S. Public Interest Research Group Education Fund released a report supporting Bechtol's dissent. The report highlights that university and college partnerships with banks (and particularly Higher One, which now has contracts with over 520 campuses) can be exploitative of students, potentially charging excessive fees and hampering students' ability to make their own banking choices.







"(See this article, this article, and this article, and while you're at it, check out this one from The New York Times, too)."
None of these links work. Thought you'd want to know.
The Original Kit at June 5, 2012 6:07 AM
She only excerpts a few paragrapgs, I assume the links are valid on the original article
lujlp at June 5, 2012 9:34 AM
Dang! Why would any self-respecting college want to get in bed with the banksters? They must be getting something financial-wise out of the deals.
mpetrie98 at June 5, 2012 11:00 AM
The enmeshment of credit card companies and colleges and universities is actually pretty horrific. Not only to many universities sell student information to credit card companies (information most students probably assumed was confidential) but then get a percentage of any purchases made with those credit cards.
Higher education is turning into the biggest swindle in the history of the world. Lower education is scrambling to catch up.
Joe at June 5, 2012 11:55 AM
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