THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

The ASFLC: RSO Travel and Event Grants

The ASFLC: RSO Travel and Event Grants

Story by Chris Mannara Photo by Jarred Green

Author: Bodine, James/Friday, October 21, 2016/Categories: Campus

Rate this article:
No rating

A number of resolutions were passed that granted some RSOs travel budget funding at the ASFLC meeting Wednesday.

 

Bee Club

 

The FLC Bee Club were granted an amount of $1,024 by the ASFLC Senate through Resolution 16-042.

 

The money will be used to fund a trip for 8 students and a faculty member to Galveston, Texas for a beekeeping conference, Hollie Wall Dalenberg, president of the bee club, said.

 

The fund would be put towards transportation for the students as well as for a hotel room for the students, Dalenberg said.

 

Research on bees and beekeeping  that was found would be presented to the conference by the FLC Bee Club, Dalenberg said.

 

The conference, which is being held in January, is a trade show and the bee club wil acquire products that would keep the six beehives on campus thriving, Dalenberg said.

 

ASFLC Senate ultimately approved the FLC Bee Club for their travel grant by passing the resolution.

 

Philosophy club at FLC was also approved for a event grant of $1,600 through Resolution 16-043.

 

This event grant would be used to fund two speakers from various colleges to come speak to students.

 

Philosophy Club

 

Professors from The State University of New York and The University of Georgia will be flown in to Durango to speak at a philosophy conference held in the Vallecito Room.

 

The topics for the discussion would be political philosophy as well as morality and all students are welcome to come, Sean Conte, president of the philosophy club, said

 

Student Activity Update

 

Student Activity Fees were proposed to be raised through Resolution 16-044.

 

The activity fee was proposed to be raised for the 2017-2018 school year.


 

The increased fee proposal will be used to fund the new Durango Transit contract.

 

The new transit contract runs from Fall 2017 to the Spring of 2022 and will cost $549,130 over 5 years and will include an increase for Durango Transit of 0.46 cents, Thrasher said.

 

The total amount raised over that 5 years will be approximately $553,500 to cover the total transit contract, Thrasher said.

 

The reason for the increase is due to decreased enrollment as well as to fully fund RSOs of all levels on campus, Harrison Thrasher, student senator, said.

 

The past few years RSOs IIs and III’s budgets have remained stagnant and have even fallen which has limited RSO growth while RSO Is have fully utilized their $16,000 grant pool, Thrasher said,

 

RSO Levels:

 

Level

Funding

Total Number 2016-2017

Examples

RSO I

Initial allocation of $50 or $100

55

Bee Club, Cultural Kitchen, Pueblo Alliance, FLC Taekwon-Do Club.

RSO II

Receives annual budget funded by student activity fees, staff members are considered employees of Fort Lewis College

7

SUP, WellPAC, The Independent, ASFLC, Club del Centro, Wanbli Ota, Village Aid Project

RSO III

Receives annual budget funded by student activity fees, staff members are considered employees of the club itself

2

Environmental Center and KDUR

 
Print

Number of views (5427)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

Screaming Rubber Band Chickens

AJ Repinski

Contestants test their pain limit for Snowdown glory.

  Contestants and spectators pack into 11th Street Station’s “Screaming Rubber Band Chickens” Snowdown event at 4:30 p.m. on Feb. 2.    11th Street Owner Marcos Wisner prepares a tournament-style bracket for the event. Randomly drawn for the bracket after entering, contestants prepared themselves for several rounds of rubber band slaps all...

ASFLC Meeting 1/24

AJ Repinski

During the first ASFLC meeting of the spring semester, several important agenda items were viewed. 

During the first meeting of the 2024 spring semester, the Associated Students of Fort Lewis College viewed several key agenda items. During the meeting, two resolutions successfully passed.  First, the proposed Financial Allocation Board Bylaw Amendments were approved. The new bylaws state RSO II’s wishing to become RSO III’s no longer need to apply solely in the fall...

Measuring CO2 with Machine Learning

AJ Repinski

How artificial intelligence could replace expensive measuring instruments.

Artificial intelligence seems almost inescapable in today's increasingly technology driven world. Deep learning models, such as OpenAI’s Chat GPT, have been at the forefront of public amazement and controversy since their mainstream introduction in late 2022. Today, Fort Lewis College students are discovering new ways that artificial intelligence can be used to reduce the costs...

Durango's Beloved Beaters

Morgan Smith and Sienna Reese

Fort Lewis College students will drive anything with four wheels! 

Whether cars are used to get to the slopes, back home or simply the grocery store, some Fort Lewis College students see their vehicle as the connection they have to the world outside of campus.  Take a look into the tales of five FLC students and their beloved beaters, to see the trust, love and tears that are put into owning an old car.    1999 JEEP...

The Old Fort Report

Kiiyahno Edgewater (Diné), Scout Edmondson, AJ Repinski, Derek Tippeconnie (Lenape)

Recognizing the past and reaching for the future of Fort Lewis College

On Tuesday Oct. 3, a group of Fort Lewis College students and faculty came together for the FLC Opportunities for Healing through Reconciliation Efforts event, held in the Center for Indigenous Research of Culture and Language to discuss a very troubling yet important topic: the release of History Colorado and FLC’s “Federal Indian Boarding Schools in Colorado, 1880-1920”...

First678911131415Last