THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

Skystore Hopes to Compete Under New Management

By: Taylor Hutchison Indy Staff Writer

Author: Bodine, James/Wednesday, September 25, 2019/Categories: Home, Campus

Rate this article:
No rating

Since mid-summer, the Skystore, located in the Student Union, has been under new operation and management.

The new company, Textbook Brokers, lowers prices to go up against competitors like Amazon and Chegg, said Kristian Luce, the new manager. Students may rent textbooks for less, and are now more likely to shop at the Skystore, which has received over 1,700 online orders since Textbook Brokers took over this summer.

“We are now in direct competition with Amazon,” Jimmi Ogden, the assistant manager, said. “I think that makes it a lot more affordable for students.”

Jill Coon, Director of the Student Union, works in communication between the Skystore and the Student Union, she said.

She said that after the contract with Follett ended, she did what is called “going out to bid,” or making the Skystore available for bidding. 

Coon provided the Request for Proposal that invites companies to submit a Proposal for Management and Operation of the Skystore. 

The RPF outlines what was needed, like a company to reduce prices of textbooks for students.

The requests varied from improved customer service satisfaction to expanding product selection, but affordability was most important, Coons said.

“It was disheartening for our students to have to be ordering books and having them shipped because we couldn’t provide what they needed,” she said. 

Ultimately, it was a committee made up of Coon, a faculty member and former Associated Students of Fort Lewis College President Chance Sallaway that decided to accept Textbook Brokers as the new company, she said.

The contract with Textbook Brokers is five years long, she said.

Coon said that the reaction from students was positive, citing one student who bought their textbooks from the Skystore for the first time as a senior.

Since the introduction of Textbook Brokers, a few changes have been made to the Skystore, like the policy on price matching, for example. In the past, students were given an in-store gift card, but now the difference is removed at the cash register, or students are refunded the difference to the method of payment used, Ogden said.

However, there is a catch. Textbook Brokers is unable to accept a gift card given to a student by Follett, Ogden said.

Luce declined to comment on any further details regarding price matching.

Luce has faced several challenges since becoming the new manager, he said. When Follett left mid-summer, they took  all of their products with then. Since then, he has worked to fill the Skystore with textbooks and gear in time for the fall semester. 

Follett left no information behind, so Luce compiled a new list of the textbooks students needed. 

He was also unable to stock the Skystore with used textbooks, so the store has been selling and renting new textbooks for the price of used ones, he said.

In addition to textbooks, the Skystore continues to offer a variety of gear from T-shirts to mugs. 

Under Textbook Brokers, it is easier for employees to tailor the items in the Skystore to what students want, Ogden said. Before, it was a challenge to do so because employees had to go through many steps to get approval.

She attributes this change to Textbook Brokers being more independent than Follett.

Print

Number of views (2885)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

Can you dig it?

By Mia McCormick Indy Staff Writer

Historical or hideous: Buried cars on campus once served as erosion control. But now, some say they’re little more than trash.

Imagine walking down a trail or beside a riverbank and coming upon an old rusty car sticking out of the ground. Deep in the forest behind the Bader Snyder dorms at FLC, there lie two buried cars with caved-in roofs and hollow windows protruding from the earth.The rusty cars look decades old. They are mildly dilapidated and covered with graffiti. The interior, except for the steering wheel, is...

16 Shades of Green

By Garrett Middleton Indy Staff Writer

Through a largely student-run group, The Environmental Center, sixteen project leaders aim to keep the college environmentally conscious through a variety of efforts.

How does Fort Lewis involve students in campus sustainability? Through a largely student-run group, The Environmental Center, sixteen project leaders aim to keep the college environmentally conscious through a variety of efforts. The FLC Environmental Center is a Student Sponsored Organization in which students are given the chance to run campus sustainability projects with the assistance...

FLC places second at Collegiate Mountain Bike Nationals

By Mia McCormick Indy Staff Writer

The Fort Lewis College mountain bike team had the home field advantage at the Collegiate Mountain Bike Nationals, or so they thought, until all of sudden, Durango got hit with a snowstorm.

The Fort Lewis College mountain bike team had the home field advantage at the Collegiate Mountain Bike Nationals, or so they thought, until all of sudden, Durango got hit with a snowstorm.  The major race was at the local Durango ski slope, Purgatory Ski Resort, on October 14-17, two days after the mountain received an estimated 6-inch layer of snow.  The snow didn’t...

A Durango Skate of Mind

By Mia McCormick Indy Staff Writer

How Pain, Progress, and Passion Create a Community on Four Wheels. 

In Durango, it is hard to go a day without seeing a skater riding down the street. Whether it be to commute across the Fort Lewis College campus or to try new tricks at the Schneider Skatepark, Durango is home to a wide community of people who like to skateboard.  The Schneider Skatepark lies adjacent to the Animas River Trail and is tucked to the side of Roosa Avenue.  The...

FLC’s Performing Arts Department is taking the stage

By Tayler Huntley Indy Staff Reporter

The department has overcome several challenges within the COVID-19 pandemic, giving students the chance of performing in person this year.

Fort Lewis College’s Performing Arts Department has overcome several challenges within the COVID-19 pandemic, giving students the chance of performing in person this year.  “This fall looks very different from last fall,” Felicia Meyer, an associate professor of theatre at FLC, said. “Last year, we weren’t able to have live performances of our fall...

First1011121315171819Last