Difference between revisions of "Columbia College Student Council"

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Beginning in fall [[2011]], CCSC begin its new branding campaign: yourCCSC. All updates and information about the council are now available at yourCCSC.com. You can email the Columbia College Student Council Executive Board at [mailto:ccsc@columbia.edu ccsc@columbia.edu].
 
Beginning in fall [[2011]], CCSC begin its new branding campaign: yourCCSC. All updates and information about the council are now available at yourCCSC.com. You can email the Columbia College Student Council Executive Board at [mailto:ccsc@columbia.edu ccsc@columbia.edu].
 
==History==
 
 
CCSC was founded in 1979. Its first president was [[Jack O'Laughlin]]. They collected fees of $20 per student, and had a budget of $90,000 a semester at the time. When CCSC was first formed, the Spectator presciently urged it to "show very quickly that it is something other than a gathering place for the blowhards who used to be high school student body presidents. The idea behind the creation of the council was to coordinate the activities at Ferris Booth Hall. Ferris Booth itself was run by a Board of Managers, and organizations that held events at Ferris Booth were represented by an organization known as the Student Polity. <ref> http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19771020-01.2.4&srpos=&dliv=none&e=-------en-20--1--txt-IN-orientation---50- </ref>
 
 
Their first committees were Joint Budgeting and Calendaring, Academic Affairs and College Policy, and Concert. <ref> http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19800905-01.2.4&srpos=9&e=-------en-20--1-byDA-txt-IN-%22columbia+college+student+council%22---- </ref>
 
  
 
== Members ==
 
== Members ==
  
 
The CCSC consists of three parts:  the executive board, the class councils, and the representatives-at-large.
 
The CCSC consists of three parts:  the executive board, the class councils, and the representatives-at-large.
 +
 
=== Executive board ===
 
=== Executive board ===
  
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* Student Services Reps (2): Works with VP for Policy to pursue policy changes to [[Student Services|student services]] such as housing and dining.
 
* Student Services Reps (2): Works with VP for Policy to pursue policy changes to [[Student Services|student services]] such as housing and dining.
 
* Pre-professional Rep: Works with [[Center for Career Education|CCE]] to plan events geared towards career/internships.
 
* Pre-professional Rep: Works with [[Center for Career Education|CCE]] to plan events geared towards career/internships.
*Alumni Affairs Rep: Works with [[Columbia College Young Alumni|CCYA]], [[Columbia College Alumni Association|CCAA]], and [[Columbia Alumni Association|CCA]] to connect students and alumni.
+
* Alumni Affairs Rep: Works with [[Columbia College Young Alumni|CCYA]], [[Columbia College Alumni Association|CCAA]], and [[Columbia Alumni Association|CCA]] to connect students and alumni.
 +
* Sandwich Ambassador
 +
* Inclusion & Equity Rep
  
 
== Co-sponsorships ==
 
== Co-sponsorships ==
 +
 
Any student group that includes [[Columbia College]] students can apply for CCSC co-sponsorship of their event.  If a co-sponsorship is approved, CCSC will provide additional funding for the event based on the judgment of the council.  In [[2012]] the council voted to approve the creation of two new student group co-sponsorship funds: one specifically for group travel to competitions and another for capital purchases.
 
Any student group that includes [[Columbia College]] students can apply for CCSC co-sponsorship of their event.  If a co-sponsorship is approved, CCSC will provide additional funding for the event based on the judgment of the council.  In [[2012]] the council voted to approve the creation of two new student group co-sponsorship funds: one specifically for group travel to competitions and another for capital purchases.
 +
 +
==History==
 +
=== Pre-History===
 +
Between 1892 and 1961, the [[Board of Student Representatives]] was Columbia College's central student government. In 1961 it was voted out of existence after students decided they were tired of ineffectiveness and even corruption. However, they also voted down the establishment of a successor, the Student Assembly, because it would be just as powerless as the Board was.
 +
 +
Years passed, and in the aftermath of the [[1968 protests]], the [[University Senate]] [[Student Affairs Committee]] mulled the idea of a "College student council" to handle some of the issues concerning the College that were being submitted to the University Senate, noting that that the College was one of the few divisions at the University without a student governing body.<ref>[http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19710423-01.2.4 Senate Panel Proposes Student 'Bill of Rights'], Columbia Spectator, 23 April 1971. Ken Lehn, a College senior and student member of the Senate stated that the student council would be "worthless" because it who would not be given any real powers.</ref> However, nothing directly came of the proposal.
 +
 +
=== Founding ===
 +
CCSC was founded in 1979 as part of a movement to consolidate activities oversight, student policy, and other roles dispersed among various scattered councils.
 +
 +
Proposals for forming a new student council were floated in Spring 1978, and were ultimately fleshed out and promulgated for referendum by the [[Dean's Advisory Committee]].<ref>Unclear if this is the same or similar to the [[Dean's Advisory Council]].</ref><ref>[http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19780330-01.2.3 Student Council, $16 fee proposed], Columbia Spectator, 30 March 1978</ref><ref>[http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19781006-01.2.7 College government, fee proposed], Columbia Spectator, 6 October 1978</ref><ref>[http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19781030-01.2.14 STAFF EDITORIAL: At Last], Columbia Spectator, 30 October 1978.</ref> The proposal was met with criticism from a number of quarters. Students objected to the proposed [[student life fee]], the concentration of money into one council, and the lack of guaranteed minority representation.<ref>[http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19781109-01.2.9 Student council proposal meets opposition at forum], Columbia Spectator, 9 November 1978</ref><ref>[http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19781114-01.2.5 Anti-student gov't rally planned], Columbia Spectator, 14 November 1978</ref> In addition, the [[Engineering Student Council]] (which, unlike the CCSC, actually existed at that point) was upset with the proposal, because in classic fashion, College students had drawn up a plan that called for swallowing up the ESC without ever consulting the Engineers.<ref>[http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19781113-01.2.4 Engineers fear council proposal], Columbia Spectator, 13 November 1978</ref>
 +
 +
In a tight vote, students approved the proposal 710 to 571.<ref>[http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19781117-01.2.5 Student gov't wins by narrow margin], Columbia Spectator, 17 November 1978</ref> However, after deliberation, the ESC politely declined to abolish itself in favor of joining the new council.<ref>[http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19781130-01.2.8 Engineers mull student gov't plan], Columbia Spectator, 30 November 1978</ref><ref>[http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19790207-01.2.20 BRIEFS: Panel Split], Columbia Spectator, 7 February 1979</ref><ref>[http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19790216-01.2.4 Fee approval will not await okay from engineers], Columbia Spectator, 16 February 1979</ref><ref>[http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19790319-01.2.12 Engineers vote down student govt. proposal], Columbia Spectator, 19 March 1979</ref> Since the initial rebuff of its approaches, CCSC [[CCSC-ESC merger|taking another pass at ESC]] has been a recurring occurrence in council relations.
 +
 +
The idea behind the creation of the council was to coordinate the activities at [[Ferris Booth Hall]]. Ferris Booth itself was run by a [[Board of Managers]], and organizations that held events at Ferris Booth were represented by an organization known as the [[Student Union Polity]].<ref> http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19771020-01.2.4&srpos=&dliv=none&e=-------en-20--1--txt-IN-orientation---50- </ref>  The first president of the Council was [[Jack O'Laughlin]]. At the time of its founding, CCSC collected fees of $20 per student, and had a budget of $90,000 per semester.  Upon the formation of the Council, the [[Spectator]] presciently urged it to "show very quickly that it is something other than a gathering place for the blowhards who used to be high school student body presidents."
 +
 +
Within four months of its founding, other student groups were calling for its abolition for its failure to carry its duties, like handing out the [[student life fee]].<ref>[http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19791203-01.2.10 Polity raises, defeats request to kill Council], Columbia Spectator, 3 December 1979</ref>
 +
 +
Unsurprisingly, the Spectator's article on CCSC in its decade-end retrospective on the 1980s was titled "CC Student Council: A decade of scandal, egos and consolidation."<ref>http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19891205-01.2.27</ref>
 +
 +
CCSC's first committees were the Joint Budgeting and Calendaring Committee (JBCC), Academic Affairs and College Policy Committee, and Concert Committee.<ref> http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19800905-01.2.4&srpos=9&e=-------en-20--1-byDA-txt-IN-%22columbia+college+student+council%22---- </ref>  Starting in 1990, seniors were given the right to vote in CCSC elections.<ref> http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19900329-01.2.6&srpos=60&e=------199-en-20--41-byDA-txt-IN-%22college+student+council%22---- </ref>  In [[1991]], members of the CCSC Elections Commission were paid $50, and members of the Judicial Commission were paid $25. <ref> http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19911010-01.2.3&srpos=195&e=------199-en-20--181-byDA-txt-IN-%22college+student+council%22---- </ref> In 1992, CCSC reps called for the abolition of [[Polity]] as redundant with JBCC.
 +
 +
== See also ==
 +
* [[F@CU| F@CU - Funding at Columbia University]]
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==
 +
 
* [http://www.yourccsc.com/ CCSC website]
 
* [http://www.yourccsc.com/ CCSC website]
 
* [http://twitter.com/yourccsc CCSC's Twitter feed]
 
* [http://twitter.com/yourccsc CCSC's Twitter feed]
 
*Old CCSC Websites (via archive.org):
 
*Old CCSC Websites (via archive.org):
 
**[http://web.archive.org/web/19961115000000*/http://columbia.edu/cu/ccsc CCSC Website December 1996 - September 2009 Snapshots]
 
**[http://web.archive.org/web/19961115000000*/http://columbia.edu/cu/ccsc CCSC Website December 1996 - September 2009 Snapshots]
 +
 +
== Famous Alumni ==
 +
* [[Benjamin Jealous]] '94CC served as CCSC Student Representative in 1992.
 +
 +
==References==
 +
 +
<references/>
 +
 
[[Category:CCSC|*]]
 
[[Category:CCSC|*]]

Latest revision as of 02:40, 1 October 2015

CCSC Logo

The Columbia College Student Council (CCSC) organizes events and promotes issues that are important to Columbia College students. The CCSC meets on Sundays at 8pm in the Satow Room on the 5th floor of Lerner Hall. All meetings are open to the public unless otherwise noted.

Beginning in fall 2011, CCSC begin its new branding campaign: yourCCSC. All updates and information about the council are now available at yourCCSC.com. You can email the Columbia College Student Council Executive Board at ccsc@columbia.edu.

Members

The CCSC consists of three parts: the executive board, the class councils, and the representatives-at-large.

Executive board

  • Student Body President: Organizes and runs meetings; chief advocate for CC student body
  • VP Policy: Pursues policy changes; heads policy subcommittee; assumes CCSC presidency upon vacancy of position by Student Body President
  • VP Finance: Treasurer of the council; heads co-sponsorship subcommittee
  • VP Campus Life: Plans campus-wide events for CC; heads campus life subcommittee
  • VP Communications: Organizes internal and external communications; heads communications committee

Class Councils

  • Senior Class Council: Consists of a president, vice-president, and 3 representatives from the senior class.
  • Junior Class Council: Consists of a president, vice-president, and 3 representatives from the junior class.
  • Sophomore Class Council: Consists of a president, vice-president, and 3 representatives from the sophomore class.
  • First-Year Class Council: Consists of a president, vice-president, and 3 representatives from the freshman class.

Representatives at large

  • University Senators (3): Fully elected members of the University Senate, although the three CC senators sit ex officio on the CCSC, they do not report to the CCSC, nor does the CCSC exercise any statutory or governance authority over any element whatsoever of the University Senate or its elected members .
  • Academic Affairs Rep: Works with VP for Policy to pursue policy changes to academic life.
  • Student Services Reps (2): Works with VP for Policy to pursue policy changes to student services such as housing and dining.
  • Pre-professional Rep: Works with CCE to plan events geared towards career/internships.
  • Alumni Affairs Rep: Works with CCYA, CCAA, and CCA to connect students and alumni.
  • Sandwich Ambassador
  • Inclusion & Equity Rep

Co-sponsorships

Any student group that includes Columbia College students can apply for CCSC co-sponsorship of their event. If a co-sponsorship is approved, CCSC will provide additional funding for the event based on the judgment of the council. In 2012 the council voted to approve the creation of two new student group co-sponsorship funds: one specifically for group travel to competitions and another for capital purchases.

History

Pre-History

Between 1892 and 1961, the Board of Student Representatives was Columbia College's central student government. In 1961 it was voted out of existence after students decided they were tired of ineffectiveness and even corruption. However, they also voted down the establishment of a successor, the Student Assembly, because it would be just as powerless as the Board was.

Years passed, and in the aftermath of the 1968 protests, the University Senate Student Affairs Committee mulled the idea of a "College student council" to handle some of the issues concerning the College that were being submitted to the University Senate, noting that that the College was one of the few divisions at the University without a student governing body.[1] However, nothing directly came of the proposal.

Founding

CCSC was founded in 1979 as part of a movement to consolidate activities oversight, student policy, and other roles dispersed among various scattered councils.

Proposals for forming a new student council were floated in Spring 1978, and were ultimately fleshed out and promulgated for referendum by the Dean's Advisory Committee.[2][3][4][5] The proposal was met with criticism from a number of quarters. Students objected to the proposed student life fee, the concentration of money into one council, and the lack of guaranteed minority representation.[6][7] In addition, the Engineering Student Council (which, unlike the CCSC, actually existed at that point) was upset with the proposal, because in classic fashion, College students had drawn up a plan that called for swallowing up the ESC without ever consulting the Engineers.[8]

In a tight vote, students approved the proposal 710 to 571.[9] However, after deliberation, the ESC politely declined to abolish itself in favor of joining the new council.[10][11][12][13] Since the initial rebuff of its approaches, CCSC taking another pass at ESC has been a recurring occurrence in council relations.

The idea behind the creation of the council was to coordinate the activities at Ferris Booth Hall. Ferris Booth itself was run by a Board of Managers, and organizations that held events at Ferris Booth were represented by an organization known as the Student Union Polity.[14] The first president of the Council was Jack O'Laughlin. At the time of its founding, CCSC collected fees of $20 per student, and had a budget of $90,000 per semester. Upon the formation of the Council, the Spectator presciently urged it to "show very quickly that it is something other than a gathering place for the blowhards who used to be high school student body presidents."

Within four months of its founding, other student groups were calling for its abolition for its failure to carry its duties, like handing out the student life fee.[15]

Unsurprisingly, the Spectator's article on CCSC in its decade-end retrospective on the 1980s was titled "CC Student Council: A decade of scandal, egos and consolidation."[16]

CCSC's first committees were the Joint Budgeting and Calendaring Committee (JBCC), Academic Affairs and College Policy Committee, and Concert Committee.[17] Starting in 1990, seniors were given the right to vote in CCSC elections.[18] In 1991, members of the CCSC Elections Commission were paid $50, and members of the Judicial Commission were paid $25. [19] In 1992, CCSC reps called for the abolition of Polity as redundant with JBCC.

See also

External links

Famous Alumni

References

  1. Senate Panel Proposes Student 'Bill of Rights', Columbia Spectator, 23 April 1971. Ken Lehn, a College senior and student member of the Senate stated that the student council would be "worthless" because it who would not be given any real powers.
  2. Unclear if this is the same or similar to the Dean's Advisory Council.
  3. Student Council, $16 fee proposed, Columbia Spectator, 30 March 1978
  4. College government, fee proposed, Columbia Spectator, 6 October 1978
  5. STAFF EDITORIAL: At Last, Columbia Spectator, 30 October 1978.
  6. Student council proposal meets opposition at forum, Columbia Spectator, 9 November 1978
  7. Anti-student gov't rally planned, Columbia Spectator, 14 November 1978
  8. Engineers fear council proposal, Columbia Spectator, 13 November 1978
  9. Student gov't wins by narrow margin, Columbia Spectator, 17 November 1978
  10. Engineers mull student gov't plan, Columbia Spectator, 30 November 1978
  11. BRIEFS: Panel Split, Columbia Spectator, 7 February 1979
  12. Fee approval will not await okay from engineers, Columbia Spectator, 16 February 1979
  13. Engineers vote down student govt. proposal, Columbia Spectator, 19 March 1979
  14. http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19771020-01.2.4&srpos=&dliv=none&e=-------en-20--1--txt-IN-orientation---50-
  15. Polity raises, defeats request to kill Council, Columbia Spectator, 3 December 1979
  16. http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19891205-01.2.27
  17. http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19800905-01.2.4&srpos=9&e=-------en-20--1-byDA-txt-IN-%22columbia+college+student+council%22----
  18. http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19900329-01.2.6&srpos=60&e=------199-en-20--41-byDA-txt-IN-%22college+student+council%22----
  19. http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19911010-01.2.3&srpos=195&e=------199-en-20--181-byDA-txt-IN-%22college+student+council%22----