[net.college] Increase in ACM Student Membership Dues

acm@LOCUS.UCLA.EDU (08/13/86)

  (Please note that a version of this letter will be sent to the ACM Council
   and the Communications of the ACM as well as the Student Chapters Comm.)


  August 9, 1986


  To whom it may concern:

  On behalf of the membership of the UCLA Student Chapter, I wish to
  most bitterly protest the planned increase in student membership
  dues.  Currently, the cost for annual student membership is $15.
  As of October 1, 1986, this rate will be doubled to $30 per year.
  (CACM, v. 29, n. 8, p. 710).

  I realize that the dues for members and associate members will also
  be increased (from $50 to $65) while many activities and other ACM
  supported events will incur reduced funding due to ACM's "large
  revenue shortfall".  That all members, student or otherwise, should
  share some of the burden is truly understandable. However, I believe
  that this 100% increase in student dues is very short sighted.

  We are all used to hearing about the plight of many students who are
  always financially desperate and struggling to make ends meet.
  I wonder how many people do not believe this.  I have to.  I happen to
  be one of those students who tries to go to school and attempts to
  survive by working on supported research.  I also am proud to be a
  student member of the ACM both through the ACM and here at the UCLA
  Chapter.  As well, I know several other students here who are in the
  same financial predicament that I am.  Unfortunately, they are no longer
  interested in the ACM any more since they learned about the
  increase in annual dues.  They wonder why the student members must
  bear such a large portion of the "shortfall".  They also do not plan
  to renew their student membership when it expires nor are they very
  interested in participating in the UCLA Student Chapter's activities.

  A possible motivating factor for increasing the base student
  membership fee might be the number of students currently members of
  the ACM.  If we accept the figure of approximately 67,000 members
  currently within the ACM (CACM, v. 29, n. 8, p. A-5) and
  approximately 41,100 members who are not students (CACM, v. 29, n. 8,
  p. A-26), then we must conclude that there are 25,900 non-voting
  members.  If we assume that about half are associate members,
  then we have approximately 13,000 student members.  Currently, if
  each student pays at least $15 per year, then the gross revenue is
  $195,000.  By doubling that value, the ACM might expect $390,000 next
  year from just students paying the base student rate.

  Since I received the August 1986 issue of the Communications, I have
  been trying to ask all the student members that I know what they plan
  to do now.  At least half have stated that they do not plan to renew
  their national membership while a third have informed me that they
  do not forsee joining the UCLA Student Chapter primarily because of
  the 100% increase in dues for ACM itself.  If we take as a rule to
  apply to the world wide student membership, we then are faced with
  a few conclusions.  One is that the increase in the base membership
  rate will probably not increase revenue to the ACM.  Another is that
  students will not be participating in as many activities in either
  chapters or in the ACM as a whole.  Still another is that revenues
  for SIGs and chapters will not be helped by the loss of students.
  Finally, many students who will become professionals and researchers
  in the field of computing no longer feel any compelling urgency to
  become a member of the ACM because the ACM cannot be trusted to
  fulfill its obligation to a large, yet underrepresented, portion of
  its membership.


  Sincerely,

  David E. Lee
  past UCLA ACM Chairman (1984-86)
  4801 Boelter Hall
  UCLA
  Los Angeles, CA  90024
  (213) 825-7597
  (ARPA: acm@locus.ucla.edu)


  p.s. The ACM might also be compared to other societies and their rates.
       I am a student member of several other professional societies
       such as the IEEE, SME, and SWE.  The maximum base rate charged by
       any of these is $15.00 per year.
David E. Lee
UCLA ACM Chairman               UUCP: ...!{...}!ucla-cs!acm
4801 Boelter Hall               ARPA: acm@LOCUS.UCLA.EDU
Los Angeles, CA 90024           VOICE: (213) 825-7597