volvoclearinghouse said:
The point is not that the students could do this outside of the realm of the college. The point is that this club's been around for almost a century, and now, because of some ill-founded concerns, they can't do what they've always done. Nothing about the activity is illegal, insensitive, offensive, or whatever other buzzword you care to throw around. Some committee, somewhere, simply decided it was "Too Risky".
I don't buy the "This Day and Age" crap, either. That's simply code-speak for, in this instance, "we're afraid of being sued". And that's bullE36 M3. Plain and simple bullE36 M3. Students can't take responsibility for themselves, parent won't let them take responsibility for themselves, the college is too E36 M3 scared to let them keep doing it, and a nice thing goes away.
What nice thing is going to go away next, because we live in "This Day and Age"?
I have been avoiding posting in this thread because I'm not sure I'm going to say anything useful, so I guess this is just venting. A lot of you guys are speculating about this stuff from the outside (which is fine) but I grew up in it.
I went to college from 2008-2012 and was heavily involved in the Formula SAE program. At the beginning of those 4 years we had our own private unsupervised space in a university building, university backing, open unsupervised machine shop access, and relatively easy access to a test site to drive the car. By the end, we had a shared, supervised space with limited working hours, cash sponsorships had to be hidden to avoid having our budget "skimmed" by the school, machine shop hours were limited and had to be supervised, and testing required waivers and faculty sign offs. I fought this stuff as it was happening, to little (or possibly negative) effect, and admit that I may not have played the political game I needed to, but the fact that I had to was ridiculous- even being told at one point that I was just an idiot who would be gone in a few years, so I should bow down to the faculty since they're in it for the long haul (my tuition pays your salary motherberkeleyer!)
Through all of this there was only one student injury, in another club, due to a blatantly unsafe design which was signed off on by a faculty member- the students present during the accident (myself and a number of FSAE people included) responded appropriately, and yet we're the ones who got clamped down on in the name of safety. The faculty member responsible was given more authority over things and was never even mentioned in conjunction with the accident, much less reprimanded.
A university is a business, and wants to make as much money as possible while avoiding as much liability as possible- if a club activity doesn't generate more revenue than it consumes, it's going to get cut down to the bare minimum of what is possible to still claim that they have that program.