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kappagator 04-30-2010 09:50 PM

By your 3rd or 4th semester the dues level out. Eventually everyone's will, not just girls who pledge the 1st semester of their freshman year.

33girl 05-01-2010 02:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kappagator (Post 1923615)
By your 3rd or 4th semester the dues level out. Eventually everyone's will, not just girls who pledge the 1st semester of their freshman year.

I still don't understand how this works. If sophomores, juniors and seniors are all participating in the same activities and living in the same house, why should the seniors have lower dues???????????

ggforever 05-01-2010 12:29 PM

Maybe I can help a little. In the first year you have new member fees and initiation fees. Many sororities also have house corporation fees that are paid over a two year period. This is a fee paid by all initiated members for future maintenance and remodels. This fund will grow and be used for new furniture, painting, and remodeling in the future. Let's say house ABC has a house corp fee of $500. It might be spread over a year or two so that in the first and second year a woman is active she will pay $125 a semester ($500 divided by the first four semesters). By the time she is a junior, her obligation will be paid and her bill will go down by $125. Everyone will pay the same over the time they are active.

As to the expense, I also found it much less expensive to be in a sorority and live in the house than when I move into an apartment my senior year. I did not realize just how expensive and quickly power, cable, internet, etc add up.

I think houses do a disservice to themselves and the pnm by not being totally honest about all the fees for each house. Giving an "average" cost to a pnm rather than a specific cost for each house can lead to nm dropping because she is hit with expenses she is not expecting. If fees are thoroughly explained and the women understand the first couple of years are more expensive AND the total cost of living in the house vs off campus or even in a dorm, most will see that being in a sorority can very cost effective as well as building life long relationships.

33girl 05-01-2010 12:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ggforever (Post 1923731)
Many sororities also have house corporation fees that are paid over a two year period. This is a fee paid by all initiated members for future maintenance and remodels. This fund will grow and be used for new furniture, painting, and remodeling in the future. Let's say house ABC has a house corp fee of $500. It might be spread over a year or two so that in the first and second year a woman is active she will pay $125 a semester ($500 divided by the first four semesters). By the time she is a junior, her obligation will be paid and her bill will go down by $125. Everyone will pay the same over the time they are active.

That makes a lot more sense. Thanks!! (Previous posters: was that so hard?)

Barbie's_Rush 05-01-2010 04:25 PM

So if one were to join as a junior, they'd still have to pay the housing corp fee in the two years they are a member, right? So it's not a matter of freshman year is most expensive, then sophomore is less, and it levels out for junior and senior. The higher fees are always going to be paid, the when they are paid depends on your class year when you join.

I'm still amazed how chapters with such big houses can not have a live-in requirement. What happens if one semester or year too many members want to live out and there are vacant spots in the house?

KSUViolet06 05-01-2010 06:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Barbie's_Rush (Post 1923751)

I'm still amazed how chapters with such big houses can not have a live-in requirement. What happens if one semester or year too many members want to live out and there are vacant spots in the house?

I have had friends at bigger schools whose chapters had no live-in requirements, but they said that their chapter has a point system to fill vacancies if too many poeple are trying to live out. The # of points you have, determines whether you have earned the right to live out.

Ex: Julie Junior gets points for having already lived-in for a year, being an officer, serving on x number of chairs/committees and having 100% attendance for 3 years.

In contrast, Suzie Sophomore has not lived-in yet, has never been an officer, and has only held one chair position. She also has 70% attendance for 2 years. She ranks lower on the points list.

When it comes time to fill any vacancies, they go to the list. Those who are lowest on the points list are required to live-in.
Someone like Julie Junior ranks high, so she is passed over and gets to live-out for senior year. In contrast, someone like Suzie Sophomore could possibly be pulled in depending on how many spots needs to be filled and how other girls rank.

Ex: if there are 5 openings, the lowest 5 are required to move in. They either move in or resign their memberships.




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