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NIC "Open Expansion"
So my IFC E-Board came back not too long ago from an IFC Regional Conference, and one of the things discussed there was the NIC "Open Expansion" Policy which states:
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Because of this, my IFC believes that we can't turn away any fraternity that is interested in coming on this campus. Now don't get me wrong, I'm a huge advocate for Greek Life and served on IFC two years ago, but Greek Life at my campus is not big (despite us being a big campus), and if we just allow any fraternities to come on board, our greek system will be diluted with lesser quality people and these orgs will struggle to stay afloat and probably close down after a couple years, not to mention we have a few strugglers now and it makes more sense for the IFC & the Office of Fraternity & Sorority Life to concentrate on helping them first before allowing 2 or 3 new fraternities to come on board (we regularly get that many requests each year). I honestly can't believe that the NIC really demands from its campuses that we just allow any org to come here and start up a local chapter, especially considering that it could potentially be detrimental to our greek system here as a whole. Can anyone offer me some suggestions on what to do here? More specifically, if you have any concrete proof that says that we do not have to be 24/7 open to expansion, that would be great because I could show that to my Greek Advisor and we can all breathe a collective sigh of relief. Thanks!! |
It seems to me that the school's rules trump the NIC rules, as they would any umbrella or individual organization.
It seems that this rule prohibits the campus IFC from making the determination, but the school itself can still make the decision of what's in the best interest of the campus. Am I wrong? |
I think it would depend on whether or not all members of the campus IFC were NIC. I don't know, but it they are would they be bound by the rule?
I do think any NIC would think long and hard before starting a colony on a hostile campus - it takes a great deal of time and money to start from scratch. |
I should have clicked the link first.... it says "Standards for Campuses" big as day.... I'll have to read this more closely, but I don't think it changes my opinion so far.
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The way I understood it, though I'm not sure if I'm correct, is that if a campus is open to expansion you can't bar anyone who wants to colonize from colonizing. I didn't think this meant anyone could colonize at any time. Before I joined Delta Chi, I looked into starting a new NIC colony on my campus and most expansion programs need support from the IFC and Greek Adviser to get off the ground.
The way its been portrayed to me here is that we opened up for expansion in Spring 2007 when my fraternity colonized and will be open until Spring 2010. Since we colonized, AKL and SAE came in the 2007-2008 year. Last Fall one group failed to colonize and the group that is currently trying to colonize has very low membership goals, so we prercieve greek life to be coming to a natural satturation point. Of course this is just how I've understood the process to work, I don't claim to be an expert. |
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On my campus, there is a rule that no council can take on additional colonies if there is already one organization in colony status (ex. if ODPhi is currently classified as a colony, LTPhi can't come on campus). Also, if the school has minimum standards for membership and GLOs, that should prevent lesser people (whatever that means) and organizations from "diluting" the system. |
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Here's the way it works.
1. Federal law permits a fraternity to organize on the campus of a public university. No law requires the IFC to recognize any fraternity. Of course, everyone has to be sensitive to due process. See: the Freedom of Association Act of 1996. 2. The NIC tries to influence it's member chapters, and by extension the local IFC, to embrace expansion. The theory is that aggressive, new fraternities will energize the student population and enhance the overall standing and strength of fraternities. There is truth to this. Most fraternities that fail do so becasue no one wants to join. They're not a good "product". A new fraternity on campus can be an exciting and attractive product. 3. A private university is not held to all these requirements. For instance, a private school can declare deferred rush and make it stick. A public university would be challenged, probably with success, if they tried to impose deferred rush. 4. NIC is a weak organization, and does not have the authority or power to enforce its declarations on any campus. They depend on their ability to influence the various IFCs through persuasion. |
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I was questioning the "official" part. |
I think he means "officially recognized"
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