Hi Jen, The parking policies in place at the University of Kansas can be found here: http://www.policy.ku.edu/sites/policy.ku.edu/files/regsFY13.pdf This document outlines parking for students, faculty, staff, and visitors as well as details on permits, violations, and appeals.
By way of background: At KU, Parking & Transit is considered an auxiliary unit, meaning that it a self-supporting entity that generates its income from fees that are levied or charged for services. Thus, their policies can be found in our policy library although they are not in our standard template for university policies. Thanks, Amy Amy E. Smith, M.S.E. Director, Policy Office Office of the Provost The University of Kansas Tel. +1 (785) 864-4906 | Fax. +1 (785) 864-4463 Email [email protected]|<mailto:[email protected]%7C> Web www.provost.ku.edu<http://www.provost.ku.edu/> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Rogers, Jen Sent: Tuesday, July 15, 2014 3:44 PM To: Institutional policy-related discussions Subject: [acupa-l] Parking Policies Greetings! UND is in the midst of final revisions to its parking policy and I hope ACUPA members can provide some insight. Citation-based Suspension of Parking Privileges There has been some additional discussion surrounding the loss of parking privileges based on citations. I'm looking for verbiage specifically addressing: 1. What triggers a loss of parking privileges (is it the number of citations, is it the total bill outstanding, etc.), 2. Who decides when parking privileges are lost (is it Parking Services or another level of administration: Dean of Students, Provost, etc.), 3. The logic supporting citation-based suspension of parking privileges, and 4. Repeat violators. (If they continue to pay parking tickets in a timely manner, should we care?) Additionally, are these issues handled differently among students, faculty and staff? If so, how? Visitor Parking Does your institution have any "free" parking for visitors? If the answer is yes, it may be free to the visitor, but who really pays for it? How are free spaces patrolled to ensure faculty, staff and students are not using/abusing spaces designed as visitor parking? Moreover, how do you make parking on campus visitor-friendly? After Hours Parking Finally, does your institution allow after hours parking on campus without a permit? "After hours" could be loosely defined as any time between 4:30 p.m. and 3 a.m., weekends and holidays. However, UND has several night classes which would require students to park on campus between 4:30 and 10 p.m. These individuals would not technically qualify for after-hours parking sans permit. How are these situations addressed for your institution? I look forward to your responses. All the best, JEN Jennifer Rogers Special Projects Assistant to the VPFO University of North Dakota Twamley Hall, Room 314 264 Centennial Drive Stop 8378 Grand Forks, ND 58202-8378 O 701.777.3511 | D 701.777.4392 F 701.777.4082 [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> | UND.edu/finance-operations ATTN: Please be aware that when you respond to an ACUPA-L e-mail, the reply will be distributed to the ENTIRE list of members. If you do NOT want to send an e-mail to everyone, please reply directly to the individual who initiated the query (their e-mail address appears in the "From" line of their original e-mail). If you wish to remove yourself from the ACUPA e-mail list, please go to the following website and complete the form. We will remove you from the list within 24 hours, during normal business hours. http://www.acupa.org/MembershipForm_Discontinue.html If you have questions about the ACUPA e-list, please contact Jamie Parris at [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]?subject=ACUPA%20e-list%20assistance> or 607-255-6837.
