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This is an archival copy of the 2006–2017 Assemblies website. This information is no longer updated.

Guidelines Content

These funding guidelines articulate the extent, limitations, and processes by which student organizations may obtain and use commission funds. All student organizations which have business with the Commission are expected to understand and follow these guidelines. Should a conflict arise between these guidelines and the bylaws of the Commission, the bylaws shall supersede these guidelines.

Adopted by the Student Assembly on Thursday, 24 April 2008. Amended: Thursday, 23 April 2009; Thursday, 3 December 2009; Thursday, 11 February 2010; Thursday, 22 April 2010; Thursday, 29 April 2010; Friday, 3 December 2010; Tuesday, 26 April 2011; Thursday, 26 April 2012; Thursday, 30 August 2012; Thursday, 2 May 2013.

1 Definitions

1.1 Terms

Allocation
A conditional allotment of funds by the Commission in response to a request for funding. In releasing an allocation, the Commission does not guarantee payment of any particular or reimbursement expense; rather, it promises to set aside funds which may be used towards certain expenses, subject to all applicable university and statutory regulations.
Applicant
The organization or organizations who are parties to the application.
Application
An application consisting of several requests for funding submitted to the SAFC by one or more applicants.
Business day
A business day shall be any day the Office of the Dean of Students is open for regular business and regular undergraduate classes are in session.
Commissioner
A member of the SAFC.
Fiscal year
A university fiscal year which extends from July 1 to June 30 in the following calendar year.
New organization
An organization that either did not receive or did not spend any funds allocated by the SAFC during the previous two fiscal years.
Price quote
A price quote is a good faith estimate of the cost of goods or services for which the applicant is requesting funds. To be valid for the Commission the price quote must:
  1. be dated within the last two calendar years;
  2. be written in English or be accompanied by a written translation to English; and
  3. include:
    1. unit costs or prices for each requested expense for which the quote issued as documentation, and
    2. cost of shipping and handling, if additional funding is requested for those costs.
Registered student organization
An organization which has a current and complete registration on file with the SAO.
Returning organization
An organization that received and spent funds allocated by the SAFC during the previous fiscal year.
SA
The Student Assembly (the assembly) is the undergraduate student government of the university under which the Commission is chartered.
SAFC
Student Assembly Finance Commission (the Commission)
SAO
The Student Activities Office is an administrative unit of the university which grants registrations to student organizations, allowing them certain privileges on campus, including the right to apply for funds from the SAFC. The office also provides extensive information and advisory resources to officers of registered student organizations.

1.2 Version of Record

The version of the guidelines posted online is the version of record, and it shall supersede any other existing versions. The Office of the Assemblies shall maintain and modify this version according to the procedures for amendment. Commissioners and other parties may not alter the effect or applicability of the bylaws or guidelines by misstatement or misinterpretation.

2 Applicants

This section establishes rules and procedures governing the interactions of applicant organizations and the Commission.

2.1 Eligibility

2.1.1 Basic Requirements

To be eligible to request funds or to spend allocated funds an applicant must:

  1. register with the Student Activities Office (SAO) and indicate its interest to pursue funding from the Commission in its registration:
    1. prior to the first deadline for funding requests in the fall semester, if funding is sought in the fall,
    2. prior to the first deadline for funding requests in the spring semester, if funding is sought in the spring;
  2. have undergraduate members who comprise at least sixty percent of its total membership, excluding alumni members; and,
  3. be in good standing with the Commission.

Officers of the applicant must also meet the following requirements:

  1. president(s) and treasurer(s) must agree to abide by standards for ethical conduct; and,
  2. president(s), treasurer(s), and advisor must affirm their approval for each request either by digital or by written signature as the Commission provides.

The organization must meet all eligibility requirements as well as submit both requests and supporting materials before the deadlines set by the Commission in order for the Commission to accept and review such requests and materials. The commission may not accept submissions from organizations that have not met the eligibility requirements.

2.2 Ethical Conduct

Officers of applicants must agree to the Statement on Ethical Conduct prepared by the Office of the Assemblies by digital or written signature as the office provides.

2.3 Suspension and Revocation of Funds

2.3.1 Purpose

To prevent misuse of commission funds, the Executive Committee of the Commission may act to temporarily suspend or permanently revoke allocated funds. The Committee may revoke funds of an organization if it finds that the organization:

  1. does not meet one or more eligibility requirements; or,
  2. acted in violation of the Statement on Ethical Conduct.
2.3.2 Suspension of Funding

Either the Office of the Dean of Students or the Chair(s) of the Commission may temporarily suspend an organization’s funds at any time. Any action to temporarily suspend funding of an applicant organization shall last no more than ten business days. Such a decision takes effect only after the following are informed:

  1. the Office of the Dean of Students;
  2. the Chair(s); and,
  3. the president, treasurer, and advisor of the affected organization.
2.3.3 Revocation of Funding

To revoke funding of an organization, the Commission must follow this procedure:

  1. the Chair(s) of the Commission must contact the officers and advisor of the organization, explaining the Commission’s intent and reasoning for proposing revocation of funding; and,
  2. the Chair(s) of the Commission, or a designee, must arrange for a meeting between the Executive Committee and the organization so the organization may:
    1. hear the Commission’s intent and reasoning,
    2. examine any evidence associated with the proposed revocation of funding,
    3. present its case and additional evidence to the Commission, and
    4. negotiate a mutually acceptable remedy; and,
  3. the Executive Committee, after deliberating in closed session, may vote to revoke funding.

The decision to revoke funding is subject to appeal. Any funds that are revoked remain unavailable to the organization until the appeal process is resolved.

2.3.4 Limitations

The Executive Committee may not revoke funding for more than one academic year and may reverse a decision to revoke funds at any time.

3 Request for Funds

3.1 Budget Request

3.1.1 Purpose

Organizations may obtain funds individually by submitting a budget request. The application is prerequisite to all other requests for funding the organization may submit.

3.1.2 Basis on Which to Make Requests

The Commission will provide at least three opportunities for the submission of budget requests each semester.

3.1.3 Permitted Expenses

Organizations may request funds for the following kinds of expense in a budget application:

  1. administrative expenses;
  2. local events;
  3. travel events;
  4. durable goods; and,
  5. publications.
3.1.4 When Applications Are Due

The commission sets deadlines for online submission in its calendar.

3.1.5 When Funds Become Available

The commission sets a date in its calendar when funding decisions are released and funds become available. Once released, funds may be used towards expenses that occur between the first and last days of classes for the semester in which those funds are allocated. Funds remain available until revoked or reverted at the end of the semester in which they are granted.

3.1.6 Maximum Allocation
3.1.6.1 Maximum Funding Determined by Tier Assignment

The commission assigns each organization to a maximum allocation tier, which determines the maximum cumulative amount of funding per semester the organization can receive.

3.1.6.2 Annual Adjustment of Tiers

The commission will annually evaluate the number of tiers and total number of organizations to assign to each tier before assigning organizations to such tiers. The commission may increase or reduce the maximum allocation for the lowest tier throughout the fiscal year depending on the amount of funds available and the number of new organizations that request funding.

3.1.6.3 Initial Tier Assignment

The commission assigns every new organization to the $500 tier in the first semester that it submits a regular budget request. The commission may assign a returning organization to lowest tier in the second semester they submit a regular budget request.

3.1.6.4 Requirements to Stay in Tier

The commission completes an annual evaluation of each organization at the end of each academic year to determine whether the organization may remain in the current tier or should be assigned to the next lowest tier in the next academic year. In order to remain in its current tier, the organization must in each semester that it receives funding:

  1. spend a proportion of its allocated funds relative to the total amount allocated that meets or exceeds the efficiency spending percentage (the spending requirement); and,
  2. remain in good standing with the Commission.

The efficiency spending percentage is set by the Commission by the first day of classes in the academic year in which groups are being evaluated.

If an organization does not submit any budget requests in an academic year, the Commission will assign it to the next lowest tier in the following academic year.

3.1.6.5 Advancement to a Higher Tier

As part of the annual evaluation, the Commission also provides an opportunity for organizations to request advancement to a higher tier for the next academic year. In order to advance to the next highest tier, an organization must:

  1. fulfill all requirements to remain in its current tier; and,
  2. in at least one semester, spend a proportion of its allocated funds relative to the maximum allocation allowed for its tier that meets or exceeds the tier spending percentage.

The tier spending percentage is set by the Commission by the first day of classes in the academic year in which groups are being evaluated.

3.1.6.6 Special Cancellation Request

The commission permits the submission of Special Cancellation Requests to allow organizations to remove select funds from the tier and efficiency spending calculation in light of circumstances that were unforeseen at the time of application. The Request must be submitted to the Commission within three weeks of the organization becoming aware of the inability to fulfill the expense. The commission will determine whether or not the circumstances are unforeseen. These may include but are not limited to:

  1. speaker/performer cancellations after the budget was reviewed;
  2. weather conditions prohibiting travel;
  3. a reduction in price after the submission of the original price quote;
  4. injury or illness; or
  5. actual costs are lower than those allocated under negotiated rates.
3.1.6.7 Fast Track Advancement

If the organization is in the lowest tier and advanced to a higher tier in three consecutive academic years and meets criteria for advancement into the next highest tier in the fourth year, it may advance two tiers that year.

3.1.6.8 Additional Requirements for Performance Tiers

The commission may designate certain tiers as performance tiers. To remain in or advance into a performance tier, organizations must:

  1. fulfill all of the basic requirements to be eligible for that tier; and
  2. submit an annual performance report using facilities provided by the Commission.

The commission will consider information submitted in the annual performance report in determining whether an organization may remain or advance into the specified performance tier. If the Commission determines that the group is not eligible to remain in a performance tier then the group will be placed into the highest tier that is not a performance tier.

3.1.6.9 Option to Receive Double Tier Amount in One Semester

An organization may elect to receive funding in only one semester. Such an organization may receive twice the maximum allocation permitted for its tier.

To exercise this option, the organization must submit a Fall/Spring Only Semester form to the commission before the first deadline for budget submissions in the fall semester.

4 Allocation

The commission allocates funds according to these guidelines and its bylaws. Allocations do not guarantee that specific reimbursements or payments will be issued. For this reason, organizations are advised to consult with the Commission before entering into any commitment with financial consequences.

5 Budget Hearings

5.1 Purpose of a Budget Hearing

A budget hearing process is provided to enable organization leaders to meet with commissioners to resolve certain mistakes identified in or arising out of the initial allocation process.

5.3 Eligibility to Request a Budget Hearing

An applicant may only request a hearing regarding a request which:

  1. is submitted in an application; and
  2. received less than the maximum allocation for which it is eligible, which is the lesser of:
    1. the amount requested; and
    2. the difference between the semester tier cap for that group and cumulative funds already allocated to that group in the current semester.

5.3 Procedures

The commission:

  1. will schedule hearings within one week of release of preliminary allocation determinations;
  2. does not allow amendment of the originally submitted request;
  3. accepts additional documentation and statements provided by the applicant which clarify or support the requests included in the original submission; and,
  4. keeps minutes which document the names of participants in the hearing, the questions asked of the applicant, and the responses received.

The applicant:

  1. provides no less than one and no more than three representatives of whom all must be either undergraduate student members or registered advisors; and,
  2. limits responses to the questions posed by the Commissioners.

6 Appeals

6.1 Purpose

The external appeal process assures actions of the Commission are fair and reasonable.

An organization may utilize this process only where it can

  1. dispute:
    1. an allocation decision;
    2. a special cancellation request; or
    3. placement into/removal out of a performance tier;
  2. where it can demonstrate that the Commission:
    1. incorrectly interpreted or applied its guidelines or relevant policies; or
    2. wrongly excluded or construed relevant information or supporting documentation in the organization’s application.

An organization may not appeal an allocation decision if it had, but did not utilize, an opportunity for a hearing with the Commission. The burden shall rest on the appealing organization to demonstrate that the Commission erred. The Student Assembly (the Assembly) determines the outcome of the appeal.

6.2 Format of Appeal

Appeals are submitted to the Student Assembly Vice President for Finance (the Vice President) via email to sa-vpfinance@assembly.cornell.edu. Appeals must include:

  1. name of the organization;
  2. the date and time of the organization’s appeal with the Commission regarding the allocation that is being appealed;
  3. whether the organization is appealing either the Commission’s:
    1. interpretation of its funding guidelines; or
    2. wrongful exclusion of relevant information or supporting documentation;
  4. rationale explaining how the group believed the Commission erred;
  5. a citation of the specific policies in these guidelines or other policies applicable to the Commission’s determination (for example: “SAFC Funding Guidelines Section 8.2.1”); and,
  6. the contact(s) who will represent the organization in the appeal, who must be the registered president, treasurer, or advisor of the organization.

6.3 Receipt of Appeal and Initial Action

  1. The organization must submit completed appeals before the deadline provided by the Commission or, if the Commission does not specify an explicit deadline, within five business days after the Commission releases the decision the organization wishes to dispute.
  2. The Vice President, after determining the appeal submission is timely and complete, transmits it to the Commission’s Executive Board.
  3. If the Executive Board agrees with the appeal request in its substance, the Chair of the Commission may notify the Vice President, who may grant the request without conducting a hearing.
  4. The Vice President, unless so notified regarding the appeal, contacts the members of the organization within five business days of receiving the review request to schedule a hearing with the Appropriations Committee.

6.4 Appeal Hearing

In presentation and discussion, the Appropriations Committee reviews only the actions disputed in the appeal, and neither the affected organization nor the Commission may present new information or documentation that was unavailable when the Commission made its initial decision.

The affected organization and the Chair(s) of the Commission each:

  1. present their rationales; and,
  2. answer questions concerning its presentation.

6.5 Decision

The Committee:

  1. deliberates in closed session and, for each disputed action, determines whether Commission erred in its original decision; and,
  2. for each determination that the Commission erred in its original decision, adopts a rationale explaining its determination.

In determining whether guidelines were correctly interpreted the Committee will consider whether the Commission’s application of its guidelines was reasonable. In determining whether the Commission erred in its determination of facts, the Committee will decide based on a preponderance of evidence provided in the hearing.

For each appeal reviewed, the Vice President for Finance:

  1. compiles a preliminary report of all determinations and rationales approved by the Appropriations Committee;
  2. presents the preliminary report for the Assembly to adopt at the earliest practical date; and,
  3. transmits the adopted report to the Chair(s) of the Commission, the Office of the Assemblies, and the presidents, treasurers, and advisors of the affected organizations.

For each determination that the Commission erred, the Commission or its Executive Committee must within ten business days:

  1. reconsider the disputed action and adopt actions that are consistent with the rationale of the Assembly;
  2. report its revised decision to the Vice President, the Office of the Assemblies, and the affected organizations.

6.6 Further Appeals

Organizations may appeal a revised decision of the Commission in the same manner as the original decision, but only on the basis of new determinations that were made since the original appeal was filed. Organizations may additionally dispute outcomes of appeals through the university Ombudsman.

7 Reversion of Funds

If an organization has unspent funds remaining in its account at the first business day after the last day of classes in the academic semester in which those funds were allocated, those funds will automatically revert to the Commission.

8 Categories of Supported Expenses

This section describes the kinds of expenses which the Commission may fund.

The following general principles apply to all expenses funded by the Commission:

  1. The commission funds only for expenses that relate to the purpose of the organization as specified in its registration with the Student Activities Office.
  2. In requests for funding, organizations must always break down the amounts requested in each expense category and specify the permitted expense in the category to which the amounts relate.
  3. Depending on the type of request and the category, additional documentation or conditions may apply to funding requests.

8.1 Administrative Expenses

8.1.1 General Purpose

Administrative expenses support the basic operation and administration of the organization.

8.1.2 Permitted Expenses

The following expenses are allowed under this category:

  1. copying and printing services;
  2. chalk;
  3. advertising for recruitment;
  4. repairs and maintenance of equipment;
  5. Willard Straight Hall mailbox rental fee;
  6. web hosting;
8.1.3 Prohibited Expenses

The following expenses are prohibited under the administrative expenses category: durable goods and items with a typical or expected useful life of more than one year.

8.1.4 Maximum Funding

Administrative expenses may not exceed $200 per semester.

8.2 Local Event

8.2.1 Purpose

This category includes expenses associated with putting on an event, program or practice.

8.2.2 Eligible Events

To be eligible for funding the event must:

  1. occur between the first and last day of classes:
  2. occur on a weekday when classes are in session or a weekend that is not part of a university holiday such as Fall Break or Spring Break; and,
  3. be one of the following:
    1. a practice session for athletic or performance organizations, or
    2. a public event open to the Cornell community to the extent permitted by spatial, temporal, or financial constraints;
  4. not have a primary or substantive purpose of:
    1. conversion/worship
    2. influencing legislation
    3. partisan political activity
    4. raising funds for profit
    5. raising funds for charity, unless the event has another equally substantive purpose related to the mission of the organization
    6. social activity; and,
    7. comply with the Use of University Property Policy, if it occurs on campus.
8.2.3 Permitted Expenses

The following expenses are permitted under this category if they relate to an eligible event, are not among the prohibited expenses for the category, and are for:

  1. guest performers, including:
    1. honorarium or engagement fee,
    2. transport,
    3. lodging, and
    4. meals;
  2. venue rental;
  3. event production services;
  4. supplies and materials essential to the event;
  5. media rental and licensing fees; and,
  6. copies and chalk

If an event is eligible for funding, the Commission will provide up to two complementary, vertical eighth-page advertisements to publicize the event in the Cornell Daily Sun. Funding is not allocated for these ads in the organization’s budget, but the organization may pay for the ads using the Cornell Daily Sun Advertisement Authorization Form.

8.2.4 Prohibited Expenses

The following expenses are prohibited under the local events category:

  1. durable goods and items with a typical or expected useful life of more than one year,
  2. food other than meals for performers as provided in permitted expenses,
  3. honorarium or engagement fee if paid to:
    1. a speaker or performer with whom another organization has negotiated an engagement fee, documented by a Letter of Intent filed with the Commission, for which it is seeking funding from the Commission,
    2. a university student,
    3. a university employee,
    4. an alumnus who graduated within five years, or
    5. a parent, adopted parent, sibling, step-sibling, or child of a Cornell student.
8.2.5 Application Requirements

Applicant must submit:

  1. price quote documentation for each individual expense; and
  2. a completed Letter of Intent Form for each guest performer for which it requests funds in this category.

A Letter of Intent Form is a form available online from the Office of the Assemblies, which must be completed by the speaker or performer and the group organizing the event. It is not binding upon either party, but it documents the good-faith intent of the parties to organize the event.

8.2.6 Maximum Funding

The following caps will apply to expenses under the local events category:

  1. Lodging for guest performers may not exceed $100 per night and $20 per person for any additional persons if the guest performer is a group of people.
  2. Meals for guest performers may not exceed $30 per person per day.
  3. Travel expenses for guest performers may not exceed the eligible amount under the Internal Revenue Service rate, listed under negotiated rates.
  4. Copies and chalk for publicity may not exceed $20 per event.

8.3 Travel Event

8.3.1 Purpose

The commission funds expenses related to student participation in conferences and tournaments away from the university.

8.3.2 Eligible Events

To be eligible for funding the event must:

  1. be located outside the municipal limits of Tompkins County, New York;
  2. occur between the first day of classes and the last day of exams for the semester in which it occurs;
  3. be organized and hosted by another institution;
  4. not be a retreat in which group members partake in team building, training activities, and other such activities which do not further the purpose of the organization; and,
  5. not have a primary or substantive purpose of:
    1. conversion/worship
    2. influencing legislation
    3. partisan political activity
    4. raising funds for profit
    5. raising funds for charity, unless the event has another equally substantive purpose related to the mission of the organization
    6. social activity.
8.3.3 Permitted Expenses

The following expenses are permitted under this category if they relate to an eligible event, are not among the prohibited expenses for the category, and are:

  1. student travel expenses, including:
    1. transport, and
    2. lodging.
  2. entry fees; and,
  3. supplies and materials essential to participation in the event.
8.3.4 Prohibited Expenses

The following expenses are prohibited under the travel events category:

  1. durable goods and items with a typical or expected useful life of more than one year,
  2. meals, unless the meals cannot be separated from an otherwise eligible expense, or
  3. social activities, unless the activities cannot be separated from an otherwise eligible expense.
8.3.5 Application Requirements

Applicant must submit:

  1. travel event documentation for each individual event.

Travel event documentation must:

  1. originate from the event organizer in the form of a letter, fax, or website printout; and,
  2. specify:
    1. organizer of the event, including a phone, email, or web contact;
    2. date of the event;
    3. location of the event;
    4. description or subject of the event; and
    5. all expenses associated with the event.
8.3.6 Maximum Funding

The following caps will apply to expenses under the travel events category:

  1. Student travel expenses for travel events may not exceed the eligible amount under the student travel rate, listed under negotiated rates.
  2. For destinations outside the contiguous United States that are not within 400 miles of Ithaca the Commission will allocate a maximum of $1,500 for travel expenses per event.

8.4 Durable Good

8.4.1 Purpose

The commission funds purchases of items with a useful life of more than a year that are necessary for an organization’s purpose.

8.4.2 Eligibility

To receive funding for expenses in this category, the organization must submit current information about each of the durable goods it has purchased in the last three years with commission funds using the performance reporting facilities provided by the Commission.

8.4.3 Permitted Expenses

Expenses permitted under this category include:

  1. purchase or repair of a durable good which:
    1. has a typical and expected useful life of at least one year;
    2. will be held on campus for active use by the organization for its entire expected useful life;
    3. is necessary to carry out activities related to the organization’s purpose; and,
    4. is intended for use in activities that would be eligible local events, travel events, or publications.
8.4.4 Prohibited Expenses

The following expenses are prohibited under the durable goods category:

  1. is purchased for personalized issue or use;
  2. will not be stored in an on-campus facility managed by the organization or its advisor;
  3. duplicates functionality or service already available on campus;
  4. is used to produce publicity items;
  5. is an office good such as, but not limited to:
    1. pens,
    2. pencils,
    3. markers,
    4. paper,
    5. filing cabinets,
    6. hole punches,
    7. staplers,
    8. and paperweights; or,
  6. is among the following:
    1. media for physical copying or production of music or video,
    2. hardware, software, and video games,
    3. refrigerator, or
    4. flash drives and hard-drives.
8.4.5 Application Requirements

Applicant must submit:

  1. price quote documentation for each individual expense.

8.5 Publication

8.5.1 Purpose

The commission funds production of publications for general distribution to the campus community.

8.5.2 Maximum Allocation

The commission allocates a maximum of $3,500 per academic semester for production of a publication.

8.5.3 Eligible Publications

For expenses to be eligible under this category, they must support production of a publication that:

  1. circulates in the same academic year funds are issued;
  2. is available to the entire Cornell community and distributed at locations on campus frequented by this community, including campus dining facilities, student centers, libraries;
  3. issue at least 100 copies; and,
  4. include the e-mail, phone, or mailing address for the president, treasurer, and advisor of the organization in each issue.
8.5.4 Permitted Expenses

Expenses are permitted under this category solely for production of eligible publications.

8.5.5 Application Requirements

For each publication, the applicant must provide:

  1. price quote documentation for each individual expense; and
  2. either:
    1. a copy of a recent issue of the publication; or,
    2. in the case of a new publication, a written outline detailing the format, content, and intended audience of the publication.

9 Performance Reporting

Organizations seeking to remain in or advance to performance tiers are required to submit an annual performance report. To facilitate such reporting, the Commission provides means for organizations to submit information about their activities over the previous academic year. The annual performance report will allow organizations to submit responses to the following questions:

  1. How does your organization contribute to Cornell’s campus environment and reputation?
  2. What is your organization’s membership?
  3. Approximately how many students attended any local events your organization held in the past two academic years?
  4. List and describe any awards and recognitions your organization has received in the past two academic years
  5. Describe any travel events and their significance for the organization
  6. Describe your marketing efforts as an organization. Please include information on funds spent on advertising, time spent handing out quarter cards or chalking, ads placed in the Daily Sun, or anything else that you feel is relevant
  7. Describe any steps your group has taken to reduce your organization’s environmental footprint.
  8. How do you ensure your meetings and events are accessible to all members of the Cornell Community?
  9. Describe how your organization currently reaches out to Cornell’s numerous diverse communities, and going forward, how it plans to continue and expand these initiatives. These communities may include but need not be limited to:
    1. Cornell’s 7 undergraduate colleges and schools
    2. Majors
    3. Relevant organizations or groups that support your mission/purpose
    4. Racial, ethnic, religious, sexual orientation, disabled populations
    5. Faculty and staff
    6. Other undergraduate organizations or special interests

10 Calendar

By the last day of classes in any semester, the Commission adopts a calendar of events and deadlines consistent with these funding guidelines. The calendar is subject to change without notice and the online version supersedes any other version. Applicants are expected to review the calendar before making any fiduciary commitments.

Appendix A. Negotiated Rates

The following rates are determined by the Office of the Dean of Students by negotiation and consultation with other units and external vendors that serve applicant organizations. The rates are subject to change by the Office of the Dean of Students without notice.

Some rates are available only to university organizations (organizations that register with a “university” rather than “independent” status). For university-only rates, organizations will have to obtain a quote directly from the vendor.

Expense TypeCurrent RateVendorApplies ToUpdated
Advertising$64.00 per 1/8 page vertical advertisementCornell Daily SunUniversity organizationsMonday, 16 April 2012
Speaker/performer transportation$0.565 per person per mileUS Internal Revenue ServiceAll organizationsTuesday, 1 January 2013
Student travel rate$0.071 per person per mileSAFC and US Internal Revenue ServiceAll organizationsTuesday, 1 January 2013
Student lodging rate$25 per person per nightSAFCAll organizationsThursday, 1 August 2013

Contact SAFC

Willard Straight Hall Main Lobby
Cornell University
Ithaca, NY 14853

ph. (607) 255–9610
fx. (607) 255–1116

safc@cornell.edu