How to Park in the Faculty Lot

August 26, 2009

Incognito U. has a large number of “live off-campus” students who drive to classes, as well as a large number of “live on-campus” students who drive between classes. As the semester starts, many inexperienced students, desparate from the 350% oversell of student parking space, will attempt to sneak into a faculty/staff parking lot. Sadly, many have no idea how to get away with it. So, I am providing this valuable information to the Incognito U. student body.

  1. Park in a space and in only one space; that is, between those lines painted on the ground. Don’t just pull up to the curb and turn your hazards on. You are going to be inside for longer than “a minute.”
  2. Park as far away as possible. Don’t take spaces that are right by the door. I shouldn’t have to tell you this.
  3. Don’t block any other cars. Ever. No matter how briefly. Even if they are illegally parked.
  4. Don’t block the drive; see #1 and #3.
  5. Don’t park in spots marked ‘reserved.’ Those aren’t reserved for you (they’re not reserved for me, either).
  6. Don’t park in gated lots, even if you can get the gate to open by punching the card reader, ramming the gate, or following another car.
  7. The parking enforcement officers are woefully predictable. Take a  lunch one day and watch to see when they come and go. It’s the same every day. Beginning and end of the day are popular times for patrol, but the middle of the day when demand for spots is highest? Not so much.
  8. Don’t put an expired or fake parking pass in your window. Having no pass is better because we may think you’re a visitor.
  9. Don’t wave or say “hey dude” to faculty when getting out of your illegally parked car. Particularly when you’re in the spot in which he usually parks. Yes, I mean me.
  10. Don’t park and then put up your hood; no one believes you broke down and pushed your car to a faculty lot. And then into a spot on the faculty lot. If you actually do break down, don’t push it to a faculty lot; when we see a stalled student car, we know it’s going to become a permanent part of the lot because you can’t pay to fix it. Automatic tow.
  11. Be prepared to pay; you will eventually get caught. But it’s probably cheaper to pay a couple of those tickets than the actual parking pass fee for student lots, and the payments won’t due at the same time as tuition, fees, etc. It’s like a payment plan. However, they will boot you if you have more than some number of tickets; learn what that number is. Stay under it.
  12. If you drive a real hooptie, don’t even bother. No one will believe that piece of crap belongs to faculty or staff. Get a bicycle.
  13. Actually, get a motorcycle because apparently you can park those any goddam place you want (sidewalks, stairwells, foyers, hallways, cafeteria, etc.).
  14. Lock your doors, but don’t turn the alarm on. It will go off while you are in class (or whatever it is you do), and someone will have to find out “whose alarm is going off?” Done.
  15. Someone sitting in the car, driver or passenger side, will not keep me from calling parking enforcement to ticket you. Even if that person is the chair of some other department. It’s been done.

I am certain that many of my colleagues have additional useful suggestions. We’re here to help.


We Attack at Dawn

August 23, 2009

blueprintSpace is short at Incognito U., and particularly in my department. Square footage is allocated by our chair, according to grant funding and seniority, which is a fair and equitable method, in my opinion, for most cases.

However, some space has been somehow shanghaied by senior faculty for quite some time, who now view it as ‘their’ beholden (legacy?) space, I suppose based on some theory of inheritance, ancient (B.F., Before Funding) history, or simply delusional hubris.

The problem is that they no longer have funding or active research that would, in my humble view, actually justify the space, especially given that the rest of us with funding and active research are standing on top of each other, although that may or may not carry any weight with the space-grantors. These, my blessed senior (in some cases very senior) colleagues, essentially use the space as a separate wing of their office.

Without disrespecting any alleged contribution to the university in the past, I would like to say GET OUT. You are hereby evicted. I can pay for the space. You cannot. What else do we have to discuss?

Oh, wait, I have yet another federal grant. Pack your bags. You have until first light. My team moves at dawn.


Premature convocation

August 21, 2009
Calendar-Full

Prof. Anonymous is out of the office...

The week before classes seems packed with “urgent” and otherwise worthless meeting requests, most of which seem to be “necessary” because the requestors have done no work over the summer and are now desparate to get something (something unimportant to me) done “before the semester starts”?

Here’s a hint for all of you summer lovers: THE SEMESTER STARTS THE WEEK BEFORE CLASSES. I refer you to the university academic calendar; where it says “Semester Opens,” which means…the semester has opened–i.e., started. You have (again) failed to accomplish anything before the semester starts. My meeting with you will have no effect on that fact. Hence, I am unable to attend. Forever.

This is not a good start to the new year.