Oso planning to go pro
Totally false. Marquette does not have the monopoly on campus. Sodexo does. Their agreement with Marquette gives them that. If it is some sort of official function on campus, you are required to order all of your food and drinks from Sodexo. My daughter was in charge of a pancake breakfast fundraiser for her sorority's charity, and she was not allowed to hold it on campus unless they bought all the food from Sodexo. That would have meant little or not profit, so they wound up having it in the common area of a nearby apartment building (the Marq before the school purchased it) so they could make their own pancakes and buy juice, syrup, etc. from Costco.TL;DR - Marquette has no stake in making on-campus food a monopoly.
So when Freshmen buy a meal plan on their Marquette Card, MU doesn't see a dime of that? They let Sodexho run this monopoly with nothing in return? (genuinely asking, not trying to be a little sh*t)
If Marquette isn't making a significant profit off of food plans, why do they require students that live in the dorms to have a food plan? I know most would anyway because it's hard to find ways to cook for yourself, but why isn't it an option rather than a requirement?
1. Because part of their food plan likely partly covers the fixed costs for equipment, etc.2. The contract with the provider may require a minimum amount of participation.3. Requiring a food plan at least in the first year is usually considered a best practice because it helps build connections with classmates, etc.
Also, most cooking appliances (other than a microwave) are prohibited due to fire safety reasons.
Bad ass alert, I had a toaster oven in my room. It was awesome
Pellet smoker in ours with the pizza oven attachment.
and the lines forming out your door were endlessbtw, i still can't get a pizza oven attachment. no one has them until august i believe. anyone know how to make these bad boys could be a rich man
Just get one of these bad boys and never look back.https://ooni.com/
I don't know exactly how it works, but I don't think it's Marquette's goal to profit off of the meal plan. It's a service that needs to be provided to students. When it's contract time, I am sure that every interested company submits a bid to the University, which tries to choose the plan that will meet students' needs best at the most reasonable price to the student.Regarding the monopoly I was talking about (and I am way oversimplifying things), they probably give Marquette a better deal in exchange for having a monopoly on all food service on campus. For all I know, that might be a pretty standard clause in college food service contracts.
Depends on what you mean by profit. A GAAP profit, inclusive of fully allocated costs, no. But a strong contribution margin, yes. Like anything else, residence life expects to "cover its costs" and turn something back to the university. The "back to the university" is positive contribution margin designed to cover depreciation (which, based on what I knew about residence halls was NEVER reinvested back in the product), corporate overhead and other fixed costs without a corresponding revenue source.The monopoly is a necessary requirement to make the fixed costs invested by Sodexo recoverable. There's an operating cost associated with setting up residence hall food services and if there's no monopoly, what's to keep someone from bringing in a competing catering service? I doubt anyone would be competitive in a university or corporate setting under those circumstances.
I'd be fine with requiring it the first year. Two years is a bit much, considering the costs of the food plan and Marquette in general. College costs are becoming absolutely insane. These rules were put in place decades ago when things were cheaper. It is time to allow for more flexibility, and an easy place to start is not requiring people to live in expensive dorms and purchase expensive food plans their sophomore year.
It would be pretty silly to live in the dorm and not have a food plan. Especially since there’s no where to eat on campus. I can’t imagine many students would choose that if offered
Sultan, are you aware of any campus that allows you to live in the dorms without a food plan?
Dayton
ABD
Dayton uses a 100% ala carte plan. While there is no need to figure out where to eat, the kids there have to deal with the hassle of budgeting their dining dollars. I was glad none of my kids attended a school where that was required. I know that my son in particular would have been calling me about halfway through the semester asking for more money in his meal plan.