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<strong>The</strong> <strong>Montclarion</strong> <strong>»</strong> <strong>Blog</strong> <strong>Archive</strong> <strong>»</strong> <strong>Want</strong> <strong>to</strong> <strong>Pr<strong>in</strong>t</strong>? <strong>Get</strong><br />

<strong>in</strong> L<strong>in</strong>e<br />

by Gerald Flores and Ratanjot Rekhi<br />

A l<strong>in</strong>e of 20 students wraps around the fifth floor computer lab of University Hall. Three m<strong>in</strong>utes pass; some students<br />

stand rigidly and clutch the straps of their backpacks with both hands. Five m<strong>in</strong>utes; other students start <strong>to</strong> lean aga<strong>in</strong>st<br />

the clear glass walls of the computer lab and peer <strong>in</strong> at students us<strong>in</strong>g computers. Seven m<strong>in</strong>utes; the l<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong>ches three<br />

steps forward as each student’s face wears a grimace.<br />

Watch video of students express<strong>in</strong>g their concerns about the shortage of pr<strong>in</strong>ters on campus.<br />

“My freak<strong>in</strong>’ class starts at 10,” says Iman Coachman, 20, a bus<strong>in</strong>ess major <strong>to</strong> her friend while four people stand <strong>in</strong><br />

front of them <strong>in</strong> l<strong>in</strong>e. <strong>The</strong> clock above the eleva<strong>to</strong>r doors reads 9:53 a.m.<br />

Coachman folds her arms across her chest and beg<strong>in</strong>s <strong>to</strong> tap her right foot. Her jaw stiffens and her eyes become fixed<br />

on the clock.<br />

“<strong>Get</strong> <strong>to</strong> class on time or show up late with the hand-outs we were supposed pr<strong>in</strong>t out?” Coachman asks her friend.<br />

“We’ll probably get po<strong>in</strong>ts off for be<strong>in</strong>g late or be <strong>to</strong>tally unprepared for the lesson, so either way we’re screwed.”<br />

Coachman takes a deep breath; she signals <strong>to</strong> her friend by rais<strong>in</strong>g her eyebrows and both students start <strong>to</strong> move their<br />

feet <strong>to</strong>ward the fifth-floor stairway.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are five comput<strong>in</strong>g labs with pr<strong>in</strong>ters open <strong>to</strong> students on the Montclair State University campus, <strong>to</strong>tal<strong>in</strong>g 10 free<br />

pr<strong>in</strong>ters accessible for use. With more than 18,000 students at Montclair State University, the current student <strong>to</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>ter<br />

ratio is 1,817 <strong>to</strong> 1, the highest of five area colleges with<strong>in</strong> a 16-mile radius of campus.<br />

“<strong>The</strong>re are approximately 30 computers per dedicated pr<strong>in</strong>ter,” said Stacia A. Zelik, direc<strong>to</strong>r of technical support at<br />

MSU. “Also consider<strong>in</strong>g the push <strong>to</strong> go green and save the planet by not pr<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g everyth<strong>in</strong>g, [I th<strong>in</strong>k the amount of<br />

pr<strong>in</strong>ters <strong>in</strong> the labs are enough.]”<br />

Zelik is <strong>in</strong> charge of how many pr<strong>in</strong>ters are used <strong>in</strong> the comput<strong>in</strong>g labs and also what pr<strong>in</strong>ter make and models are<br />

used. She was unaware that the MSU student <strong>to</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>ter ratio was higher than those of Kean University, Ramapo<br />

College, William Paterson University and New Jersey City University.<br />

<strong>The</strong> University Hall Information Commons, UN5007 and UN5008, has three pr<strong>in</strong>ters <strong>in</strong> one technology lab and one<br />

other pr<strong>in</strong>ter <strong>in</strong> the other. At peak hours, which Information Technology employees say is 11 a.m. <strong>to</strong> 2 p.m. on Monday<br />

through Thursdays, the wait for a computer can be up <strong>to</strong> 30 m<strong>in</strong>utes.<br />

On Wednesday, Dec. 2nd dur<strong>in</strong>g the time of 11:10 a.m., the wait <strong>to</strong> get <strong>to</strong> a computer at the University Hall<br />

Information Commons was 23 m<strong>in</strong>utes. <strong>The</strong> time it <strong>to</strong>ok <strong>to</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>t out two one-page documents was an additional eight<br />

m<strong>in</strong>utes.<br />

“Students get impatient, it’s understandable because everyone gets worried about be<strong>in</strong>g late <strong>to</strong> class,” said Tiffany<br />

Johnson, a student employee at the Office of Information and Technology as she waved people <strong>in</strong><strong>to</strong> the computer lab.<br />

“Sometimes, it can get really ugly.”<br />

Mailyn Ventura, 21, a senior biology major has dealt with this problem firsthand. Ventura said, “My stuff pr<strong>in</strong>ted out<br />

and then someone <strong>to</strong>ok it. I pr<strong>in</strong>ted it out aga<strong>in</strong> and then it still wasn’t there.”<br />

Ventura was pr<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g at the Surf N’ <strong>Pr<strong>in</strong>t</strong> lab, a three-pr<strong>in</strong>ter computer lab located on the first floor of the Student<br />

Center. Students are timed by a system that permits them <strong>to</strong> use a computer and pr<strong>in</strong>t documents for 10 m<strong>in</strong>utes.<br />

Ventura cont<strong>in</strong>ued, “I got kicked off of the computer by my third try at pr<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g, so I had <strong>to</strong> wait <strong>in</strong> l<strong>in</strong>e <strong>to</strong> get on<strong>to</strong><br />

another computer aga<strong>in</strong>. It was so annoy<strong>in</strong>g and such a waste of time.” Ventura says her ordeal <strong>to</strong>ok nearly 30<br />

m<strong>in</strong>utes.


This computer lab was formerly ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed by the IT department but is now run and staffed by the student center.<br />

Marsha Campbell-Young, associate direc<strong>to</strong>r of student center programm<strong>in</strong>g, oversees the Surf’N’<strong>Pr<strong>in</strong>t</strong> lab and was<br />

also unaware that MSU had the highest student <strong>to</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>ter ratio out of the closest five public colleges schools.<br />

“I th<strong>in</strong>k that has more <strong>to</strong> do with the number of students enrolled than the amount of computers,” Campbell-Young<br />

said. MSU enrollment has risen significantly, go<strong>in</strong>g from 15,637 <strong>in</strong> 2004 <strong>to</strong> currently be<strong>in</strong>g over 18,000.<br />

On Monday, Dec. 7 dur<strong>in</strong>g the time of 9:47 a.m., the wait <strong>to</strong> get a computer at the Surf’N’<strong>Pr<strong>in</strong>t</strong> lab was 14 m<strong>in</strong>utes.<br />

Additional time <strong>to</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>t out a 13-page document was three m<strong>in</strong>utes.<br />

A computer lab that used <strong>to</strong> be open for all student computer needs, dur<strong>in</strong>g the Spr<strong>in</strong>g 09 semester, on the second floor<br />

of the library has been transformed <strong>in</strong><strong>to</strong> the student <strong>in</strong>formation multimedia lab for color pr<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g only.<br />

Nathaly Salazar, OIT employee, expla<strong>in</strong>s, “This lab always existed, it just used <strong>to</strong> be <strong>in</strong> the basement of the library.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y just moved it up here, so more people know about it and put new software on the computers.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> library handles the pr<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the multimedia lab, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g the cost <strong>to</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>t one page. One color page costs 30<br />

cents <strong>to</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>t while one black and white page costs 10 cents. Salazar said, “<strong>The</strong> work you do here is graphic related,<br />

scann<strong>in</strong>g or color related.”<br />

A pr<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g card must be purchased from the library <strong>in</strong> order <strong>to</strong> use this lab. It costs $1.00 <strong>to</strong> buy a card and 50 cents of<br />

that goes <strong>to</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g. Students can then refill the card as many times as they want.<br />

To compensate for the lab that used <strong>to</strong> have l<strong>in</strong>es curv<strong>in</strong>g around the wall <strong>to</strong> the silent study section, the university<br />

started a lap<strong>to</strong>p loan program <strong>in</strong> the library.<br />

In the lap<strong>to</strong>p loan program, MSU students borrow a lap<strong>to</strong>p for up <strong>to</strong> three hours.<br />

Students are able <strong>to</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>t <strong>in</strong> the library by tak<strong>in</strong>g the borrowed lap<strong>to</strong>p <strong>to</strong> any library floor or Café Diem, and pr<strong>in</strong>t<br />

documents <strong>to</strong> the library’s front counter. Students are not permitted <strong>to</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>t from their own lap<strong>to</strong>p because of network<br />

connections.<br />

On Tuesday Dec. 1 at 2:20 p.m. the wait time for a lap<strong>to</strong>p was 45 m<strong>in</strong>utes. Additional time <strong>to</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>t a four-page<br />

document was five m<strong>in</strong>utes. It also takes up <strong>to</strong> two hours <strong>to</strong> charge the lap<strong>to</strong>ps.<br />

“<strong>The</strong> other day, three or four people would just yell or get extremely upset because we have no lap<strong>to</strong>ps,” said Arthur<br />

Elwell, library OIT technician. “<strong>The</strong>y saw me giv<strong>in</strong>g lap<strong>to</strong>ps <strong>to</strong> other people and they would accuse me of not giv<strong>in</strong>g<br />

lap<strong>to</strong>ps <strong>to</strong> them <strong>in</strong> particular. I have noth<strong>in</strong>g aga<strong>in</strong>st them. I just didn’t have any lap<strong>to</strong>ps <strong>to</strong> give out.”<br />

Compared <strong>to</strong> the <strong>to</strong>p four New Jersey public colleges <strong>in</strong> the immediate area, MSU comes up short as far as pr<strong>in</strong>ters are<br />

concerned. Kean University, which has an enrollment of 13,050 undergraduate and graduate students, has 10<br />

technology labs with pr<strong>in</strong>ters open <strong>to</strong> all students. Kean’s student <strong>to</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>ter ratio is 1305:1, compared <strong>to</strong> MSU’s<br />

1817:1.<br />

“In one of the build<strong>in</strong>gs (Henn<strong>in</strong>gs Hall) that build<strong>in</strong>g alone has seven computer labs. <strong>The</strong>y’re <strong>in</strong> classrooms, but<br />

students have access <strong>to</strong> it and can pr<strong>in</strong>t all they want. <strong>The</strong>y’re also build<strong>in</strong>g a new science and technology build<strong>in</strong>g<br />

across the street, which is def<strong>in</strong>itely go<strong>in</strong>g <strong>to</strong> have pr<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g labs,” said Shanice Rimes, 21, junior at Kean University.<br />

Kean University also has pr<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g labs <strong>in</strong> their dorms, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g the New Upperclassmen Dorm and Dougall Hall, so<br />

students have the convenience of not leav<strong>in</strong>g their own residence halls.<br />

Jean<strong>in</strong>e Stroh could not be reached for comment. Zelik says that each department is responsible for their own<br />

computers and the IT department is only responsible for computers and pr<strong>in</strong>ters <strong>in</strong> the public comput<strong>in</strong>g labs.<br />

William Paterson University has eight available pr<strong>in</strong>ters for its 10,265 students, mak<strong>in</strong>g its student <strong>to</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>ter ratio<br />

1,250:1. Free pr<strong>in</strong>ters access is available at the William Paterson University library, atrium, science hall, Ben Shaun<br />

Art Center, and Valley Road. In addition, William Paterson does not charge students a technology fee for pr<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g<br />

services.


Montclair State University charges a technology fee of $146.25 <strong>in</strong> addition <strong>to</strong> tuition every semester. New Jersey City<br />

University charges a $216 technology fee every semester but has a student <strong>to</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>ter ratio of 852:1. Zelik says that the<br />

average cost for a pr<strong>in</strong>ter used with<strong>in</strong> the IT department at MSU is $4,500.<br />

Ramapo College has n<strong>in</strong>e pr<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g labs on campus for its 5,702 students. With a <strong>to</strong>tal of 11 pr<strong>in</strong>ters, Ramapo College’s<br />

student <strong>to</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>ter rate is 518:1.<br />

Bill Johns<strong>to</strong>n, applications development manager at Ramapo College said, “<strong>The</strong>re’s usually one pr<strong>in</strong>ter <strong>to</strong> each lab<br />

and there’s no maximum page limit. We try <strong>to</strong> have a pr<strong>in</strong>ter for every 20 computers.”<br />

Some students have come up with their own solution <strong>to</strong> the pr<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g problem at MSU. Buy<strong>in</strong>g a personal pr<strong>in</strong>ter is a<br />

way <strong>to</strong> beat l<strong>in</strong>es <strong>in</strong> the computer labs as well as have easy access <strong>to</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g documents.<br />

“I’m so over the pr<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g here. I bought my own pr<strong>in</strong>ter and don’t even bother pr<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g on campus,” said Kirsy<br />

Smith, sophomore Spanish major.<br />

Although the MSU IT department has not provided any solutions <strong>to</strong> the shortage of pr<strong>in</strong>ters, the Surf’N’<strong>Pr<strong>in</strong>t</strong> lab has<br />

already begun <strong>to</strong> address issues brought up by students <strong>in</strong> the student center.<br />

“We’ve already purchased a fourth pr<strong>in</strong>ter for the Surf’N’<strong>Pr<strong>in</strong>t</strong> lab. One of our staff suggested that we do so because<br />

of the high volume of use that we get there,” Campbell-Young said.<br />

<strong>The</strong> fourth pr<strong>in</strong>ter for the Surf’n”<strong>Pr<strong>in</strong>t</strong> lab will be <strong>in</strong>stalled dur<strong>in</strong>g the w<strong>in</strong>ter break. Campbell-Young says she hopes it<br />

will alleviate traffic dur<strong>in</strong>g the lab’s peak times, which are the f<strong>in</strong>al weeks of the semester.<br />

Johns<strong>to</strong>n shared his advice on what MSU could do about the current pr<strong>in</strong>ter situation. Out of all five of the area public<br />

schools, Ramapo had the lowest student <strong>to</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>ter ratio.<br />

“I’m not familiar with all the details at Montclair, but I th<strong>in</strong>k the simple solution would be <strong>to</strong> either lower their<br />

enrollment or get more pr<strong>in</strong>ters,” Johns<strong>to</strong>n said. “It might not even be a case of actually purchas<strong>in</strong>g more pr<strong>in</strong>ters, but<br />

tak<strong>in</strong>g a pr<strong>in</strong>ter that hardly gets used from a department office of classroom and mov<strong>in</strong>g it <strong>to</strong> where it’s better<br />

needed.”<br />

Iman Coachman bolts down the stairway of University Hall, as if she were <strong>in</strong> a race aga<strong>in</strong>st the tick<strong>in</strong>g clock that was<br />

above the fifth floor eleva<strong>to</strong>r doors. <strong>The</strong> sound of her black rubber flats reverberates throughout the stairwell<br />

“This isn’t the first time this happened <strong>to</strong> me,” Coachman says, catch<strong>in</strong>g her breath. “And I know I’m not the only<br />

one.”

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