|  | The Cavalier daily Thursday, February 12, 1970 |  | 
Parking Problems
The expected influx of some 400 more 
student cars into the University as a result of 
the new first-year car rules does not seem like 
a serious problem at first glance. It won't be 
until the first rainy day this semester. Then, 
most of those 400 first-year men will drive 
their cars to Cabell Hall rather than walk 
through the rain. Since first-year men are 
practically the only victims of 8 a.m. classes, 
they will have their pick of the limited open 
facilities available in the Cabell Hall area. 
Then at 9 a.m. the rest of the available spaces 
will be consumed by the secretaries and 
faculty members who come to work by that 
hour. And, inevitably, some Dean or senior 
faculty member is going to have to walk three 
miles through the rain at 10 a.m. because he 
couldn't park anywhere near Cabell Hall.
After this happens several times, there will 
be a sizable group of influential people dead 
set against first-year car privileges, and 
perhaps second and third-year privileges as 
well. As the University grows, the problem 
will become more acute. Sooner or later there 
will be a crackdown. When faced with this 
problem once before, the University reacted 
by setting up extremely high grade 
qualifications for undergraduate car owners. It 
could happen again.
We think that Student Council should act 
now to see that it doesn't. And we think that 
the solution to the problem lies in a dual 
sticker system. One type of sticker should 
allow students to park as they do now, in any 
available student parking on the Grounds. The 
second type would limit students to the lots 
surrounding Scott Stadium with the provision 
that cars must be moved to University Hall on 
the weekends of home football games.
This is not an unreasonable restriction to 
place on student automobile operators. For 
most students, a car is useful for 
transportation downtown or out to Barracks 
Road and on trips outside of Charlottesville. 
Nobody would be unduly inconvenienced by 
having to walk to classes and the library. Nor 
should students who live far enough off the 
Grounds feel unduly put upon if they have to 
walk the final stretch from Scott Stadium to 
class.
Nonetheless, any group singled out for 
inclusion in the second type of parking sticker 
is going to feel discriminated against. It will be 
difficult to determine an equitable system for 
doing this, but we feel that some sort of 
seniority factor ought to be the primary 
consideration. It will probably be insufficient 
to merely place the present first-year 
undergraduates in this group; that might avert 
a crisis, but it would do nothing to alleviate 
the problem that existed during the first 
semester which was in itself serious enough to 
warrant action. Another group, perhaps the 
second-year undergraduates or the first-year 
students in the graduate and professional 
schools ought to be included. Nobody will 
like being relegated to Scott Stadium; but 
before they oppose such a plan they ought to 
consider the possibility that the University 
will tell them they can't have cars at all.
|  | The Cavalier daily Thursday, February 12, 1970 |  | 

