History
Student Government has a long history at Stony Brook University. In 1959, the Student Polity Association was established in Oyster Bay, Long Island. In 2003 the SPA was succeeded by the USG which is the current student government of Stony Brook University.Student Polity Association
The original student government was known as the Student Polity Association, Inc (Polity). Polity was established on May 8, 1959 when the Polity constitution was ratified by well over two-thirds of the student body. The name Polity comes from the original debate regarding student government. There were two opposing viewpoints, one argued for a Republican form of government, and the other for a Democratic form of government.Statesman, V. 02, n. 02 - The Stony Brook Statesman publishes the debate between Democratic/Republican viewpointsDecertification
In the Spring 2001 semester, Polity was beset with two issues that resulted in a period of tense relations between the university and itself. Firstly, the elections for the upcoming academic year were declared invalid by the Polity Supreme CourtStatesman, V. 45, n. 09Transition Period
With the decertification of Polity, it ceased to be recognized as the student government on campus able to distribute the student activity fee. Polity however had not been allowed to distribute the SAF since May since it had been placed in ''receivership'' and this was more of a formality to begin the process of forming a new undergraduate student government. Legally, Student Polity Association, Inc was still a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization operated by the elected officials of the Polity Council and could have remained a student organization on campus. Many members of the Polity Council were chosen by the university administration to run the interim student government in order to minimize the disruption to clubs/organizations as well as event planning for the undergraduate community. The interim government was made up of several committees: SAF Special Programming Council and SAF Interim Planning Committee which were designated to plan ''campus life-oriented activities'', the SAF Budget Committee which was responsible for preparing the budget for the following academic year, SAF Promotions and Communications Committee whose task it was to promote the functions of the interim government, the Undergraduate Activity Fee Election Board which would coordinate the adoption of a new government constitution and hold elections for its officials and finally the SAF Interim Finance committee (which included the former Polity Treasurer) to cut checks for clubs and organizations "in consultation with Vice President Preston's office."Statesman, V. 46, n. 23Early USG Years
Although the Senate and Executive Council were completely restructured, the newly established USG was very similar to the decertified Polity in many ways. All Polity Agencies were carried over, and club funding remained the same. USG was located in the same office with many of the same people and employees. The Student Activities Board was left unchanged, structured much like a club with a general body, and a fraction of the size it was decades ago when Stony Brook was known as a frequent concert venue. In 2004 the Coalition Of Righteous Egalitarians (CORE) sprang up as USG's first political party. It successfully placed itself on top of the USG with the goal of giving a more fair share of funding to religious clubs. When the intent of the party was discovered, they were defeated by the investigative journalism of the Stony Brook Press. The CORE Laws were repealed in the following year.Reform Years
Recent years have brought various plans to reform the USG, motivated by the state of the Constitution and other documentation left over from Polity days. In many cases, documents had been left unchanged except for the replacement of "Polity" with "USG". In Spring 2005, the USG Constitution was amended to enable the new government to secure its 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status from the Internal Revenue Service in Article II, Sections 2.2. through 2.4.http://stonybrookusg.org/media/NEW-BETTER-CONSTITUTION2.pdf During the same semester, new efforts led by the local College Republicans club began to institute wide-ranging reforms, including changes to the Elections Board Bylaws to remove restrictions on electioneering and campaign spending, and to simultaneously allow for the creation of recognized political parties. And then, pushing for a more comprehensive approach to funding religious and political clubs, who at the time were barred from utilizing the Student Activity Fee. Clubs raised First Amendment objections to the ban, and the Second Clubs and Organizations Bill of Rights was soon promulgated, adopted by the Senate, and signed into law, instituting viewpoint neutral funding criteria for all clubs, which opened the door for religious and political club funding. With these reforms in place, a year later in Spring 2006, USG's next two parties were formed, with SUCCESS and USG Reform both appearing on the ballot. USG Reform secured a slight majority in the Senate, plus the presidency, and SUCCESS won a majority in the executive council elections. USG Reform and SUCCESS in a bipartisan fashion the next academic year worked together to amend the USG Constitution to include the viewpoint neutral criteria for funding, ensuring that religious and political clubs' access to the Student Activity Fee would not be rolled back by subsequent administrations. It passed via referendum in Fall 2006, with the changes still included in the USG Constitution to this day, under Article II, Sections 3.2. through 3.10. These were the changes that today allow religious clubs such as the Muslim Student Association and Chabad to secure funding, at $13,322 and $13,405, respectively, and political clubs like College Democrats and College Republicans, which each have $6,637 and $8,713, respectively, in the 2014-15 budget.http://stonybrookusg.org/media/2014/05/USG-Academic-Year-Budget-FY-14-15.pdf Although the original intent was to open up funding for religious and political clubs, the Fall 2006 constitutional changes by design were broadly applied to all clubs. They guaranteed every club's eligibility to receive funding provided they had open memberships, the right to be allocated an appropriate level of funding in the budget process to function effectively, the right to use that funding in carrying forth their respective missions when submitting vouchers, and required the Senate to institute even-handed, non-discriminatory budgeting criteria when allocating those funds. And, that no separate criteria would be established for receiving funding. Additionally, because of the changes, every club retains the right under Article II, Section 3.7.c. to appeal their budgets to the judicial branch should there ever be an instance of funding discrimination. A separate amendment was postponed until later in the Fall that year by Vice-President of Student Affairs Peter Baigent and Associate Vice-President of Student Affairs / Dean of Students Jerry Stein. That amendment allowed simply the amount of the Student Activity Fee to be set by a binding referendum. After the postponement, a united delegation of USG Reform and SUCCESS senators and executive council members traveled to the SUNY Assembly in Albany to press the USG's rights to have a Student Activity Fee referendum included in the Constitution, so that any fee increases or decreases would be by popular vote. Ultimately, the ballot to amend the Constitution was allowed by school administrators, ratified by the undergraduate student body, and today appears in Article XI, Section 3 of the Constitution. Several other reforms were instituted later that academic year under the leadership of the SUCCESS coalition, including the student tutoring program, PASS, which drew bipartisan support. The agency is headed up by the Vice President of Academic Affairs, and received $14,000 in the 2014-15 academic year. In Fall 2007, attempts began to pass a new USG constitution based more strictly on the United States Constitution, but would have stripped clubs of the explicit, constitutional rights that had just been secured a year prior, including the right of judicial review over club budgets in the event of funding discrimination. It also would have removed the right of the undergraduate student body to vote on the amount of the Student Activity Fee, instead giving that power to the Senate. When clubs were alerted to the changes, although the new constitution's framers assured concerned club leaders subsequent legislation would restore nominal club rights via legislation, voters were not convinced and the reforms were defeated soundly at the ballot box by more than a two-to-one margin. A Stony Brook Press editorial from V. 29, N. 3, summed up objections to the new proposal: "Although it is flattering that the current drafters would believe that a 'flexible' document would be easier to navigate than the urrentConstitution, which explicitly lists clubs' rights and budgeting processes, this move would ultimately be more detrimental to the students. If the Judiciary were to turn to Constitution 2.0 to reach a verdict pertaining to any club, where would they look? Would they simply end up quoting the same line over and over again bout viewpoint neutrality In the urrentConstitution, all clubs can look for any specific information, instead of one small clause about viewpoint neutrality. In this case, we would have to agree that less is definitely not more." A similar proposal was defeated in Spring 2008 by a two-to-one margin, despite changes that were made to appease critics. Although these proposals failed at the ballot, some of the changes were ultimately made through legislation. In the 2007-08 academic year, the various bylaws and Senate acts of the USG were consolidated into a unified USG code,http://stonybrookusg.org/media/Winter-2012-Code-Update1.pdf similar to the United States Code. The intent of the innovation was such that when the Senate acted to amend existing law, it would be amending the code itself. This would prevent laws enacted from years prior from being lost in the shuffle in between academic years or subject to malicious destruction, a common problem in the early days of USG. To stop the problem, under older practice, the acts of the Senate had been informally kept in a binder at the front desk of the USG office, maintained by the President Pro Tempore and Executive Vice President, and often these were the sole copies of laws available. The USG code created a formal, orderly way of maintaining the integrity of the laws. To facilitate the process of maintaining the USG code, an Office of Law Revision was established, with members appointed by the Executive Vice President and President Pro Tempore of the Senate, a majority of whom had to be voting members of the Senate. In the Spring of 2009, two competing parties formed, SBUnited and the Student Advocates party. Each party sought to reform the internal operations of USG. By the end of 2009, the SBUnited party and Student Advocates united to create the Students First Party. The name for the Students First party came from the former Student Polity Association, Inc. The Students First party passed many major pieces of legislation, the most important was the Establishment of Student Life Act to dissolve the club-like Student Activities Board and replace it with a Board of Directors and a new Student Programming Agency with the goal of bringing higher caliber events to campus more frequently. The Checks and Balances Act which established checks on the discretionary power of the President and limited the ability for students to serve in two different branches. Treasurer Khan led the way in reforming the highly controversial Employment/Pay policies and practices of the USG. Another major development was the creation of ALLOCATE, an e-voucher system for student clubs and organizations. ALLOCATE was officially launched on November 1, 2010 and all clubs were mandated to use the new sustainable e-voucher system. The project has since spawned the creation of Hueritix Software for the future development and maintenance.Recent Years: 2010 to Present
The culmination of the reform years was the 2010-2011 Academic year. In this year, the reformed Student Activities Board led the way in Event Programming, hosting popular artists, comedians and lectures to sellout crowds. The historic Stony Brook Concert Series was revitalized under the direction of Student Programming Agency. The Agency coordinated and marketed the new series that featured surf-rock bandBranches
Executive Branch
Executive Council
The Executive Council consists of 7 voting members: The President; The Executive Vice President; The Treasurer; Vice-President of Communications & Public Relations; The Vice-President of Academic Affairs; Vice-President of Clubs and Organizations; and the Vice-President of Student Life, Programming & Activities. (Please note most positions and names are lost in history and are being brought back).=Current Roster
= *President: Devin Lobosco *Executive Vice-President: Nistha Boghra *Treasurer: Amitesh Reddy-Akiti *Vice-President of Communications: Arnav Sawant *Vice-President of Academic Affairs: Joseph Bisiani *Vice-President of Clubs and Organizations: Akaansha Kundra *Vice-President of Student Life: Isaiah Daniel Source for this Roster=2022 - 2023 Roster
= *President: Sowad Ocean Karim *Executive Vice-President: Devin Lobosco *Treasurer: Sanurag Barobhuiya *Vice-President of Communications: Nistha Boghra *Vice-President of Academic Affairs: Harrison Feig *Vice-President of Clubs and Organizations: Arsh Naseer *Vice-President of Student Life: Wideline Jean=2021 - 2022 Roster
= *President: Manjot Singh *Executive Vice-President: Victoria Sarita *Treasurer: Pujan Patel *Vice-President of Communications: Sowad Ocean Karim *Vice-President of Academic Affairs: Willie Bedoya *Vice-President of Clubs and Organizations: Thaliyah Fraser *Vice-President of Student Life: Christopher Jean Source for this Roster=2020 - 2021 Roster
= *President: Huntley Spencer (Resigned in March 2021) *President: Asna Jamal *Executive Vice-President: Asna Jamal (Succession to President in March 2021) *Executive Vice-President: Christopher Jean (Appointed by Asna Jamal in April 2021) *Treasurer: Kevin Mahon *Vice-President of Communications: Jolena Podolsky *Vice-President of Academic Affairs: Khadija Saad *Vice-President of Clubs and Organizations: Naseem Malik *Vice-President of Student Life: Shawn Moore Source for this Roster=2019 - 2020 Roster
= *President: Shaheer Khan *Executive Vice-President: Mohammed Heiba *Treasurer: Adrien Ortega *Vice-President of Communications: Anthony Bianco *Vice-President of Academic Affairs: Justin Ullman *Vice-President of Clubs and Organizations: Maame-Esi Otoo *Vice-President of Student Life: Hadiths Mohammed Source for this Roster=2018 - 2019 Roster
= *President: Justas Klimavicius *Executive Vice-President: Abdelrahman Salama *Treasurer: Adrien Ortega *Vice-President of Communications: Ian Oyoung *Vice-President of Academic Affairs: Nicole Olakkengil *Vice-President of Clubs and Organizations: Samantha Rodriguez *Vice-President of Student Life: Kojo Dansoh Source for this Roster=2017 - 2018 Roster
= *President: Ayyan Zubair *Executive Vice-President: Christina Dorf *Treasurer: Alexander Bouraad *Vice-President of Communications: Junstine Josue (Resigned) *Vice-President of Communications: Anthony Bianco (Appointed) *Vice-President of Academic Affairs: Nicole Olakkengil *Vice-President of Clubs and Organizations: Katherine Colatuoni *Vice-President of Student Life: Jaliel Amador Source for this Roster=2016 - 2017 Roster
= *President: Cole Lee *Executive Vice-President: Drazen Bacarra *Treasurer: Hikari Oshiro *Vice-President of Communications: Maximillian Shaps *Vice-President of Academic Affairs: John Mele *Vice-President of Clubs and Organizations: Lydia Senatus *Vice-President of Student Life: Jaliel Amador Source for this Roster=2015 - 2016 Roster
= *President: Cole Lee *Executive Vice-President: Krisley Zamor *Treasurer: Taylor Bouradd *Vice-President of Communications: Brody Hooper *Vice-President of Academic Affairs: Danielle Ali *Vice-President of Clubs and Organizations: Chienlo Obinero *Vice-President of Student Life: Fiqry Kleib Source for this Roster=2014 - 2015 Roster
= *President: Garry Lachhar *Executive Vice-President: James Alrassi *Treasurer: Kathryn Mishaud *Vice-President of Communications: Danny Chung *Vice-President of Academic Affairs: Steve Adelson *Vice-President of Clubs and Organizations: Kimberly Pacia *Vice-President of Student Life: Kenneth Myers Source for this Roster=2013 - 2014 Roster
= *President: Adil Hussain *Executive Vice-President: Mallory Rothstein *Treasurer: Brian Mclivain *Vice-President of Communications: Mario Ferone *Vice-President of Academic Affairs: Steve Adelson *Vice-President of Clubs and Organizations: Kerri Mahoney *Vice-President of Student Life: Jaliel Amador Source for this Roster=2012 - 2013 Roster
= *President: Anna Lubitz *Executive Vice-President: Mallory Rothstein *Treasurer: Allen Abraham *Vice-President of Academic Affairs: Derek Cope Source for this Roster=2011 - 2012 Roster
= *President: Mark Maloof *Executive Vice-President: Deborah Machalow *Treasurer: Thomas Kirnbauer *Vice-President of Communications: Farjad Fazli *Vice-President of Academic Affairs: Adil Hussain *Vice-President of Clubs and Organizations: Allen Abraham *Vice-President of Student Life: Deron Hill Source of this Roster=2010 - 2011 Roster
= *President: Matthew Graham=2009 - 2010 Roster
= *President: Jasper Wilson=2008 - 2009 Roster
= *President: Jeffrey Akita=2007 - 2008 Roster
= *President: Joseph Antonelli=2006 - 2007 Roster
= *President: Romual Jean-Baptiste=2005 - 2006 Roster
= *President: Diana Acosta=2004 - 2005 Roster
= *President: Jared Wong=2003 - 2004 Roster
= *President: Sandy Curtis=2002 - 2003 Roster
= *President: Akelia Lawrence=2001 - 2002 Roster
= *President: Akelia Lawrence=2000 - 2001 Roster
= *President: Jonnel Doris=1999 - 2000 Roster
= *President: Andrez Carberry=1998 - 1999 Roster
= *President: Aneka Gibbs=1997 - 1998 Roster
= *President: Monique Maylor=1996 - 1997 Roster
= *President: Keren Zolotov=1995 - 1996 Roster
= *President: Annette Hicks=1994 - 1995 Roster
= *President: Crystal Plati=1993 - 1994 Roster
= *President: Jerry Canada=1992 - 1993 Roster
= *President: David Greene=1991 - 1992 Roster
= *President: Daniel Slepian=1990 - 1991 Roster
= *President: Daniel Slepian=1989 - 1990 Roster
= *President: Sorin Abraham=1988 - 1989 Roster
= *President: John Cucci=1987 - 1988 Roster
= *President: Gerry Shaps (Resigned) *President: Jacques A. Dorcely=1986 - 1987 Roster
= *President: Marc Gunning=1985 - 1986 Roster
= *President: Eric Levine=1984 - 1985 Roster
= *President: Rory Aylward=1983 - 1984 Roster
= *President: Dave Gamberg=1982 - 1983 Roster
= *President: Adina Finklestein=1981 - 1982 Roster
= *President: Jim Fuccio *Vice President: Van Brown *Treasurer: Chris Fairhall Source of this Roster=1980 - 1981 Roster
= *President: Richard Zuckerman *Vice President: Jim Fuccio *Treasurer: Lori Reckson Source of this Roster=1979 - 1980 Roster
= *President: Dave Herzog *Vice President: Lisa Glick *Treasurer: Lori Reckson *Treasurer: Alan Price Source of this Roster=1978 - 1979 Roster
= *President: Keith Scarmato *Vice President: Mike Genkin *Treasurer: Randy Brown *Secretary: Paul Diamond Source of this Roster=1977 - 1978 Roster
= *President: Ishai Bloch *Vice President: Frank Jackson *Secretary: Mark Glasse Source of this Roster=1976 - 1977 Roster
= *President: Gerry Manginelli *Treasurer: Mark Minasi Source of this Roster=1975 - 1976 Roster
= *President: Gerry Manginelli=1974 - 1975 Roster
= *President: Ed Spauster (Resigned) *Vice President: Mark Avery (Succession to Acting President until October 1974) *Treasurer: Lynette Spaulding *Secretary: Paul Trautman Source of this Roster=1973 - 1974 Roster
= *President: Cherry Haskins *Treasurer: Lynette Spaulding Source for this Roster=1972 - 1973 Roster
= *President: Rich Yolken Source for this Roster=1971 - 1972 Roster
= *President: Bob Rosado Source for this Roster=1970 - 1971 Roster
= *President: Vincent Montalbano Source for this Roster=1969 - 1970 Roster
= *President: Lonnie Wolfe *Treasurer: (Unknown First Name) Goldfarb Source for this Roster=1968 - 1969 Roster
= *President: Don Rubin *Treasurer: (Unknown First Name) Goldfarb Source for this RosterLegislative Branch
The Legislative branch is aCurrent Roster
*At-Large Senator: Christian Jean-Pierre *At-Large Senator: Yuchen Zhang *At-Large Senator: Sarah Elbaroudy *At-Large Senator: Ray Chen *At-Large Senator: David Safo *At-Large Senator: Jada Seto *At-Large Senator: Lamia Rathi *At-Large Senator: Camryn Zezelic *At-Large Senator: Jorvany Jean *At-Large Senator: Jeremy Galindo *At-Large Senator: Meijheen Cesaire *At-Large Senator: Peter Joyce *At-Large Senator: Antonios Manolas *At-Large Senator: Adam Pareek *At-Large Senator: Alex Herz *At-Large Senator: Michael Angelone *At-Large Senator: Luca Rallis *At-Large Senator: Leon Verkhovsky *At-Large Senator: To Be Appointed by Devin Lobosco *At-Large Senator: To Be Appointed by Devin Lobosco *At-Large Senator: To Be Appointed by Devin Lobosco *At-Large Senator: To Be Appointed by Devin Lobosco *At-Large Senator: To Be Appointed by Devin Lobosco *CSA Senator: To Be Determined *RHA Senator: To Be Determined2022 - 2023 Roster
*At-Large Senator: Amitesh Reddy Akiti *At-Large Senator: Grace Armann *At-Large Senator: Joseph Bisiani *At-Large Senator: Andrew Candio *At-Large Senator: Alex Casamassima *At-Large Senator: Danny Feliciano *At-Large Senator: Joshua Feng *At-Large Senator: Iqra Ishrat *At-Large Senator: Christian Jean-Pierre *At-Large Senator: Peter Joyce *At-Large Senator: Aliaksandra Kiniova *At-Large Senator: William Laffey *At-Large Senator: Isabella Milgam *At-Large Senator: Rimakshi Roy *At-Large Senator: Arnav Sawant *At-Large Senator: Bonnie Wong *At-Large Senator: Elaine Xiao *At-Large Senator: Alexander Van Geuns *At-Large Senator: Jada Seto *At-Large Senator: David Gonzalez *At-Large Senator: Luca Rallis *At-Large Senator: Yuchen Zhang *At-Large Senator: Sarah Elbaroudy *CSA Senator: Daniel Canavin *RHA Senator: Chloe Nevers2021 - 2022 Roster
*At-Large Senator: Alex Casamassima *At-Large Senator: Abighail McKinney *At-Large Senator: Anthoni Haynes *At-Large Senator: Ashani Escoffery *At-Large Senator: Benjamin Joffe *At-Large Senator: Charuta Manikra Bamane *At-Large Senator: Chiagoziem Okolo *At-Large Senator: Devin Lobosco *At-Large Senator: Dylan Rehman *At-Large Senator: Easmin Chowdhury *At-Large Senator: Harrison Feig *At-Large Senator: Jada Franklin *At-Large Senator: Jaydan Philogene *At-Large Senator: Julien Arellano *At-Large Senator: Kim Stepien *At-Large Senator: Leslie Chavez *At-Large Senator: Nichole Sutton *At-Large Senator: Subhadra Debnath *At-Large Senator: Tenzin Tsetan *At-Large Senator: William Laffey *At-Large Senator: PE Shauna Noordeen *At-Large Senator: Nistha Boghra *At-Large Senator: Gabriella Hassildine *CSA Senator: Malhar Virda *RHA Senator: Trevor Kapuvari2020 - 2021 Roster
*At-Large Senator: Alexandria Nunez *At-Large Senator: Benjamin Owusu *At-Large Senator: Beres Lewis *At-Large Senator: Reginald Ligonde *At-Large Senator: Cheyenne Baxter Gregory *At-Large Senator: Chiagoziem Okolo *At-Large Senator: Emily Lam *At-Large Senator: Eric Kier *At-Large Senator: Grace Morel *At-Large Senator: Isha Oza *At-Large Senator: Jennifer Lopez Fernandez *At-Large Senator: Karina Hernandez *At-Large Senator: Marcus Wong *At-Large Senator: Melanie Intriago *At-Large Senator: Nichole Sutton *At-Large Senator: Pujan Patel *At-Large Senator: Ryan Tam *At-Large Senator: Sabrina Oza *At-Large Senator: Sowad Ocean Karim *At-Large Senator: Thaliyah Frazer *At-Large Senator: Victoria Sarita *At-Large Senator: Willie Bedoya *At-Large Senator: Yi Chen *CSA Senator: Arsh Naseer *RHA Senator: Manjot SinghJudicial
The Judicial branch consisted of two levels of courts, the Supreme Court and the Judicial Council. The Supreme Court consisted of one Chief Justice, and six Associate Justices. The Judicial Council consisted of three Judges. In Fall 2019, the student body voted in favor of approving constitutional reform which abolished the Judicial Branch of USG for the purposes of protection from legal liability and improving operational cost efficiency. The changes were justified by the claim that continued payment of Supreme Court Justices for office hours despite a notable lack of tasks available was financially wasteful.Current roster
AbolishedCurrent Agencies
The USG has three different types of agencies; independent, quasi-independent, and joint. Independent agencies are agencies that are not aligned with the Legislative or Executive Branches. Ultimately the President is responsible for ensuring that these agencies are functioning properly. Quasi-Independent are agencies that report directly to the President. Joint Agencies are agencies that are created by the President and the Senate.Student Activities Board, 1959-Present
A quasi-independent agency that provides programs and events on behalf of the USG. The Student Activities Board was significantly reformed in the spring of 2010 with the Establishment of Student Life ActUSG 2010 Establishment of Student Life Act (PDF)Student Programming Agency, 2010-Present
Established in May 2010, the new model of event planning replaced the former committee chairs of the SAB with a Director of Event Programming.PASS Tutoring, 2007-2015
"Providing Academic Support to Students" is a free tutoring service overseen by the VP of Academic Affairs, who can appoint a Director. Applications have traditionally been submitted on thSpecial Services Council (SSC), 1969-Present
A joint agency that reviews and approves/disapproves groups seeking the USG recognition. The SSC also provides additional funding to individuals, clubs and organizations for special events. This was known as the Programming and Services Council or PSC during the Polity years. It began as a decision making body in 1969 for the programs in the newly opened Stony Brook Union. Within Polity, it originally funded all clubs that received less than a certain threshold of funding. The intention was to make the process of starting a club and putting on events as easy as possible for small clubs. Over time, the purpose was less well defined, and indicated by the vague name. In the fall 2010 semester, after the departure of the Chair, USG decided to place this responsibility under the VP of Clubs and Organizations. This resulted in the passage of the 2010 Act to Restore Sanity to the Club Funding Process, which added that the Council would be made up of members from the Senate's Programming and Activities Committee.Elections Board
The Stony Brook Undergraduate Student Government's Elections Board is an independent agency that ensures all elections within the USG are operated properly and fairly. The Elections Board has historically been a defendant in a USG Supreme Court case over some discrepancy in the execution of the election or the bylaws themselves, though this has recently become a more rare occurrence. As a result, the bylaws have been reformed several times. In 2005, they were amended to remove restrictions on electioneering and campaign spending, and to allow for the creation of recognized political parties that could appear on the ballot in the Spring and Fall elections. As of 2010, the bylaws were completely rewritten, and now include Election Inspectors for the elections of clubs primarily funded by the Undergraduate Student Government with budgets exceeding $10,000 USD. The USG Senate's Elections Bylaws Act of 2018 has attempted to reasonably regulate the presence of online campaigning, and has now mandated the presence of a Vice Chair–a position previously treated as a norm, and whose duties have never before been codified–amongst other revisions.Events Management
A quasi-independent agency that provides event management services to all of Stony Brook University's clubs and organizations. As of the Fall of 2010, the Executive Vice President oversees this agency as its Chair. The Executive Vice-President and President jointly appoint a Director to manage the day-to-day operations of the agency.Audio/Visual Services
A quasi-independent agency that provides audio and visual services to the USG clubs and organizations. Currently, the agency is overseen by the President and he appoints a Director to manage the day-to-day operations of the agency. USG A/V is the successor to SCOOP, Inc.SBU TV, 1990's - Current
SBU TV is a quasi-independent agency that provides media services to the USG and its members. This is directed by a professional staff member. SBTV was a short-lived project of the University in 1992 as a way for students to get hands on involvement in television and television production. In the fall of '92, the Student Polity Association (Ticket Office
This has been a long-standing presence of student government on campus, mainly providing ticket sales services to large programming clubs. Originally located in the lobby of the Student Union, the ticket office is now located in the Why Lobby of the Student Activities Center, but the Union is still used as a secondary location. This has generally been operated by a professional staff member who hires student employees.Defunct Agencies
Committee On Cinematographic Arts (COCA), 1962-2005/2010
Established in 1962, COCA was chartered with the task of creating a vibrant campus life for less outgoing students by showing movies on a regular basis. At its peak, COCA was a thriving business showing a Feature Film every Friday and Saturday in the largest lecture hall on campus seating more than 500 students, Javits 100. COCA absorbed another student film program "Tuesday Flicks" (foreign and independent films on Tuesday nights) and developed the "American Cinema" program (double features exploring the auteur concept in American directors on Thursday nights), COCA for Kids (Sunday matinée kids films), "New German Cinema" in cooperation with the German Department on Monday nights, and helped student groups the Science Fiction Forum, Hillel and SAB Concerts develop film programs to the point that there was a movie on campus every day of the week. COCA sold snacks and candy before the weekend movie generating revenue for more movies and other events on campus, and worked with New Campus Newsreel to screen Newsreel shorts, and make entertaining commercials to support candy sales. COCA was instrumental in starting ICON, the annual science fiction convention on campus. In 2002 when Polity was decertified, COCA was reduced to a committee within the Student Activities Board. During the USG years, C.O.C.A. still showed a movie on weekends. No evidence of its existence can be found in the papers after 2005. According to accounts from USG officials from 2008–2010, SAB would typically show a movie once or twice per semester under the name of COCA. The Committee was officially defunct when the SAB was dissolved by the Student Life Act in the spring 2010 semester. However, the new SPA continues to show movies occasionally. The Commuter Student Association also features a "Drive-In Movie" in the South P-Lot at the beginning of every year.Specula Yearbook, 1961-2005
A quasi-independent agency that provided yearbook services to the USG and its members. The yearbook was abandoned in 2005 due to rising costs and plummeting sales. The cost was estimated to be $50,000 per year, with only a handful of yearbooks sold in the last year. Loss in sales were blamed on new developments on the Internet like Facebook. A book of class portraits became a frivolous and expensive duplication. The USG is considering establishing a new yearbook without portraits for archival and photojournalism purposes. The new yearbook would have an extremely small budget, if any.Student Cooperative (SCOOP, Inc.), 1969/1971-1993
Incorporated on January 25, 1971, SCOOP, Inc. was the first legal student cooperative at Stony Brook. Steve Rosenthal kicked off the idea with the first student business, the Replacement Coffee Shop in Langmuir College. In 1970, the decision was made to form SCOOP with plans to incorporate in order to unite student businesses under one legitimate organization overseen by the FSA. SCOOP owned and operated Scoop Audio/Visual, the Replacement Coffee Shop, Tabler II Cafe (Douglass College), Polity-Toscanini Record Shop, Hard Rock Cafe (Toscanini), James College Pub, two Cooperative Cafeterias in Roosevelt, HARPO Ice Cream (Kelly), SCOOP Health Shop (Union), Rainy Night House (Union, where the Salon and the Colours Cafe/Sci-Fi Forum are now) amongst other short-lived businesses throughout the years. The more recent Colours Cafe was operated by Polity and the Harriman Cafe was operated by the Business School. Both were indirect dissidents of SCOOP, but were never a part of it. All businesses on campus are currently operated by the FSA. In the summer of 1993, SCOOP had accumulated more than $55,000 in debt to local businesses and vendors. Upon receiving complaints from these businesses, the University requested that the FSA look into dissolving SCOOP, which it had the power to do contractually. In early September 1993, SCOOP was closed down, with three remaining businesses left with an uncertain fate.Department of Web Technologies, 2010-2012
Originally named the Office of Web Technologies and Financial Informatics (OWTFI), this was formed in the Spring of 2010 to coincide with the development of ALLOCATE, an open source project known as the Student Life Loupe. The intent is for this agency to continue to develop and maintain all software and web assets of the USG, in order to remove this responsibility from elected officials who may not have the ability to do so.Department of Justice
A quasi-independent agency headed by the Advocate General, who serves as the USG's representative for internal court cases, as well as an investigator into financial issues. In 2008, the Student Bureau of Investigation (SBI) was established to assist the Advocate General in investigating potentially fraudulent uses of the Student Activity Fee, but the Bureau has been on indefinite hiatus since then.External links
References