Cutting the Phone Line
Save Email Print
Updated: 9:24 PM Jul 9, 2009
Cutting the Phone Line
Students at Florida State University will no longer be able to reach some professors on their office phones. The FSU College of Business and the Department of English are cutting landlines to save money.
Posted: 9:24 PM Jul 9, 2009
Reporter: Whitney Ray

FSU Cutting Back On Phone Service
width:200 and height: 120 and picwidth: 200 and pciheight: 120
Font Size:

Students at Florida State University will no longer be able to reach some professors on their office phones. The FSU College of Business and the Department of English are cutting landlines to save money.

If the plan takes off, other colleges could begin nixing their landline service.

Many professors are starting to give out their cell phone numbers to students. Not to be more accessible, but because money is tight. FSU Junior Tyler David got his professor’s cell phone number off the class syllabus.

“I think that it’s a good idea just in case you really need to get in touch with them, you have an important question, whatever it might be”

While Tyler likes the extra access, FSU Freshman Meredyth Cassell thinks calling a professor on their cell phone is too personal.

“I think it should be kept professional between the student and teacher and giving them your cell phone number kind of makes it more of friend sort of thing.”

The English Department is the latest college to cut landlines. Dr Ralph Berry, Chairman of FSU’s English Department, says professors are sacrificing their personal cell phone minutes to stay in touch with students.

“Given the range of options of what we’ve got to cut this feel relatively painless when you compare it to the other things we might have to give up.”

FSU is laying off 200 faculty employees and closing some departments. It’s a little dark here in the College of Business and that’s because half the lights have been turned off to save electricity.

The penny pinching is adding up. FSU is expected to save 3.5 million dollars in utility cost this year. And with the economy forcing everyone to tighten their belts, finding the least harmful way to cut cost may mean cutting the landline.

The FSU College of Business cut landlines last year and saved thousands of dollars. Cutting the landlines in the English Department is expected to save 16-thousand dollars.