table fees for students
#1
Posted 2025-February-11, 19:34
#2
Posted 2025-February-11, 19:44
gprentice, on 2025-February-11, 19:34, said:
JOB, you can work and be full time student, very common..
#3
Posted 2025-February-11, 20:11
https://www2.cs.sfu....an-bc/index.htm
“Let me put it in words you might understand,” he said. “Mr. Trump, f–k off!” Anders Vistisen
#4
Posted 2025-February-12, 13:55
gprentice, on 2025-February-11, 19:34, said:
I didn't vote because I think the poll is both exaggeratedly detailed and somewhat illogical, but I fully agree with the idea that young people with no job should pay very little.
I am bemused by the table fees that some are paying, I trust they receive an excellent service (nice venue, good coffee, certified director) in return.
#5
Posted 2025-February-12, 14:03
#6
Posted 2025-February-12, 14:33
I mean you don't go to to school for free..books, supplies ,clothes, that stuff is not free..
College is even more stuff, food, rent etc..
If you can afford a phone you can pay the minimum cost for bridge, geez..
If you are traveling to your local bridge club buses are not free..
#7
Posted 2025-February-12, 15:40
mike777, on 2025-February-12, 14:33, said:
I mean you don't go to to school for free..books, supplies ,clothes, that stuff is not free..
College is even more stuff, food, rent etc..
If you can afford a phone you can pay the minimum cost for bridge, geez..
If you are traveling to your local bridge club buses are not free..
I can relate to that with our fees, and also in comparison to alternative pastimes of students (making breweries prosperous).
But 12 dollars just to play bridge once, plus travel?
In my club you can play an entry level tournament for the equivalent of 2.6 dollars, with free tuition and a decent venue.
#8
Posted 2025-February-12, 16:23
pescetom, on 2025-February-12, 15:40, said:
But 12 dollars just to play bridge once, plus travel?
In my club you can play an entry level tournament for the equivalent of 2.6 dollars, with free tuition and a decent venue.
My club is charging £10 per session for members, I think a few years ago when I played elsewhere the fee was somewhere between £2 and £5.
Unfortunately my club is the closest EBU club to where I live and it is the only one which offers IMP pairs sessions on a weekday convenient to me (Friday) in London and, at such a table fee, I can't really afford 2 sessions per week (and my club doesn't have another pair sessions at a convenient time to me - I don't really have a team to play team sessions).
#9
Posted 2025-February-12, 16:31
mikl_plkcc, on 2025-February-12, 16:23, said:
Unfortunately my club is the closest EBU club to where I live and it is the only one which offers IMP pairs sessions on a weekday convenient to me (Friday) in London and, at such a table fee, I can't really afford 2 sessions per week (and my club doesn't have another pair sessions at a convenient time to me - I don't really have a team to play team sessions).
To be fair, we do have an annual subscription fee of 100 Euros, although that is considerably reduced for those just starting with bridge.
#10
Posted 2025-February-12, 18:52
mike777, on 2025-February-12, 14:33, said:
I mean you don't go to to school for free..books, supplies ,clothes, that stuff is not free..
College is even more stuff, food, rent etc..
If you can afford a phone you can pay the minimum cost for bridge, geez..
If you are traveling to your local bridge club buses are not free..
Where I live, bus fares are half price for under 25 year olds. You can buy two or three phones per year for the cost of playing one session of Bridge per week per year so your comment about phones couldn't be more wrong. Not everyone lives in the USA where half the population have expensive iPhones. Food isn't free because it costs money to make and businesses have to make a profit. A Bridge club is not a business, it has no need to make money out of students and reducing the fees might even be a gain due to more students playing and the incremental cost increase for those extra people is less than the table fees they pay. Lighting, heating Director's fees, rates, property maintenance - these costs do not increase if there's an increase in the number of students playing.
#11
Posted 2025-February-12, 21:32
And the costs do go up per table (not much, mind you, but they do). Back in the Martinique days, a bigger game paid bigger directors' fees (which, given the fact that the session was "yours" for at least months at a time, gave you an incentive to grow "your" game).
But discounts for students is a very good way for people to get hooked on bridge, which we frankly need. And some might still play, if the club offers an after-work or weekend game, after they leave school/university and start earning the money they need to pay full rates. If there's a way to get them in the door without losing money or making the game unenjoyable for the normal punters, I'm all for it.
#12
Posted 2025-February-13, 16:13
#13
Posted 2025-February-15, 15:08
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Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean