The policy with Hockey tickets is much more disturbing than I first
thought.
I called the Ticket Office again this AM and talked to Janet. I asked
her questions about ticket availability to the general public. Here
are her answers:
There are only about 1,500 total seats in the whole arena available
to students and the general public combined. The other 3,800-3,900
seats are reserved for season ticket holders, donors, team players,
and visiting schools. The 1,500 seats are all actually student seats.
The only reason that there are (or were) seats available to the
general public (including alum's) was that the students didn't pick
them up ( or sign-up for them?), and those remaining were then made
available to the general public. (And as has been said here already:
For the first four home games this year all 1,500 seats are reserved
for students and will be empty if the students don't use them. Janet
confirmed that as well.)
What is disturbing is that if 1,500 students decide to go to the
games this year or if the ticket office decides to continue to hold
them only for students, there will be no seats available to the
general public. The only options would then be to attempt to get a
ticket from a player or from a visiting school, either from the school
or from the UMO ticket office if any are returned by visiting schools.
I wouldn't look for very many to come back from BU, UNH, etc..
I do not begrudge the students their 1,500 seats at all. What does
disturb me greatly is that if the University is successful in getting
the students to fill up the 1,500 student seats, there will be NO
seats available to the general public, and the only way to be sure of
being a continuing fan (which my son and I have been) and attending
games, is to become a donor or to buy season tickets.
I can't afford season tickets. I can't afford to be a donor at the
level that I get seats.
It is my opinion that it is WRONG, WRONG, WRONG, for The University
of Maine, a Maine Taxpayer supported institution, to limit access to
the select few that can afford the big bucks for season tickets. Some
of those 4,000 seats need to be made available to the general public
on a permanent basis.
AND, there should NEVER be an empty seat in that arena when there
is someone who wants to go.
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