Campus Cards, College and University Identification and Security
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Off-campus programs could trigger new IRS reporting requirements

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

The National Association of College and University Business Officers is warning its members that if their schools enable students to make purchases at off-campus merchants they’ll probably have to file a new IRS form for 2011.

The form is 1099-K, the Merchant Card and Third Party Network Payments form, NACUBO points out it “will be used to report payments to unrelated entities in settlement of payment transactions.”


This new reporting obligation was mandated by the Housing Assistance Tax Act of 2008 and is intended to ensure that businesses accurately report their income from such transactions.

For example, if deposits are made to the card by the card holder, if the card is accepted by one or more merchants not related to the institution, or if the institution is obligated to pay participating merchants in settlement of transactions with cardholders, than the school will likely have to file a 1099-K.

However, if a campus card program is outsourced to a bank or other third party, that entity, assuming it actually makes the payments to the merchants, would be the one required to file the form.

Read more about the new IRS reporting requirements at the NACUBO Web site here[end] 

Tallahassee-based Florida A&M University and campus card service provider CardSmith have announced plans to upgrade the university’s multi-functional Rattler Card program.

The new Rattler Card will feature Rattler Bucks, a prepaid spending account offering FAMU’s more than 13,000 students cashless access to an expanded range of campus facilities and services including the bookstore, dining venues, mobile payments, campus offices and off-campus merchants.

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Saint Joseph’s University in Philadelphia and campus card service provider CardSmith have announced plans for an expansion and upgrade to the school’s campus ID card program.

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Administrators at eduKan, a consortium of six Kansas colleges created to offer online courses, are using BioSig-ID, a software only biometric solution, to discourage cheating among students involved in the schools’ distance education programs. The technology enables the colleges to determine that the student taking the course and the test is the same student who registered for the course.

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Tom Bell offers expertise to campus card directors

Paraphrasing a famous comedian, Tom Bell says that campus card programs ‘get no respect.’ This is despite the fact that if a school’s card program were suddenly to go away, he believes the university would practically shut down.

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