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The Student News Site of Texas State University

The University Star




The Student News Site of Texas State University

The University Star

The Student News Site of Texas State University

The University Star










Texas State decreases commuter parking

Parking at Texas State has been a hot topic, sparking conversations across campus– it’s mentioned over 300 times in the university’s 2023-29 master plan. Now, the campus will see more changes to parking, specifically regarding commuter lots.

Beginning this fall, all commuter parking will be located east of the San Marcos River, which means the closest parking lot to campus for students with the purple commuter pass is the Sewell North lot by the park, which is a 10-minute walk from The Quad. What this also means is both Speck Street Garage and James Street parking lot, located west of the river, are no longer available to commuters.

Speck Street Garage is now rezoned to Residence Hall Green Zone to accommodate the opening of the new Cibolo and Alamito residence halls, according to a July 24 email from Finance and Support Services.

The email also wrote James Street parking lot is closed until further notice due to the construction of the new Canyon residence hall, also known as James Street Housing.

“Canyon Hall is not expected to be completed until July 2025 and the STEM Classroom building is not expected to be completed until July 2026. The closure of the James Street lot was done… to accommodate these construction projects,” Texas State said in an email to The Star.

James Street parking lot may take up to two years to open up for students again.

According to Texas State’s parking map, anyone with a valid permit, except gold, can park in the designated purple lots from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday– it is not secluded to just commuters.

Two new parking permits are now available to students– an orange zone for Cypress residents, previously Vistas apartments, and a blue zone for Balcones residents, previously Sanctuary Lofts.




Another recent change is Parking Services has shifted from being under Texas State’s Transportation Services department to now operating under the University Police Department (UPD) effective July 1.

“UPD was not part of any of the decision processes for any of the parking changes that have been implemented,” UPD Chief of Police Matthew Carmichael said. “Those decisions were made prior to July 1.”

However, Carmichael said even before the changes to commuter parking, there were already limited spaces available for purple-pass holders on the west side of the river.

“Somebody says ‘there’s nowhere to park,’ and I can tell you as the new director of parking there’s plenty of places to park, but there’s two discussions here: is there enough parking and is it convenient?” Carmichael said.

Carmichael acknowledged the available commuter parking is often far enough from campus that students usually need to ride the shuttle to get to their classes.

All lots designated for specific parking permits are restricted to permit holders from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Outside of these hours, the lots are open to all students.

“If [a student] lives on campus and comes in at 10 p.m. do I want [them] parking out in [UFCU] Stadium? Or do I want [them], from a safety perspective as a student, to have the ability to park as close as possible where you live?” Carmichael said.

According to data from UPD, there are 3,912 parking spots available to students with a purple pass and 13,724 total parking spots including those for faculty and staff, visitors and motorcycles. However, as of fall 2024 there were 38,873 students enrolled at Texas State, almost three times more than there are parking spots.

One of those students is Aaron Davis, a pre-med junior, who commutes 15 minutes to campus for class. When he had a purple parking pass, the closest parking he would find was Bobcat Stadium– 20 minutes away from the main campus.

“After the first week, I started parking at the pay to park in LBJ because once I did the math, it was cheaper for me to just do paid parking than to even actually have a pass,” Davis said.

Prices of parking passes at Texas State range from $115 for a purple one to $485 for a green residence hall pass, annually.

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