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Is Cash No Longer Legal Tender?

An anonymous reader asks: "I attend the University of Illinois at Chicago. Last semester my housing arrangements went smoothly. I put down my application fee, and my deposit just fine, got a room for the semester and life went on. This semester, because there was supposedly a large number of students who did not check into their rooms last semester, we were required to make a $100 prepayment, in addition to the application fee and deposit. No problem, I think, I see the university is trying to make a quick buck off people who don't follow through with their plans. Now I do NOT have a checking account, a credit card, or anything. I don't trust the banks, or the credit card companies, so I am one of the few people who do EVERYTHING in cash. However, they refused to take the cash. Is it legal for a state-owned university, let alone any business to not take legal tender?" The housing department also will not charge my university account (so I can pay the bursar or whoever I need to) in cash, and they want a check or money order. Nowhere in their letter did they say that. I fear out of technicality I am going to loose my housing since I cannot get them their money on time because they do not take cash.

What can I do?"

1 of 719 comments (clear)

  1. Re:In some cases.... by lorcha · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    My landlord got burned by bounced checks (not from me), so he accepted nothing but cash.
    Damn, what's that idiot going to do when he gets mugged for the $10,000 cash he's carrying around? What form of payment will he accept, then?

    Somebody better tell that guy about cashier's checks and money orders, pronto!
    --
    "Avoid employing unlucky people - throw half of the pile of CVs in the bin without reading them." -- David Brent