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So Goes the Nation

In what appears a harbinger of things to come for higher education, governors of two of the nation’s most populous states have rolled out plans that would dramatically reduce funding for colleges and universities — again.

In the past two weeks, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger of California and Gov. David Paterson of New York have both proposed midyear budget cuts that college officials say will cripple already strained higher education systems.

At a news conference Wednesday, Paterson laid out a proposal that would cut $348 million from the State University of New York and the City University of New York. His plan came on the heels of Schwarzenegger’s proposal from earlier this month, which cut $132 million from public universities and $332.2 million from community colleges.

The blow from the budget cuts in New York would be softened, Paterson’s office suggested, by allowing SUNY and CUNY to raise tuition for just the second time in 13 years. The tuition hikes of $600 a year, which would be fully implemented in the 2009-10 academic year, would amount to increases of 14 percent and 15 percent at SUNY and CUNY, respectively.

The state would allow both systems to keep 10 percent of tuition revenues this spring, and 20 percent of the increase in 2009-10, generating $12.4 million for the current academic year. Allowing the universities to retain a portion of new tuition revenues marks a departure from tradition in New York, where the state has typically reduced general fund appropriations by an amount commensurate with any dollars gained by tuition hikes. But the state is still taking the lion’s share of the money, which it can then devote to purposes other than education. That doesn’t sit well with Shirley Strum Kenny, president of SUNY’s Stony Brook campus.

“The notion that students should pay tuition to fill a void rather than to pay for their education — that they in effect are being taxed that money rather than the money coming to the university for their education — is, I think, not going to go down well,” Kenny said.

The SUNY Student Assembly issued a statement Wednesday in opposition to the tuition hike.

“New York State is in a tight spot, we understand that completely. But, the state cannot expect SUNY students and their families to bear more of the burden than anyone else,” Jacob Crawford, the assembly’s president, said in a statement. “While all agencies, including SUNY, are being cut, SUNY students are the only ones being asked to also pay more. The state’s purse strings may be tighter than ever, but so are those of our students. Responsible spending paired with a rational tuition plan is the solution, not asking students for what is essentially an additional tax for state coffers.”

The plan still requires the approval of New York’s Legislature, which will meet in a special session starting November 18. Lawmakers normally wouldn’t have considered the 2009-10 budget until January, but they are convening to consider midyear cuts and the 2009 cuts all at once in light of the state’s dire fiscal situation. As the center of the nation’s financial sector, New York has been particularly hard hit by the current economic crisis.

The cuts in New York also include decreases for SUNY’s and CUNY’s community colleges, which will see average per-student aid drop by 10 percent, or $270.

New York’s proposed cuts come on top of $146 million in cuts already endured by the 64-campus SUNY system, and $50.6 million for the 23-campus CUNY system.

California State May Reduce Enrollment

Schwarzenegger’s proposal in California would cut $66.3 million from California State University, which already took a cut of $31.3 million earlier this year. The plan has prompted Chancellor Charlie Reed to propose increasing admissions standards across the 23-campus system in order to reduce enrollment by at least 10,000 students.

Currently, only six of California State’s campuses have competitive admissions standards beyond the minimum system-wide requirement that students have a 3.0 high school grade point average, according to officials. Reed’s proposal to change standards comes at a time when demand is peaking at California State, which has already seen a 20 percent spike in applications this year.

As for the University of California, Schwarzenegger’s plan would reduce state support by $65.5 million, on top of a $48 million cut approved by lawmakers in September. Gene Lucas, executive vice chancellor of the University of California at Santa Barbara, said the upcoming budget reductions continue a painful cycle in the state’s higher education system.

“I’ve been at the executive vice chancellor position for six, going on seven years, and I’ve had five years of budget cuts out of that and no year of recovery,” he said. “It hasn’t been all that much fun.”

The University of California will probably be forced to backtrack on last year’s decision to enroll an additional 5,000 students, Lucas said. University officials were faced with a politically perilous question last year: Hold enrollment steady and turn away qualified students, or increase enrollment and risk not getting any more funding for it. In the face of Schwarzenegger’s new plan, it now seems obvious that growing enrollment wasn’t the right move, Lucas said.

“We chose door number two and it wasn’t the right one, I think,” he said.

California’s community colleges are also facing cuts of $332.2 million, and the timing couldn’t be worse, according to Erik Skinner, vice chancellor for fiscal policy for the California Community Colleges system. It’s incredibly difficult for colleges that have already made hiring commitments to slam on the brakes at this point and rethink their budgets, he said.

“The state puts districts in an impossible situation when we try to take money midyear,” Skinner said.

Adjuncts Protest

Before plans for further cuts in New York were announced, higher education officials were already bracing for the worst. About three weeks ago, deans and department heads at CUNY’s Queens College were called into an emergency meeting with the president and provost to discuss a series of unpalatable options. Andrew Beveridge left the meeting and began crafting plans to reduce course offerings and grow class sizes in the sociology department, which he chairs. That proposal was rebuked by adjunct faculty, whom Beveridge said were justified in their concerns about losing work.

“They’re going to get screwed,” he said. “It’s terrible.”

James Hoff, a member of an ad hoc group called CUNY Contingency Unite that represents adjunct faculty, said the group was protesting on campuses that appear poised to reduce course offerings.

“Losing one class is actually really devastating for some adjuncts,” he said. “At this point, it’s triage; we’re trying to save jobs.”

CUNY Chancellor Matthew Goldstein injected one-time money into the system to help minimize the impact on academic programs and support services, but those efforts don’t appear to be enough to stave off painful changes at this point, Hoff said.

“When Goldstein first made the cuts, he said they were not going to have this kind of effect, and instead they would deal with facilities, deal with library holdings,” Hoff said. “But as they always do when they have budget problems, the adjuncts are the first to go.”

Clemson Requires Furloughs

A number of other states are anticipating or undergoing midyear budget cuts, including South Carolina. In response to budget reductions, Clemson University announced this week that all employees will be required to take mandatory unpaid five-day furloughs. The plan is expected to generate $5 million, which will only partially address the $25 million reduction in state support Clemson has incurred over the course of three separate budget cuts this year.

Robin Denny, a spokeswoman for Clemson, said university officials are already concerned another budget cut may come before the end of this fiscal year.

“We’re looking at this as a one time only short-term fix,” she said. “The real work comes between now and July 1.”

The National Conference of State Legislators is currently conducting a 50-state survey to determine the level of midyear budget cuts across the country. Arturo Perez, fiscal analyst for the group, said higher education officials have been eager to get the results, hoping to compare their own hardships with those of their peers.

“Everybody wants to know ‘how bad is it out there? Are we the only ones in this situation?’ ” he said. “The short answer is no.”

Jack Stripling

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Comments

NYS Budget Cuts

The story about SUNY community colleges and the Governor’s proposed cut needs to be told fully.

The proposal has a direct impact on community college budgets for the remainder of this academic year as well as next year. The Governor is recommending a 10% reduction in Base Aid/FTE funding for the current fiscal year, which is more than half over. Even with the option for a sliding or graduated scale based upon college size, this kind of cut would be devastating to College operations. NYS has yet to fund its community colleges at the 40% of operating budget as mandated by State regulations — that’s been done just once in some twenty years. This is a budget “cut,” instead of a “reduction in budget growth” that the Governor is proposing for K-12 education and for Medicaid.

All of community college personnel costs come from our own operating budgets, unlike the 4-year state colleges, whose personnel costs are covered elsewhere in the NYS budget.

SUNY community colleges are shoe-string operations, at best, without much depth in any of their operations — the smaller colleges especially are one-person deep in most of their staff positions, and they depend fully upon using adjunct faculty to deliver their academic programs.

It’s almost as though NYS governors, of either party, have a tacit understanding with the NYS Legislature not to support SUNY community colleges, and that the Assembly carries the water in terms of support. This is representative of the dysfunctional nature of NYS government, not of good educational practice. It’s unfortunate that NYS never seems to understand or realize the true opportunity for its community colleges to be the lead organizations for workforce development. We enroll more than one-half of all SUNY undergraduates, and we continue in so many ways to be the step-child of NYS higher education.

Daniel Larson, President at Cayuga Community College, at 8:40 am EST on November 13, 2008

penny-wise, pound foolish?

If it is true that State economies in the USA have become knowledge based economies, then cutting educational budgets ultimately undercuts States’ abilities to compete. If education is central to high productivity, higher wage jobs, then undercutting educational budgets puts people into lower productivity jobs and lower pay jobs...hence increasing the strain on public social services, lowering the tax base etc. A vicious circle.

And most importantly (to me, that is) decreasing access to education perpetuates class and social divisions AND keeps people from the experience and knowledge that heightens life.

Of course, education does tend to create critical thinkers, not bound by ideologial boxes and not quite so suseptable to the political rhetoric of fear and sound-bites these politicans use to get elected.

theron, at 9:40 am EST on November 13, 2008

Budget Cuts

I teach at CSU as an adjunct. There is not a budget shortfall, there is an energy shortfall among the tenured faculty and administration. The facilities are almost empty on Friday. Adjunct faculty are teaching most of the large servfce classes. Classes are 90 minutes on Tuesday/Thursday so that there is no need for classes on Saturday. This means one class instead of two in a two hour period. How about M/W/F and T/Th/Sat classes for 3 unit classes. How about minimizing the release time for the tenured faculty. The CSU system was set up to be teaching set of universities while the UC system was set up to be the research system in California. The CSU system is breaking the compact with the taxpayers. Hit the reset button, minimize research hours for the tenured faculty, and serve the students. Stop serving the tenured faculty. Stop whining and start teaching.

George, at 10:20 am EST on November 13, 2008

No surprises

The lack of comments suggests to me that this isn’t new news. Everyone is already feeling the crunch of budget cuts. Further budget cuts only highlight the worsening economy. You can’t blame the state for trying to remain fiscally responsible. We all have to dig deep and sacrifice a little to come out of this.

Befuddled, at 1:25 pm EST on November 13, 2008

In California community colleges have very low tuitions, far below those of the state four year institutions. It is reasonable to raise these and allow students to pay a more reasonable portion of their education costs.

Rob, at 1:30 pm EST on November 13, 2008

tax raise

The state of New York is experiencing a revenue crisis. Conventionally it is considered rational to raise taxes in such situations, but Albany does not look poised to reverse the devastating tax cuts for the rich put into place in the early 1990s. And yet, a tax increase is occurring: the (mostly working-class) students and contingent faculty at New York’s public universities are being taxed heavily. Why isn’t this kind of tax hike disparaged?

John, CUNY, at 3:25 pm EST on November 13, 2008

Tax?

John, It is simple — tuition hikes, or other increased costs of higher ed, are generally seen as ‘User Fees’ by the public, NOT a ‘tax’ as you call it. The public is more accepting of user fees, than taxes on everyone.And add to the fact that most adults are not currently college students, nor have a child in college....

Jerry in LA, at 3:40 pm EST on November 13, 2008

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