GOV. CORBETT'S PROPOSED BUDGET: A RESPONSE
Posted on February 8, 2012
Statement on Gov. Corbett’s 2012-13 proposed budget
“We also agree with the governor that every family in Pennsylvania should be
able to afford higher education. That is why we have been very vigilant, not
only in keeping our tuition the lowest in the Commonwealth, but also in
maintaining the cost of attendance below the average in the mid-Atlantic
region.
“We fully recognize the financial challenges facing the Commonwealth. Governor
Corbett was right in saying that education is a key to the state’s financial
recovery. That is especially true of our graduates, over 80 percent of whom
stay in Pennsylvania for their careers and as community and civic leaders.
However, our joint goals are at risk as a result of the budget blueprint for
the Commonwealth presented today, which provides only $2 million more than the
system received 24 years ago in 1988-89. During that period we have added
23,000 students.
“The proposed budget represents the latest in a cascade of reductions to the
State System in the past 18 months. If this proposal stands, we will have
lost more than $170 million in state and federal education and general funding,
compounded by a 50 percent reduction in our capital allocation and the loss of
Key ‘93 funding dedicated to deferred maintenance. Taken together, these
reductions now mean that we must increasingly decide whether to renovate and
maintain our existing physical plant or provide students the courses and
programs they require to graduate.
“We do our part. We have reduced our operating costs by more than $230 million
during the past decade and will continue to seek additional efficiencies
through collaboration. Since 2010, we have over 900 current vacancies
and/or eliminated positions throughout the System. We continue to review our
academic offerings; we have eliminated or put into moratorium hundreds of
programs.
“We respond to the Commonwealth’s needs. Our new programs have focused on
meeting the needs of the shale industry, filling workforce training gaps in the
Northern Tier of the Commonwealth, and responding to the growing need for
well-prepared allied health professionals, especially nurses and physician
assistants. It will be challenging to continue to devote funds to these efforts
without stable funding.
“We will continue to look for ways to reduce our costs. Through the cooperation
of two of our unions, AFSCME and SPFPA, we have achieved cost savings in our
new agreements through the adoption of more flexible work rules and health and
benefit savings. We hope to achieve similar cost savings in our ongoing
negotiations with our faculty and coaches union, APSCUF, and our SCUPA
employees. We need flexibility in what, where, and how we deliver programs and
services. It is important to recognize that about 75 percent of our operating
budget is personnel costs.
“We appreciate the support of and look forward to working with the General
Assembly and the governor during the upcoming budget process. Our budget
hearings will provide the opportunity to discuss the successes we have had in
cost control and reduction, as well as the impact of the proposed cuts.
“We are also very pleased to participate in the Governor’s Higher Education
Advisory Panel. The need for a true comprehensive strategic plan for higher
education in the Commonwealth is great. We look forward to that conversation,
and to charting PASSHE’s future.” —
The Pennsylvania State System of Higher
Education is the largest provider of higher education in the Commonwealth, with
nearly 120,000 students. The 14 PASSHE universities offer degree and
certificate programs in more than 120 areas of study. About 500,000
PASSHE alumni live and work in Pennsylvania.
Proposed
spending plan would reduce funding to PASSHE universities by 20 percent
Harrisburg – The following is a joint
statement from Guido Pichini, chair of the Pennsylvania State System of Higher
Education’s Board of Governors, and PASSHE Chancellor John C. Cavanaugh in
response to Gov. Tom Corbett’s proposed 2012-13 state budget:
“The number one priority of the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education
is the success of our students. We agree with Governor Corbett that the needs
of our students come first.
The state-owned universities are Bloomsburg, California, Cheyney, Clarion, East
Stroudsburg, Edinboro, Indiana, Kutztown, Lock Haven, Mansfield, Millersville,
Shippensburg, Slippery Rock and West Chester Universities of Pennsylvania.
PASSHE also operates branch campuses in Clearfield, Freeport, Oil City and
Punxsutawney and several regional centers, including the Dixon University
Center in Harrisburg.