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From the Desk of Chancellor Steve Ballard




 


The Chancellor's View
 

The State Budget and ECU

It is the time of year when committees of the North Carolina General Assembly start to make recommendations and decisions regarding the budget for the University of North Carolina System… and therefore the time of year when the rumor mill runs overtime.  Let's take a careful look at what we know and how the administration and  the trustees of ECU are preparing for the next fiscal year.  

First, much uncertainty  exists about the projected size of the revenue  gap next year.   One can hear estimates from $2 billion to $3.5 billion.  We won't really have a good understanding of this  until late April.   Therefore, ECU continues  to be prepared for base budget cuts of 10 percent to 20 percent, but we remain hopeful  they will end up closer to 10 percent.  Whatever the final number is, it will cut to the bone of ECU, in large part because we have already lost about $100 million over the last three years and ECU remains a very  efficient university.  There is not much fat to be found.  

We have four  ways  to find the money  that will be lost next fiscal year… between $30 million and $60 million.   The  first is continued efficiency improvements and consolidation of services and administrative offices.  Because we've done so  much of  this for the last six years, I don't think this option will result in large savings; one guess is that  we might find up to $5 million from efficiency improvements but that amount is likely to take several years to realize.   We have two task forces investigating how we can save money  by reducing administrative expenditures in academic departments and dean's  offices, and I suspect a large majority of any eventual  savings will come from this source.  Provost Sheerer and I have met with the Educational Policy and Planning Committee of the Senate, which is preparing guidelines for how we might improve efficiency in academic administration.  They are doing excellent work.  

Option two  is that we will take money from our emergency  fund and  that is a painful and risky option.  Once those funds are gone, it will be difficult to replace them.  Further, they greatly  reduce our  ability  to  respond to future fiscal crises and unanticipated disasters such  as Hurricane Floyd.  Further, those funds provide essential one-time funds to build research laboratories and  complete building projects that  have been underfunded.   Nevertheless, we will use  money from this source to protect the academic core and to try to save as many  jobs as possible.  

Options three and  four really  hurt:   increasing tuition and across-the-board cuts to each  division and college.  Yet, we will have to do both. Tuition and fees have gone up nearly  35 percent in  two  years, so we will  do all we can to  limit the additional cost to the  student.  That said, ECU remains a great educational value.  We remain in the bottom quartile of our peers in terms of total tuition and fees paid by North Carolina undergraduates.  Our freshmen perform at the 93rd percentile nationally, based on learning such higher order skills as critical thinking, analytic reasoning, and problem solving.  Our seniors perform at the 86th percentile nationally.  So, our undergraduates receive quality education at a comparatively low price.*  

Clearly, we will not be able to meet our budget targets without asking each  division to make additional cuts; this means that  colleges, departments, and all administrative  offices,  including  mine, will be reducing our operating expenditures and eliminating positions.  Unfortunately, not all of these positions will be vacant.  When personnel account for more than 80 percent of our expenditures, the loss of  jobs becomes inevitable under these  circumstances.  

That is the picture that  we see in mid-March.  As we have  stated  repeatedly, it will continue to evolve.  Please  remember this over the  next few months.  ECU knows how  to survive a crisis.  We have our priorities in order.  We will protect the  student experience and our faculty as much as possible.  When  this  very tough year is over, we will remain a strong university, devoted to North Carolina and to the 41 counties in the east.      

*Data on higher order skills based on the results of the collegiate learning assessment for 2007-2008.