Thursday, February 9, 2012

MAKING THE CUT: Schools in the SEC slice their budgets

By on March 5, 2009

BILL RICHARDS

From Gamecocks to Gators, schools across the Southeast are facing a staggering budget crisis – but the rival Southeastern Conference schools remain united in their efforts to preserve the academic quality of the region’s universities.

“Hopefully we’re impacting faculty and students as little as possible,” said Larry Sparks, vice chancellor for administration and finance at the University of Mississippi. “We want the cuts to be as painless and as invisible to the instructional mission of the university as is possible.”

Ole Miss experienced two mid-year cuts in state appropriations in the last fiscal year – one of 2 percent and one of 3 percent, Sparks said in a phone interview last week.

However, university representatives acknowledge inevitable effects on students and faculty, despite efforts to reduce the impact of the budget crisis.

Some universities have even resorted to increases in tuition.

Auburn University implemented a 12 percent tuition increase, said Mike Clardy, a spokesperson for the university, in a telephone interview last week. Auburn lost almost $68 million in state appropriations last fiscal year, he said.

The University of Florida raised tuition by 15 percent in response to a $47 million budget cut, said Janine Sikes, spokesperson for the university, in a telephone interview last week. Sikes said UF hopes to continue to increase its comparatively low tuition by 15 percent each year until the university meets the national average tuition rate.

Other schools chose to implement hiring freezes, decrease travel expenses and defer spending on proposed building improvements.

“We’ve done a lot of belt tightening,” Sikes said. “Certainly classes are a bit more crowded. Some classes were canceled, but not an extreme amount.”

Crowded classes have been an especially daunting problem for the University of Alabama, said Kellee Reinhart, vice chancellor for UA system relations.

“Just like all the other states, the state of Alabama is facing a revenue short fall,” Reinhart said in a telephone interview last week.

“However, the University of Alabama is also facing record growth in student enrollment and growth in national rankings.”

“The question becomes how to maintain momentum in these challenging economic times,” she said.

Alabama lost close to $40 million in state appropriations in the last fiscal year.

The University of Arkansas remains the one SEC school not too worried about budget cuts.

Though Arkansas cut $5 million from its budget last May, the university does not anticipate any further decreases in state appropriations, said Steve Voorhies, a spokesperson for the university. Arkansas might even regain some of its losses in the next fiscal year, he said.

“I think everyone’s anticipating a lean year, where travel and things like that will be cut slightly, but we aren’t expecting any layoffs or anything like that,” Voorhies said in a telephone interview last week. “We’re really not looking at any short falls.”

But Arkansas is the exception.

Other SEC schools facing budget cuts include the University of South Carolina, which has cut more than $50 million since last June, the University of Kentucky, which experienced a loss of almost $20 million last fiscal year and the University of Tennessee, which lost $17 million in state appropriations during the 2009 fiscal year.

As the University faces the effects of a 9 percent cut in state appropriations, the University community can take solace in the fact that it’s not alone in cutting programs campus-wide.

“Everybody is suffering,” said Tom Jackson, vice president for public affairs in a phone interview last week. “Some more than others.”

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