Showing posts with label layoffs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label layoffs. Show all posts

Friday, April 3, 2009

CUTS WOULD HIT LSU HARD

BY Jordan Blum
Advocate Capitol News Bureau

LSU would lay off at least 400 employees, cut back on scholarships and shut down some research institutions under proposed budget cuts, LSU Chancellor Michael Martin said Thursday.

The LSU campus and most of the LSU System’s other institutions released their proposals for meeting $102 million in budget cuts to the LSU System in Gov. Bobby Jindal’s executive budget.

The cuts represent nearly 15 percent of the state’s appropriations to LSU campuses.

LSU museums, student services and general campus upkeep will all suffer more because the academic core must be protected, Martin said.

He said about 80 percent of LSU’s budget is in personnel and that it is “demoralizing” to let anyone go. Most layoffs would be staff and some instructors and part-time faculty, but not tenure-track faculty, yet, he said. The main LSU campus employs nearly 3,300 people.

“It’s very difficult to face the prospect that some of these good people will not be with us,” Martin said.

Martin’s budget proposal was submitted to the LSU System office Thursday evening. The system office will review and approve the budget.

LSU’s budget plans do not include anticipated 5 percent tuition increases and possible fee increases that could cushion some of the cuts, he said.

Find the rest of the story here.

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Colleges coping with cuts

By Icess Fernandez • http://www.shreveporttimes.com/article/20090213/NEWS04/902130330/1063 • February 13, 2009 2:00 am

With the economy in flux, funding for higher education from state government isn't looking too good in Louisiana.

It isn't looking good in other places either.

Most Southern states had midfiscal year cuts to their budgets. Colleges and universities in 10 out of 16 states took hits, according to information collected by the Southern Regional Education Board.

And it's only going to get worse.

"In the 30 to 35 years I've been in higher education, I haven't seen it quite this bad," said Gale Gaines, vice president of state services for the Southern Regional Education Board.

Louisiana's higher education system hasn't been immune to the economy's spiral. After sustaining midyear cuts of $55 million, campuses are seeing fewer courses taught with more students sitting in classrooms. Adjunct faculty was cut on some campuses and travel was frozen for faculty and staff.

But next fiscal year, more cuts are on the way.

In January, the Louisiana Board of Regents was told to prepare for a budget decrease that could be anywhere from $212 million to $382.2 million. The LSU system announced additional cuts recently for its campuses in an attempt to trim $175 million from its budget. At schools like LSU-Shreveport, that means as many as 64 faculty and staff positions could be eliminated.

What Louisiana has seen is common to other states, Gaines said.

"Anecdotally, I've heard of layoffs, re-educated class sections, reduced the entering freshman class, furloughs," she said. "In general, institutions are trying to protect instruction as much as they can."

But it's not all bad news out there, said Jeff Stanley, senior policy analyst for the State Higher Education Executive Officers, a national organization that represent statewide higher education governing and coordinating boards.

The group is in the middle of conducting a survey of higher education funding. Although the group is in the early stages of its work, they know of only a handful of states that have increased their funding for colleges and universities. Of the surveys they have received so far, no state has increased its funding above one percent, Stanley said.

"So far only a handful have released their budgets," he said.

Around the nation:
-In Missouri, Gov. Jay Nixon vowed to keep higher education funding static as long as university officials did not raise tuition or fees for the 2009-10 academic year.
-Maryland Gov. Martin O'Mally has a proposal to fully fund his state's higher education system and set aside money for the university system to freeze tuition. The freeze would be in its fourth year.