03-17-2010, 05:36 PM
I just copied this from the TESC board
Link: Rutgers: Office of the President - Letters to the University Community
Full Text:State Budget Proposal for Fiscal Year 2010â2011
(March 17, 2010)
Members of the Rutgers Community:
Yesterday Governor Christie presented his budget proposal for fiscal year 2010â11. The governorâs plan addresses a multibillion-dollar structural deficit in the state budget through funding cuts in many areas, including state executive departments and aid to public schools, towns, and colleges. For example, the governorâs proposed budget reduces school aid by $819 million, municipal aid by $445 million, and aid to higher education by $173 million.
Under this proposal, Rutgersâ direct state operating aid in 2010â11 would be cut 15.1 percent and therefore would be $46.6 million lower than the universityâs original appropriation for the current fiscal year. In actual dollars, Rutgersâ operating aid would be the lowest the university has received since 1994. The governorâs proposed budget also does not provide funding for the salary increases that were negotiated between Rutgers and its bargaining units last year.
In addition, the proposed state budget reduces funding for Tuition Aid Grants and the Educational Opportunity Fund and does not provide funding for incoming freshmen in the NJ STARS scholarship program.
Given the depth of the stateâs fiscal crisis, these budget cuts are not a surprise. Indeed, Governor Christie made clear when he visited the New Brunswick Campus last fall that the stateâs fiscal problems would make a cut in higher education funding unavoidable. It will, nonetheless, be very difficult for Rutgers to absorb these proposed reductions, following so many years of state budget cuts, including the $18.5 million midyear rescission the governor announced last month.
Managing the proposed reductions will require greater efficiencies, hard choices, and shared sacrifice. We are firmly committed to preserving the academic core of the institution and to the delivery of outstanding instruction to our students, recognizing that this is made possible by the hard work of all our faculty and staff. We also know that we cannot solve the problem by transferring the burden of these cuts primarily to our students and their families. In the weeks ahead, as the state budget is deliberated and finalized in Trenton, we will formulate our responses inclusively, and with a primary focus on protecting Rutgersâ core missions and values. Beginning tomorrow, I will convene the universityâs senior leadership to lay out plans to meet this challenge.
As we make difficult decisions on our campuses, Rutgers will also continue to make its case assertively in Trenton. We will inform policymakers that while public universities across America face cuts in the midst of a global recession, New Jersey is among the three states that have seen the greatest losses in state higher education appropriations per full-time equivalent student over the past five years. We will point out that funding higher education is an investment that drives economic expansion and opportunity; indeed, we are an essential part of the process of stimulating needed job growth that the governor and legislature must develop.
The governor has also proposed to merge Rutgers with Thomas Edison State College, stating that âthe combination will allow new classroom-based services for students in Trenton, while leveraging the two institutionsâ distance learning programming.â Under this unsolicited proposal, Rutgers also would take over the operations of the State Library and State Museum. Rutgers appreciates the confidence expressed in us by the governorâs proposal, and we will explore how these excellent institutions could be aligned with Rutgers to strengthen and enhance the missions of all. However, the task of vetting this proposal and performing due diligence will require consultation within and beyond the university community and would ultimately require approval by our boards of governors and trustees.
Rutgersâ enormous budget challenges will call on all of us to work even harder to sustain the high-quality education and cutting-edge research that our faculty provides and the supportive environment for learning and scholarship that our staff ensures. As our record numbers of applications and enrollments attest, the public has recognized Rutgersâ success in preparing students to contribute significantly to our state and the world. The extraordinary record we have achieved in winning grants to support our research attests to our competitiveness on a global scale. In the months ahead we will all be challenged to sustain what Rutgers has becomeâand that can only be achieved by our working together. I ask, and I know I can count on, your help.
Richard L. McCormick
President
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Link: Rutgers: Office of the President - Letters to the University Community
Full Text:State Budget Proposal for Fiscal Year 2010â2011
(March 17, 2010)
Members of the Rutgers Community:
Yesterday Governor Christie presented his budget proposal for fiscal year 2010â11. The governorâs plan addresses a multibillion-dollar structural deficit in the state budget through funding cuts in many areas, including state executive departments and aid to public schools, towns, and colleges. For example, the governorâs proposed budget reduces school aid by $819 million, municipal aid by $445 million, and aid to higher education by $173 million.
Under this proposal, Rutgersâ direct state operating aid in 2010â11 would be cut 15.1 percent and therefore would be $46.6 million lower than the universityâs original appropriation for the current fiscal year. In actual dollars, Rutgersâ operating aid would be the lowest the university has received since 1994. The governorâs proposed budget also does not provide funding for the salary increases that were negotiated between Rutgers and its bargaining units last year.
In addition, the proposed state budget reduces funding for Tuition Aid Grants and the Educational Opportunity Fund and does not provide funding for incoming freshmen in the NJ STARS scholarship program.
Given the depth of the stateâs fiscal crisis, these budget cuts are not a surprise. Indeed, Governor Christie made clear when he visited the New Brunswick Campus last fall that the stateâs fiscal problems would make a cut in higher education funding unavoidable. It will, nonetheless, be very difficult for Rutgers to absorb these proposed reductions, following so many years of state budget cuts, including the $18.5 million midyear rescission the governor announced last month.
Managing the proposed reductions will require greater efficiencies, hard choices, and shared sacrifice. We are firmly committed to preserving the academic core of the institution and to the delivery of outstanding instruction to our students, recognizing that this is made possible by the hard work of all our faculty and staff. We also know that we cannot solve the problem by transferring the burden of these cuts primarily to our students and their families. In the weeks ahead, as the state budget is deliberated and finalized in Trenton, we will formulate our responses inclusively, and with a primary focus on protecting Rutgersâ core missions and values. Beginning tomorrow, I will convene the universityâs senior leadership to lay out plans to meet this challenge.
As we make difficult decisions on our campuses, Rutgers will also continue to make its case assertively in Trenton. We will inform policymakers that while public universities across America face cuts in the midst of a global recession, New Jersey is among the three states that have seen the greatest losses in state higher education appropriations per full-time equivalent student over the past five years. We will point out that funding higher education is an investment that drives economic expansion and opportunity; indeed, we are an essential part of the process of stimulating needed job growth that the governor and legislature must develop.
The governor has also proposed to merge Rutgers with Thomas Edison State College, stating that âthe combination will allow new classroom-based services for students in Trenton, while leveraging the two institutionsâ distance learning programming.â Under this unsolicited proposal, Rutgers also would take over the operations of the State Library and State Museum. Rutgers appreciates the confidence expressed in us by the governorâs proposal, and we will explore how these excellent institutions could be aligned with Rutgers to strengthen and enhance the missions of all. However, the task of vetting this proposal and performing due diligence will require consultation within and beyond the university community and would ultimately require approval by our boards of governors and trustees.
Rutgersâ enormous budget challenges will call on all of us to work even harder to sustain the high-quality education and cutting-edge research that our faculty provides and the supportive environment for learning and scholarship that our staff ensures. As our record numbers of applications and enrollments attest, the public has recognized Rutgersâ success in preparing students to contribute significantly to our state and the world. The extraordinary record we have achieved in winning grants to support our research attests to our competitiveness on a global scale. In the months ahead we will all be challenged to sustain what Rutgers has becomeâand that can only be achieved by our working together. I ask, and I know I can count on, your help.
Richard L. McCormick
President
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Linda
Start by doing what is necessary: then do the possible; and suddenly you are doing the impossible St Francis of Assisi
Now a retired substitute Teacher in NY, & SC
AA Liberal Studies TESC '08
BA in Natural Science/Mathematics TESC Sept '10
AAS Environmental safety and Security Technology TESC Dec '12
Start by doing what is necessary: then do the possible; and suddenly you are doing the impossible St Francis of Assisi
Now a retired substitute Teacher in NY, & SC
AA Liberal Studies TESC '08
BA in Natural Science/Mathematics TESC Sept '10
AAS Environmental safety and Security Technology TESC Dec '12