Lawmakers propose tying higher education funding to performance

December 16, 2010

By Jacqueline Rabe Thomas

A bi-partisan committee of state legislators is recommending that state support for its public colleges and universities be tied to performance goals, such as affordability, graduation rates, and meeting the workforce needs of employers.

"Let's get this done in the next couple of months," Sen. John A. Kissel, R-Enfield and co-chairman of the Program Review and Investigations Committee, said Thursday. "We need to tie something to a portion of the dollars we are giving them."

But the idea is likely to face opposition from higher education officials, who collectively get $554 million--about a quarter of their total budget--from the state's general fund.

Kissel

Sen. John Kissel and Reps. Mary Mushinsky and Roberta Willis listen to a presentation on funding higher education

The state's public colleges and universities currently have complete authority over their budgets. They got that during a state budget crisis in the early 1990s as a trade-off for funding cuts.

Mary Anne Cox, assistant chancellor for the state's dozen community colleges, said she would not support linking state funding with performance benchmarks, unless there is more money on the table--an unlikely proposition given the massive budget deficit projected for next year.

"I am very concerned if this can be used effectively without increasing funds. To me, I see this as another reduction," Cox said after the PRI Committee meeting.

Bernard Kavaler, spokesman for Connecticut State University, said officials plan to review the proposal and will then make a comment on the proposal.

Kavaler said CSU routinely supports providing incentives for students to earn degrees in workforce-shortage ares, such as special education. However, he would not say whether the current funding the state gives CSU should be tied to their ability to graduate students in certain degrees.

University of Connecticut spokesman, Michael Kirk, said officials plan to review the recommendations and plans to inform lawmakers of any concerns they may have.

About half the states in the country have report cards for universities tied to their levels of state spending, PRI staff told the committee. The amount of funding tied to meeting benchmarks ranges state-to-state, from 5 percent of state funding in numerous states to 100 percent in Ohio.

"We want to make sure our money is spent most efficiently as possible," said Rep. Mary M. Mushinsky, D-Wallingford and co-chairwoman of the PRI Committee.

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Comments

Now, we're talking! It's

Now, we're talking! It's about time common sense was tied to our spending. Plus, it will give the colleges incentive to offer the best.

Students in public colleges

Students in public colleges stay put in colleges for as long as possible - almost six or more years -- to get a four (or should I say hardly worth 2-1/2 years) year undergraduate education, because that way they can live off student loans. The drop out rate is also horrendous. At any rate how much of the ct. and fed. student loans amount is in default and non-performing now, and has to be written off, and thus becomes really a subsidy?

Ct. has a good number of private colleges and really there is no need for so many

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Of course administration

Of course administration officials are going to oppose this plan. One way to improve accountability at CSU is to eliminate the System Office, but that doesn't appear to be an option. What do those System Office people do to justify their salaries? What value do they add? Bernard Kavaler needs more time to study the proposal so that he and the others can come up with a rationalization for their existence. I'm sure they will conclude that the plan jeopardizes the future of higher education in Connecticut, if not the free world.