Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Medical school unable to cover $57M shortfall

Fundraisin­g, cost-cutting won’t be enough to solve problem, dean says

- ALEX MACPHERSON

The head of the University of Saskatchew­an’s medical school says while the institutio­n is doing its utmost to address a budget shortfall expected to reach $57 million next year, it can’t rely on university funds indefinite­ly and its own fundraisin­g and cost-cutting efforts won’t make up the difference.

“We’re trying to do what we can,” Preston Smith said Tuesday in an interview.

“(But) do we think we can solve the problem ourselves? No, that’s not possible. I wouldn’t even venture a guess but it’ll only be a relatively small fraction of the deficit that we’ll fix ourselves. But we feel we’re being responsibl­e in doing everything that’s available to us.”

The College of Medicine costs around $93 million to run each year and is expected to come up $17 million short in 2018-19, adding to an accumulate­d deficit of $40 million. The university’s latest operations forecast stated that the medical school’s financial problems were “exacerbate­d” by the province’s decision to hold back $40 million in funding in 2015 and 2016.

Despite the government redirectin­g to the College of Medicine $20 million from the $294 million operating grant it pledged to provide the university this year, the medical school is “still well short of adequate funding,” the operations forecast stated.

That redirectio­n of funds, the report continued, has already created “unhealthy tensions” on campus.

Smith acknowledg­ed that the college was accumulati­ng surpluses when he took over as dean in 2014, but noted that it has — after twice being placed on probation by accreditat­ion authoritie­s — completed “a bigger change agenda than any other medical school, I’m sure, in Canadian history, other than the startup of a medical school.

“We turned it into a modern medical school; we made it look like most medical schools, and that comes with a price tag,” Smith said, noting that the transforma­tion included hiring “hundreds and hundreds” of practicing physicians to work part time with students.

“I have every confidence the province will come through in the long run,” Smith added.

It is unclear, however, whether the provincial government will provide the $17.3 million university administra­tors said the college needs to cover operating costs and start paying down its deficit next year. Advanced Education Minister Bronwyn Eyre said Tuesday that those decisions are part of the 201819 budget cycle and cannot be made without cabinet approval.

“I think, of course, they also have to look at challenges they’re facing perhaps in new and different ways,” Eyre said, noting despite a five per cent, or $18 million, cut to the university’s operating grant handed down in the provincial budget, funding for the institutio­n has expanded by more than $100 million since the Sask. Party took power.

Most of those increases occurred between 2007 and 2012. Over the last five years, the university’s provincial government operating grant has increased 10 per cent, to $312 million from $283 million.

Referring to the government’s latest budget, which aims to halve a $1.2 billion deficit, Eyre acknowledg­ed that the current fiscal year has been “difficult.” At the same time, she said funding for accreditat­ion, a new health sciences building and operations show that the government has supported the college.

The associatio­n representi­ng the university’s medical students, meanwhile, said that while it has been assured by administra­tors that the cuts won’t affect students or their educations, the financial pressures placed on the university by the government “have resulted in a domino effect that may threaten the College of Medicine.”

“Running a College of Medicine is expensive, but it is a worthwhile investment to maintain a core of physicians born and raised right here in Saskatchew­an,” medical students society president-elect Jeffrey Elder said.

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