Kane Republican

Despite calls for an increase, Penn States funding will mostly remain flat

- By Matt Disanto

Despite a call for increased funding, Penn State's state appropriat­ion for the next fiscal year will largely remain flat, the university said on Friday (July 8).

On Thursday (July 7), Pennsylvan­ia's General Assembly approved Penn State's non-preferred appropriat­ions bill as part of the commonweal­th's 2022-23 budget. The funding will provide more aid for some of the university's research and innovation initiative­s while keeping Penn State's general support appropriat­ion level for the third straight year.

In a statement, Penn State President Neeli Bendapudi thanked lawmakers for supporting the university but said level funding will pose challenges for her administra­tion moving forward.

“Inflationa­ry pressures, revenue losses from the pandemic, demographi­c shifts and other factors driving cost, coupled with successive years of flat funding, pose significan­t challenges for the University and will require us to look deeply at our budget and spending in the coming year,” Bendapudi said in a statement.

For the third straight year, Penn State will receive $242.1 million through its annual general support appropriat­ion. Those funds are entirely applied to the university's education budget, enabling it to frequently freeze or restrain in-state tuition rates and support academic programs. Despite those efforts, Penn State's tuition for in-state students remains the highest in the Big Ten among non-private institutio­ns.

Penn State requested a $12.1 million increase for its general support funding. That appropriat­ion hasn't increased since the university received a 2% bump for the 2019-20 fiscal year.

“We are disappoint­ed that the General

Assembly chose not to increase Penn State's general support appropriat­ion, as the University had requested and Gov. Wolf had proposed,” Zack Moore, Penn State's vice president for government and community relations, said in a statement. “Pennsylvan­ia students and their families are the direct beneficiar­ies of this funding, saving them thousands of dollars each on the total cost of a degree. After freezes to the University's funding each of the last two years, and in the midst of nearly unpreceden­ted inflation and state budget surpluses, Penn State and its students — particular­ly lower- and middle-income students — count on state support to help meet rising costs and to help mitigate impacts on tuition.”

Although lawmakers declined to increase Penn State's general support appropriat­ion, the school received some funding expansions in other areas. The university received $2.35 million to support its Invent Penn State initiative, which helps people learn to start and grow businesses and manage investment­s. It's the first time the program received state funding in its seven-year history.

Additional­ly, Penn State's agricultur­al research and extension programs received a 5% funding increase, rounding out to $2.7 million in funding. The university will use the $57.7 million from the state to support its efforts to grow agricultur­al education efforts, serve rural communitie­s and “provide research-based solutions to address the challenges facing Pennsylvan­ia's agricultur­e industry.”

Pennsylvan­ia College of Technology will receive $26.7 million, while Penn State Health and the College of Medicine will receive level funding, about $15 million, to support the university's health care system and medical education programs.

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