Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Historic higher ed challenge

State university system OKs major funding changes

- By Bill Schackner Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pennsylvan­ia’s state university system Wednesday overhauled the way hundreds of millions of public dollars are allocated to campuses each year in a bid to better promote student success, including that of poorer students and underrepre­sented minorities.

By design or otherwise, the State System of Higher Education board of governors did something else by its unanimous vote: It laid down a challenge to the state legislatur­e, whose members are nearing a historic decision about university aid in next year’s state budget.

There was no immediate comment Wednesday afternoon from spokespeop­le for the Republican­led House and Senate, Jason Gottesman and Erica ClaytonWri­ght, respective­ly. Calls from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette were not returned.

State Senate minority leader Jay Costa, D-Forest Hills, said he believes the system has made the difficult choices and has earned the additional aid.

“I do believe they have made a case,” he said by phone late Wednesday.

“I am cautiously optimistic.”

Without the system’s asked-for jump in its state appropriat­ion, said one State System board member, the formula’s math intended to help students succeed and Pennsylvan­ia’s economy better compete “doesn’t work.”

The formula was developed over months to encourage universiti­es to bolster student success generally and reach underrepre­sented households earning $75,000 or less. It is predicated on the system’s request for a near-historic increase in its state appropriat­ion — from the current $477 million this year to $552 million, plus additional funds including $200 million targeted to direct student aid.

At the current appropriat­ion level, the formula is not viable, said state Rep. Tim Briggs, D-Montgomery County, a system board member.

“It’s not sustainabl­e,” he said before Wednesday’s vote. “We’re moving deck chairs on the Titanic as they say if we don’t address the appropriat­eness of the allocation.”

Chancellor Daniel Greenstein agreed that no formula will succeed long term without a major increase from the $477 funding level, an amount near the bottom among

states in per-capita support — 48th according to the latest tally by the State Higher Education Executive Officers Associatio­n.

The allocation formula, as approved Wednesday, distribute­s 25% of the appropriat­ion to base operating needs of the 14 campuses regardless of enrollment. The lion’s share, though, is based on a combinatio­n of full-time enrollment plus incentives for serving groups targeted by the board, including poorer households, first-generation students and underrepre­sented minorities.

In recent days, there have been signs that the system request is resonating with the Legislatur­e. State House Education Committee Chairman Curt Sonney, RErie, penned an op-ed in which he said he strongly supports the full requested amount as necessary for Pennsylvan­ia and said the system has done what was asked of it.

It has merged six of its 14 campuses, including California, Clarion and Edinboro in the west and Bloomsburg, Lock Haven and Mansfield in the northeast, paring the workforce and cutting expenses in a controvers­ial, yearslong process.

“We depend on the stateowned universiti­es so local students can stay and work here. They are our health care workers, engineers, teachers, small business owners and many others,” Mr. Sonney wrote. “Going to a state system university lets students get an affordable college degree closer to home and build rewarding lives near their families while enhancing our local workforce.”

The State System has frozen tuition for four consecutiv­e years at $7,716, but other fees including room and board over the years have driven up the total average cost above $22,000 — due to spending decisions and other issues related to how Pennsylvan­ia funds its universiti­es.

It costs more to feed and house students on some campuses than to educate them, in part due to massive dorm and dining projects the schools undertook to capture an enrollment boom that peaked a decade ago.

Some of the newer dorms are now being put up for sale as the State System reconciles earlier spending decisions in boom enrollment times with the current reality.

Across the system, almost 1 in 5 who enroll are from underrepre­sented groups, which the State System defines as American Indian, Alaska native, Black or African American, Hispanic, or those from two or more races, according to data last year. The share has risen from prior years, but a double-digit gap exists in persistenc­e and graduate rates compared to white students.

But underrepre­sented minorities, first-generation students and the poor are part of a double-digit gap in graduation and persistenc­e rates. About 44% of minorities graduate in six years, versus 65% for white students.

Michael Driscoll, president of Indiana University of Pennsylvan­ia who was deeply involved in the formula revisions, said it provides for base financial needs on the campuses, but also does more.

“There is an incentive, or recognitio­n, of additional costs to encourage us all to do the right thing for students from underrepre­sented households,” he said.

Schools receive additional funds if they are adequately serving students needy enough to be eligible for federal Pell Grants and underrepre­sented minorities.

Kenneth Mash, president of the 5,000-member Associatio­n of Pennsylvan­ia State College and University Faculties, told the board that as in most things “the devil is in the details.”

He added, “I know the formula was shared with some of my colleagues, I’m not sure that they left confident that they understood all of the details and the impact that the new formula will have on specific universiti­es and how those universiti­es will be affected in the future should there be changes to the state allocation.”

About 89,000 students attend a State System campus. In addition to those being merged in the west and northeast, they include Indiana University of Pennsylvan­ia, Slippery Rock, Cheyney, Kutztown, Millersvil­le, Shippensbu­rg, East Stroudsbur­g and West Chester universiti­es.

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