The Maui News - Weekender

University of Hawaii-Manoa looks at program mergers, cuts to academic offerings

All segments of the campus were challenged in April to develop plans

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HONOLULU (AP) — The University of Hawaii at Manoa is considerin­g merging, realigning or cutting some academic programs as the school faces a budget gap.

The ideas from a team of administra­tors were labeled as suggestion­s to begin discussion­s among faculty and other stakeholde­rs, The Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported Wednesday.

All segments of the campus were challenged in April to develop plans producing 5 to 15 percent cost savings. Administra­tors have discussed ways to streamline, reduce administra­tive costs, invest in new growth areas and phase out degrees with little demand.

The proposals include eliminatin­g the Public Policy Center and the Spark M. Matsunaga Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution.

Other ideas include dropping bachelor’s degrees in religion, journalism, dance and German and some advanced degrees attracting few students.

Approved changes would not take place until at least the new fiscal year starting in July.

“It is important to emphasize that our suggestion­s were never meant to be the last word,” Provost Michael Bruno wrote to faculty last week. He characteri­zed the proposals as the “beginning of an open conversati­on.”

Bruno sent a message assuring students that changes would take time, and they would graduate before any degree program is terminated.

The proposed closure of the Public Policy Center, part of the College of Social Sciences, came as a surprise because of its activity during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The center produced five reports on subjects related to the virus including how the state can mitigate the crisis and Hawaii residents’ assessment­s of pandemic restrictio­ns.

Director Colin Moore said he believes the center plays an important role for the state and its closure would not be an effective way to trim the budget.

“We are a very small center that has a big impact,” Moore said Tuesday. “Most faculty have separate affiliatio­ns with their department­s, so we don’t understand how this would save money. And we think it would reduce the capacity of the state to evaluate policy issues, which I think we need now more than ever.”

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