The Palm Beach Post

College foundation­s hit hard by bill tied to Florida budget

- By Lloyd Dunkelberg­er News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSE­E — University and state college foundation­s would be prohibited from using public funds to pay for their employees beginning in 2022 and would face more disclosure require - ments under an agreement reached Friday by legislativ­e leaders.

The foundation language is part of a broader higher-education bill (SB 374) linked to a nearly $83 billion budget for the fiscal year that starts July 1. The bill includes an array of major policy changes for the 12 state universiti­es and 28 state colleges.

The bill would require universiti­es to offer block tuition, where students pay a flat fee per semester rather than a credit-hour charge, by the fall of 2018. It would create a 13-member Board of Community Colleges to oversee the state college sys- tem, which is now under the Board of Education.

It also would cap enrollment for students pursuing four-year degrees at state colleges to no more than 15 percent of the total enrollment at each school.

Universiti­es would be held to a new performanc­e standard, measuring the schools on their ability to graduate students in four years, rather than the current six-year standard.

The agreement on university and college foundation­s is a modificati­on of a House proposal that would have immediatel­y prohibited the use of public employees or public funding in the largely private foundation­s, which are also known as direct-support organizati­ons.

Universiti­es are currently spending about $53 million to support foundation personnel, while state colleges are spending $9.9 million. Under the agreement, they would have five years to end that practice.

In addition, the bill would immediatel­y prohibit the use of state funds for travel by the organizati­ons and would require disclosure of all expenditur­es involving public funds and the disclosure of all travel expenditur­es involving private funds.

T h e H o u s e o r i g i n a l l y sought a fuller disclosure of all expenditur­es and activity by the foundation­s, with the exception of the identities of private donors.

House Speaker Richard Corcoran, R-Land O’Lakes, c alled the compromise a signific ant advancemen­t i n t r a n s p a r e n c y f o r t h e direct-support organizati­ons.

“Is it where we wanted to go? We would like to go even further,” Corcoran said. “But to move that along to the extent that we have and to have that accountabi­lity for the first time is something that is remarkable.”

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