The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Deficit up nearly 38% at CT community colleges

- By Adria Watson CTMIRROR.ORG

Declining enrollment at Connecticu­t’s community colleges has increased the system’s deficit from $16 million in the fall to $22 million now, officials said Thursday.

During the Connecticu­t State Colleges and Universiti­es board of regents meeting, Finance Committee Chairman Richard Balducci told board members that the system-wide deficit, pegged at $69 million this fall, dropped to $58 million due to

reductions in spending.

Northweste­rn Connecticu­t Community College in Winsted serves about 1,614 students, according to the online Community College Review.

But spending cuts did not help the state’s community colleges as much, as that system’s deficit is now projected to grow by nearly 38 percent, largely due to declining student enrollment. In October, Connecticu­t’s 12 community colleges saw a 15 percent drop in enrollment, and the four regional state universiti­es saw a 5.5 percent drop.

“Enrollment is continuing to decline. It’s dropped 2.4 percent from the levels that we had anticipate­d in October,” Balducci said. “Universiti­es are down about 2,000 students, and the colleges are down about 3,600 students.”

Balducci added that the projected deficit increase does not include the second round of federal money under the Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund that the CSCU system expects, which they anticipate putting toward lost revenue and student financial assistance.

The system’s Chief Financial Officer Ben Barnes told the finance committee on Tuesday that even with help from the relief money, getting people to enroll is going to be a persistent issue and that they should invest in increasing enrollment to replace revenue the system may lose in the next few years.

“Community colleges make a lot more sense financiall­y when we get closer to 30,000 [students]. But unfortunat­ely, right now, the pandemic has pushed us in the other direction, and we’re getting down toward 20,000 [full-time equivalent] students, and so recovery of that is going to be a challenge,” Barnes said.

Gov. Ned Lamont’s biennial budget proposal does not offer additional state aid to help Connecticu­t’s public colleges and universiti­es — instead, it relies on $40 million in federal higher-education relief funding Connecticu­t received.

The University of Connecticu­t faced a $76 million projected budget deficit for the 2021 fiscal year but shrank it to $8 million by cutting $48 million in institutio­nal costs — through hiring freezes, pay cuts, furlough days and other cost-saving measures — and receiving $20 million in federal coronaviru­s relief. The additional federal relief will close the remaining $8 million gap, and the rest of the funds will help cover its $18.3 million projected deficit for fiscal year 2022.

The proposal also provides $6 million to maintain funding for the Pledge to Advance Connecticu­t, or PACT, program — which helps low-income residentia­l students to take community college classes debtfree – for the next two fiscal years.

But during Thursday’s meeting, board members said they are going to continue to push to get more help from the administra­tion.

“We will have to be advocating very, very, very, very strongly for our system in the context of the many, many demands that the administra­tion and the legislatur­e will be facing,” said Matt Fleury, the chairman of the board of regents. “But I know that the regents certainly stand ready to participat­e and support that in any way we can. And I know that the rest of our university and college community will do so as well.”

 ?? Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? Northweste­rn Connecticu­t Community College in Winsted.
Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo Northweste­rn Connecticu­t Community College in Winsted.
 ?? Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? Northweste­rn Connecticu­t Community College (NCCC) in Winsted.
Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo Northweste­rn Connecticu­t Community College (NCCC) in Winsted.

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