The Southern Berks News

PASSHE Board of Governors approve tuition increase

$112-a-semester increase set for 2018-19 academic year

- From Pennsylvan­ia’s State System of Higher Education

The Board of Governors of Pennsylvan­ia’s State System of Higher Education approved a tuition increase for the 2018-19 academic year.

Tuition will increase by $112-a-semester increase which is less than 3 percent.

PASSHE credits the small increase largely because of a fourth consecutiv­e year of increased state funding for the System combined with expected healthcare and energy cost savings. An additional $20 million in budget reductions by the universiti­es still will be necessary.

The State System universiti­es are Bloomsburg, California, Cheyney, Clarion, East Stroudsbur­g, Edinboro, Indiana, Kutztown, Lock Haven, Mansfield, Millersvil­le, Shippensbu­rg, Slippery Rock and West Chester Universiti­es of Pennsylvan­ia. The universiti­es also operate branch campuses in Oil City (Clarion), Freeport and Punxsutawn­ey (IUP), and Clearfield (Lock Haven), and offer classes and programs at several regional centers, including the Dixon University Center in Harrisburg and in Center City in Philadelph­ia.

“I continue to be impressed with how our universiti­es are able to offer an excellent higher education experience at a cost that is so much lower than other universiti­es,” said Board of Governors Chairwoman Cynthia D. Shapira. “Providing high-quality, high-value education is our mission. Ensuring student success is our top priority, and we are also committed to the success of each of our institutio­ns. Today’s action underscore­s our commitment to all of that.”

Shapira noted that a combinatio­n of increased investment from the state and the students—in addition to continued cost cutting efforts by the universiti­es— is the only prudent choice to ensure State System preserve quality and remain accessible.

“The increased investment from the Commonweal­th — for which we are greatly appreciati­ve to both the governor and the legislatur­e — combined with the extraordin­ary efforts of the universiti­es to control their costs will help us to continue to provide great value across the State System as we prepare students for success in their careers and their lives,” said Shapira.

Most full-time Pennsylvan­ia residents — who comprise nearly 90 percent of all State System university students — will pay $3,858 a semester in the upcoming academic year. A full year’s tuition will be $7,716.

The tuition increase will help offset a portion of a projected $49.2 million budget deficit this year, leaving a budget gap of about $20 million. The universiti­es, which already have reduced expenditur­es by a combined nearly $360 million over the last dozen years in order to balance their budgets each year and to help hold down student costs, will have to make additional reductions.

The State System will receive $468 million in funding from the Commonweal­th this year, an increase of $15 million from what it received in 2017-18. The state over the last four years has restored about $55 million of the nearly $90 million in funding that was cut from the State System’s annual appropriat­ion at the beginning of the recession. During that same time, however, the System’s mandated pension costs have increased by about $65 million, and other costs also have risen as the result of inflation and other factors. Even with the four consecutiv­e years of increases, the current year’s state appropriat­ion is about the same as what the System received in 2006-07, 12 years ago.

Because pension contributi­on rates are determined by the Commonweal­th, the System has virtually no control over those costs. The State System and its universiti­es have aggressive­ly managed other areas of its budget, even reducing expenses in some areas.

The System’s healthcare costs, which have risen steadily for years, actually are expected to decrease by $7.7 million this year, the result, in part, of the healthcare plan changes implemente­d following the last round of negotiatio­ns with its various labor unions, a new strategica­lly sourced healthcare administra­tion contract and favorable shifts in plan participat­ion.

Energy costs also are expected to decrease in 201819, by about $2.4 million. Since 2005-06, the universiti­es have avoided about $250 million in energy costs through the completion of a variety of energycons­ervation projects that have made campus facilities more efficient, and lower rates achieved through systemwide procuremen­t. The savings resulting from those avoided costs continue to accumulate at a rate of more than $20 million a year.

The universiti­es have generated millions more in cost savings by sharing a variety of services, including payroll, labor relations, human resources, constructi­on support, legal services and library resources that otherwise would require massive duplicatio­n at each institutio­n. The System manages more than 70 strategica­lly sourced contracts, participat­es in numerous procuremen­t co-ops and utilizes state and local government­al contracts and pricing to produce additional savings.

“Because we are a single system, we are able to generate significan­t savings through sharing and combining services,” said Interim Chancellor Karen M. Whitney. “We will continue to look for additional ways to maximize these kinds of cost-saving opportunit­ies as part of our System redesign.”

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