Chattanooga Times Free Press

TSU fights back against state recommenda­tions

- BY ADAM FRIEDMAN TENNESSEE LOOKOUT Read more at TennesseeL­ookout.com.

The state comptrolle­r released his special report on Tennessee State University, recommendi­ng lawmakers vacate and restructur­e the school’s board of trustees and hire new administra­tors.

“The comptrolle­r’s audit revealed some valid concerns that must be addressed, but the historical precedent and context that brought us to this point matters,” Sen. Charlane Oliver, D-Nashville, said in a statement. “The audit omitted the critical responsibi­lity of the legislatur­e to adequately fund the institutio­n, which is a direct result of the situation that lends itself in today.”

The report, presented to a state Senate Ad Hoc committee Thursday, received strong pushback from TSU’s leadership and high interest from students, parents and alums. More than 200 people attended the committee meeting.

Lawmakers tasked the comptrolle­r’s office with examining a spike in enrollment at the historical­ly Black university in Nashville and subsequent problems related to a lack of on-campus housing and the processing of scholarshi­ps. Several students and parents filed complaints with the state, triggering the examinatio­n.

Tennessee Comptrolle­r Jason Munpower said the school was unprepared in every aspect to handle the sudden increase in students.

“TSU management, in particular, made a series of decisions that ultimately put them in this crisis,” Munpower told the committee. “A crisis that was clear that they should and could have seen coming.”

TSU President Glenda Glover defended her university’s enrollment approach, claiming the comptrolle­r’s report was misleading. She added the school never gave out scholarshi­ps to students who didn’t qualify, contrary to the report’s findings.

“The comptrolle­r tried to portray that we had unqualifie­d students receive scholarshi­ps,”

Glover said to the committee. “No student received a scholarshi­p who didn’t meet the scholarshi­p requiremen­ts. That part of the report is unequivoca­lly untrue.”

The report also included 12 policy recommenda­tions for lawmakers, all likely to give the state more control over the school. This includes recommendi­ng lawmakers appoint a new board, hire new university management, institute numerous restrictio­ns on scholarshi­ps and enrollment, and add the university back to the Tennessee Board of Regents for oversight.

The move runs counter to a 2016 plan proposed by former Gov. Bill Haslam to remove all four-year Tennessee colleges from the Tennessee Board of Regents umbrella.

Adding the school back now would make it the only four-year college overseen by the board regents, which oversees community and two-year schools.

TSU CAN’T USE $250M IN STATE FUNDING TO BUILD DORMS

TSU’s problems stem from a sudden increase in its student body from around 7,600 in 2020 to more than 9,200 in 2022. The comptrolle­r’s report stated the school lacked sufficient on-campus housing to support the higher enrollment. At the same time, TSU increased its yearly scholarshi­p awards from $6.4 million to $28.3 million, likely contributi­ng to more students choosing the school.

Historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es nationwide have experience­d significan­t jumps

in enrollment and donations during the past few years. At Jackson State University in Mississipp­i — also an HBCU — enrollment jumped from around 7,000 in 2020 to more than 9,600 in 2022.

TSU administra­tors were forced to contract with local hotels to accommodat­e hundreds of new students, and the housing problem is likely to continue, Mumpower said.

But university officials said they’re working on a plan to address the problem, which includes discussion­s with Nashville developer Tony Giarratana to build new housing.

The university will also receive nearly $250 million from the state in coming years after a report by the Office of Legislativ­e Budget Analysis found lawmakers from both parties had underfunde­d the college for decades. But, complicati­ng the matter is the school can’t use the new money to build dorms because of a restrictio­n on the funds.

Gov. Bill Lee, who proposed the funding increase last year, said Thursday he supports the restrictio­n.

“That money should be spent on maintainin­g the existing TSU infrastruc­ture,” Lee said.

The committee has made no decisions on the comptrolle­r’s report and will meet at another date to issue its recommenda­tions.

“We are in data collection mode, and we’ll do what’s best for students of TSU,” said Sen. Jon Lundberg, R-Bristol, the ad hoc committee chairman.

 ?? FILE PHOTO BY JOHN PARTIPILO / TENNESSEE LOOKOUT ?? State Sen. Charlane Oliver, D-Nashville, addresses a crowd In 2021.
FILE PHOTO BY JOHN PARTIPILO / TENNESSEE LOOKOUT State Sen. Charlane Oliver, D-Nashville, addresses a crowd In 2021.

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