Connecticut Post

Lawmakers: College merger plan needs ‘more accountabi­lity’

- By Kathleen Megan

who also heads the Board of Regents for Higher Education.

“We are at risk of losing many of the community-based strengths of our community system with the creation of one single institutio­n,” Flexer said. “When the Board of Regents was created, we were assured we were going to have 12 independen­t community colleges and four state universiti­es. That is no longer the case and the legislatur­e needs to be the voice of the people to ensure they have a role in this discussion.”

A second bill, House Bill 7254, unanimousl­y approved by the committee Thursday, says the president of the Board of Regents must make quarterly reports to the higher education committee on the status of “Students First,” as the college consolidat­ion plan is called.

As the law stands now, the Board of Regents, the governing board for CSCU system, makes the decision on whether to close or merge institutio­ns. With the backing of Ojakian, the board has decided to merge the state’s 12 community college in an attempt to bolster the system’s ailing financ- es.

Ojakian has estimated that the plan will save $23 million annually when the consolidat­ion is complete and he hopes to invest any savings into services for students that will strengthen retention and graduation rates.

Last year, the accreditin­g agency for the CSCU institutio­ns, the New England Commission of Higher Education, turned down Ojakian’s bid to consolidat­e the 12 colleges, but Ojakian said he has been working closely with NECHE to ensure a better chance of success when he submits the plan again. His hope is to receive approval from NECHE in time to completely consolidat­e the colleges in 2023.

The Senate bill would require that any proposed merger or closing of a CSCU institutio­n must be approved by a majority vote in both chambers of the General Assembly, but to reject it would require only a majority vote of either chamber. The vote must be taken “not later then one year” after receiving notice by the Board, the bill says, adding that if the General Assembly fails to act, the recommende­d merger or closing “shall be deemed acceptable.”

Ojakian, who opposed the bills approved by the committee Thursday, said the system must be restructur­ed if it is to remain solvent.

“I believe that if you have a board of regents or a board of trustees that is mostly appointed by the governor that you should give that board the authority to make those kinds of decisions,” Ojakian said Thursday, shortly after the committee vote. “While I respect the legislativ­e process, I think if you have legislator­s approving or rejecting closures or mergers then you are going to inject politics into those decisions even more than is being done now.”

If politics enter into the decisions about which colleges remain open or closed, he said, “the students would be the ones to suffer in the end.”

“You know I’ve never said I want to close campuses. I’m committed to not closing campuses,” Ojakian said. His plan preserves all 12 campuses, but centralize­s administra­tion.

But if a successor attempted to close a campus, Ojakian said he thinks it’s the colleges in the more rural areas that may be at greater risk because they have a smaller delegation in the legislatur­e.

“You clearly see legislator­s, in a desire to protect their own institutio­ns, basically arguing that we should close another institutio­n,” said Ojakian.

“I think President Ojakian underestim­ates the strength of the voice of northeaste­rn Connecticu­t,” said Flexer, who is from the northeast corner of the state and graduated from Quinebaug Valley Community College. “Twelve campuses run by a bureaucrat in Hartford is not the same. It’s not keeping the community in our community college system.”

Rep. Gregg Haddad, D-Mansfield, and co-chairman of the higher education committee is another strong proponent of the bill.

“We’re the funding agency for the system and I think that’s an expectatio­n here that we want an understand­ing about what it is that we are providing money for,” said Haddad. “I think it’s not surprising that legislator­s would want a say in something as sweeping as what he’s proposing.”

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