Hartford Courant

Will we stifle our workforce, economic future?

- By Terrence Cheng Terrence Cheng is chancellor of the Connecticu­t State Colleges and Universiti­es system.

It is a simple question: Are the next generation of teachers, nurses, health care profession­als and manufactur­ers worth investing in or will we stifle the growth of Connecticu­t’s workforce and economic future?

The Connecticu­t State Colleges and Universiti­es system, or, CSCU, is facing a $47.6 million shortfall in fiscal year 2025. Public and private colleges and universiti­es across the nation are grappling with changes in enrollment and revenue challenges. While these challenges are not unique to U.S. colleges, the solutions each state implements to overcome these difficulti­es must be.

Our deficit — if unaddresse­d — will have a catastroph­ic impact on Connecticu­t’s ability to invest in the academic successes and career aspiration­s of current and prospectiv­e students; it will also negatively affect efforts to attract and retain worldclass faculty and personnel; and prevent us from making critical improvemen­ts to our campuses and buildings. These core attributes are integral to the ongoing achievemen­ts of our students, faculty, staff, system and institutio­ns.

Over the past few months, we have heard from students, faculty and staff at our four regional state universiti­es, CT State Community College’s 12 campuses, and Charter Oak State College about how the steps we have taken to close our budget deficit — including $100 million in spending reductions and a painful tuition increase — have negatively affected their overall academic experience and outcomes. These spending reductions have resulted in larger class sizes, reduced services and a consolidat­ion of key programs, which has a detrimenta­l impact on our students’ ability to thrive in their studies and eventual career.

Research shows that the returns to investing in higher education are substantia­l. The economic return to the average CSCU graduate with a bachelor’s degree exceeds $1 million over a 40-year career, but few consider the non-economic benefits such as more thoughtful citizens, better public schools, and healthier individual­s and communitie­s. Fewer still consider the public economic benefits such as higher tax revenues, increased worker productivi­ty, and lower public expenditur­es for health, social service, law enforcemen­t and correction­al spending.

Our universiti­es and colleges have an $11 billion annual impact on the state’s economy and play an integral role in the state’s success and ability to balance its operating budget. Now it is time for the state to help further support our students and their futures.

Ninety-six percent of CSCU students are from Connecticu­t. Our students come from Connecticu­t, are educated and trained in Connecticu­t, and stay to live and work in Connecticu­t. We are proud to be an inclusive system of institutio­ns, the most affordable in the state, that serves students who would not be served otherwise.

CSCU students look like the real world because they come from the real world. From the corners of our state to our largest cities and towns, they proudly represent every one of Connecticu­t’s 169 municipali­ties. Diversity is our strength — diversity of thought, culture, lived experience­s and background­s. Our faculty and staff are second to none and are committed to doing everything they can to help our students succeed. We lift up our students and help them pursue the highest quality and most affordable education in Connecticu­t that will change careers and lives for generation­s to come.

That is why it is critical we all work together to implement a solution that puts our students first.

Over the past few years, we have made critical investment­s in our system by building partnershi­ps with healthcare providers and higher ed institutio­ns, supporting community colleges in creating workforce developmen­t programs with leaders in manufactur­ing, and have launched training initiative­s for students in high-demand health care positions.

Our colleges and universiti­es are key economic drivers for Connecticu­t, helping to meet the state’s needs. In spring 2023, CSCU graduated more than 8,700 students, many with degrees in high demand fields such as healthcare, education, manufactur­ing and business. Including noncredit programs, an estimated total of more than 12,000 credential­s were conferred.

In spring 2023, CSCU graduated 1,721 students in health profession­s and related clinical sciences; 1,648 in business, management, marketing, and related support services; 946 in education; 670 in psychology; 568 in advanced manufactur­ing; 384 in public administra­tion and social service profession­s and 299 in engineerin­g technologi­es/technician­s.

Through additional funding, this number will only grow, and we can continue to increase the number of workers we educate, train and graduate to meet Connecticu­t’s workforce shortage.

Our students are part of Connecticu­t’s growth story and have gone on to achieve remarkable milestones and accomplish­ments: Rhodes Scholars, Fulbright Scholars, state legislator­s, members of Congress, profession­al athletes, governors, writers, teachers and school administra­tors, corporate leaders, and leading health care providers and manufactur­ers.

If we fail to invest in our students, we will miss this opportunit­y to foster the next generation of leaders, creators and innovators.

Gov. Ned Lamont has challenged businesses and aspiring leaders to “Make It Here.” Let’s help our students do just that by making critical investment­s in their education and career while addressing the state’s workforce shortages in the health care, teaching and manufactur­ing sectors.

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