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lonestarnot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-28-09 07:05 AM
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Education under attack in AZ!
Wednesday Education Rally and Thursday Public Hearing This Week

Public Education Rally at the Capitol Tomorrow
Arizona University Students Association will be holding a protest at the Capitol. You are invited to join them. Over 1000 students, faculty, parents and community members will be protesting the proposed education cuts. Education, from kindergarten through college, has been targeted for the biggest budget cuts by Senate President Bob Burns and Senate Appropriations Chair Russell Pearce. The quality of K-12 education and higher education is at stake.

When: Wednesday, January 28, 2009 - Noon until 12pm
Where: State Capitol, 1700 West Washington


Voice Your View on the Budget Thursday Evening in Phoenix
Join legislators from the greater Phoenix area at a public hearing on the budget crisis. Let your voice be heard! Members of both the House and Senate Appropriations Committees will be in attendance to hear citizens’ questions and concerns about the state budget shortfall and proposed solutions:

When: Thursday, Jan. 29 from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Where: Grace Lutheran Church,1124 N. 3rd Street, Phoenix, AZ 85004
In the next few weeks, Legislative Democrats will also hold hearings in Yuma (2/2), Tucson (2/4) and Flagstaff (2/9). Locations will be released as they are available. Learn more.

Federal Funds Could Relieve School Budget Deficits - Update
Hundreds of billions of dollars may flow into states to help local school districts and state legislatures protect public education and vital services. The full U.S. House is expected to debate and vote on the American Recovery and Reinvestment Bill this Wednesday, January 28. The bill continues to include significant investments in education, including increases for Title I, IDEA, and school modernization, as well as important provisions addressing health care, nutrition assistance, and unemployment insurance. Most significantly, the bill includes the NEA proposal to provide flexible funding for states through existing education funding formulas. The U.S. Senate Appropriations Committees will mark-up their version of the plan this week.

Learn more. http://capwiz.com/nea/az/utr/1/HFSJJRECUK/OVYUJRECXD/2837248976

http://capwiz.com/nea/az/utr/1/HFSJJRECUK/FENAJRECXE/2837248976

Arizona breakdown of American Recovery and Reinvestment Funding Relief by School District


Action Needed:
Contact all Members of the U.S. House immediately and urge them to support passage of the American Recovery and Reinvestment bill. Take action now.
http://capwiz.com/nea/az/utr/1/HFSJJRECUK/KYNDJRECXF/2837248976







Important ASU Budget Facts

Based on some of the responses I’ve received recently regarding the state budget proposal, I wanted to forward a few key facts to counter the lingering inaccuracies and misperceptions I continue to encounter. The information below provides important clarification related to pending budget concerns and the magnitude of the challenges ASU is facing.



Fiction: The cut to ASU in the proposed legislative budget is a small fraction (between 4 and 12 percent) of the university’s overall budget.

Fact: The actual percentages are 35 percent of the 2009 state General Fund budget that is remaining for the year and when the proposed 2010 cuts are added, it totals 40 percent of the university’s state General Fund appropriation in 2008 on a Full-time Equivalent (either a full-time student or its equivalent of two part-time students) basis.

The percentages quoted by some state legislators are based on a total budget that includes hundreds of millions of dollars in federal research funding as well as bookstore and meal plan purchases and even football ticket sales. ASU’s research enterprise and its ancillary operations from the bookstore to the football team are – and must be – financially self-sufficient and in fact, these activities subsidize a substantial portion of the instructional budget.

If ASU were to close its dormitories and bookstore and stop doing federally funded research and stop playing football, the revenue associated with those activities would also end. So, it is a fiction that ASU has other revenue that could begin to replace the loss of state revenue.
State revenue and the tuition paid by students account for 79 percent of ASU’s instructional budget. To make up the loss of state funding, tuition for in-state students would need to be almost doubled to $11,000 a year.



Fiction: The proposed legislative budget won’t really hurt ASU. The university has gotten a lot of new state money in recent years.

Fact: The proposed budget cut would take student funding at ASU back about 20 years, from $8,111 per full-time student (or equivalent) in 2008 to $4,902 for 2010, which is lower than the $5,017 ASU received in 1989. To see the full chart of state funding from 1986-2010, click here.



General Fund per FTE Student (not adjusted for inflation)
1989 2006 2010
$5,017 $6,334 $4,902
The primary mechanism state of arizona uses to fund its universities is an growth formula – if enrollment increases, your funding increases by a proportional amount.

The State of Arizona has experienced substantial population growth and more qualified students are choosing to attend ASU every year, resulting in an enormous demand for and growth in the university's enrollment – from 43,000 students in 1989 and 50,000 students in 2000 to 67,000 students today. Enrollment growth funding over the last 20 years has not kept pace with actual enrollment growth. So, most of the “new” money ASU has received in recent years is “catch-up” money, intended to bring Full-time Equivalent student funding back to previous levels.

Furthermore, the state has no regular capital construction or maintenance budget for its universities. Twice over the last six years ASU has gotten a special appropriation to build badly needed new buildings. These additions are in no way “excess funds” that the university can cut without there being drastic consequences.



Fiction: The budget proposals on the table are merely options so no one should be overly concerned about them.

Fact: No other options have been put on the table by the Legislature. Historically in Arizona, legislative budget options often become the actual budget. Even as a starting point, these cuts are so extreme that the ending point could still have dire consequences for ASU. So, there is cause for grave concern.



Fiction: ASU is unwilling to make cuts.

Fact: ASU has already taken more than $37 million in state funding cuts and prepared for further reductions by eliminating a total of 500 staff positions and 200 faculty associate positions. We have disestablished schools and merged academic departments while managing to preserve academic quality.

The university is prepared to take additional cuts but we must be clear about what needs to be done to reach the funding reductions laid out in the proposed legislative budget. These actions could include:

* Laying off thousands more employees.
* Having a massive furlough of all remaining employees for two weeks or longer.
* Increasing tuition and fees.
* Closing academic programs.
* Closing a campus or possibly two.



Fiction: These cuts are no more than short-term pruning or fat-cutting.

Fact: The intended or unintended consequences of these cuts would be to move ASU away from being a research university – which it became 50 years ago by vote of the people of Arizona – back to being a state college without graduate programs or research.

To read the January 25 Arizona Republic editorial supporting these facts, click here.

To watch the January 21 Horizon interview with the presidents of ASU, UA and NAU, click here.



Michael M. Crow
President
http://president.asu.edu
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