AP: Colleges negotiating for ways to lessen budget cuts

http://www.thenewsstar.com/story/news/education/2015/01/23/colleges-negotiating-ways-lessen-budget-cuts/22238137/
BATON ROUGE 鈥 The threat of up to $380 million in budget cuts to Louisiana鈥檚 public colleges has higher education officials and lawmakers scrambling for ideas to stop the slashing, weighing everything from tax-break suspensions to new tuition and fee hikes.

College system leaders are suggesting a special legislative session might be needed to stop deep, damaging reductions from forcing widespread layoffs, jeopardizing worker-training programs and chasing potential students and faculty from campuses.

University of 亚洲自慰视频 President Sandra Woodley said the magnitude of cuts being considered by Gov. Bobby Jindal鈥檚 administration to balance next year鈥檚 budget, which has a $1.4 billion shortfall, could have 鈥渓ong-term catastrophic effects.鈥

鈥淵ou would have a ripple effect that goes well beyond higher education and into our economy,鈥 Woodley said Friday. 鈥淭his would cause irreversible damage to this state.鈥

The Jindal administration has suggested its budget proposal for the 2015-16 fiscal year that begins July 1 could have steep reductions for higher education. College leaders say the cut figures reach up to $380 million, which they say would strip 40 percent of their state financing.

The governor鈥檚 budget won鈥檛 be presented to lawmakers until Feb. 27, but negotiations have started between higher education leaders and legislators about ways to stop the cuts 鈥 or at least lessen them.

Asked to describe the implications of the proposed cuts, Southern University System President Ron Mason said in an email: 鈥淚f they come to pass, the Southern System as we know it could not survive such deep cuts. That鈥檚 pretty much it.鈥

LSU System President F. King Alexander said without changes, many of Louisiana鈥檚 colleges would be forced to declare 鈥渇inancial exigency,鈥 the equivalent of campus bankruptcy.

He said the LSU main campus in Baton Rouge would have to stop the hiring of more than 100 new faculty members and lay off another 200 鈥 for a school that ranks 46 out of the United States鈥 50 flagship universities on what it spends per student before any reductions.

College system leaders said unless a solution can be found quickly, the damage of simply discussing the cuts and preparing for them would be significant.

鈥淵ou think students are going to want to stick around and come here as we stumble our way through this and try to decide something in May?鈥 Alexander said.

The two-month regular legislative session begins April 13.

Senate President John Alario, R-Westwego, said he鈥檇 be interested in having a special session to consider ways to stop the cuts, 鈥渋f there was a plan prior to us going in.鈥

But so far, support hasn鈥檛 coalesced behind a package of ideas.

Some lawmakers are talking about raising cigarette taxes or scaling back tax breaks. But Jindal opposes anything that he considers a tax hike.

Lawmakers are looking for loopholes where they can generate new dollars but still let Jindal call the plans 鈥渞evenue neutral.鈥 They鈥檙e also talking about the temporary suspension of some tax breaks through a resolution that the governor couldn鈥檛 veto.

Monty Sullivan, president of the Louisiana Community and Technical College System, said his campuses can鈥檛 absorb the level of state financing cuts proposed without some additional revenue to help offset the slashing.

But tuition increases force up the cost of the state鈥檚 free-tuition program called TOPS. Alario said some lawmakers are talking about possibly raising other fees on college students instead.

鈥淭here are solutions to be found. It鈥檚 a matter of how much people can swallow,鈥 he said.