To get funding boost,
University of Minnesota
must prove its need, lawmaker says
- Sarah Lemagie
After weathering years of state funding cuts,
University of Minnesota leaders are asking the Legislature for a
significant bump in aid this year. To get it, they’ll have to do a
better job showing exactly where the money goes and how much previous
cuts have hurt, one key lawmaker told them Monday.
“The
University of Minnesota has apparently no problem, in the course of any
legislative session, showing us how successful it’s been,” said Rep. Gene Pelowski Jr.
(DFL-Winona), chair of the House Higher Education Finance and Policy
Committee. “…Where it appears to have great difficulty is showing us
where it’s had to make tough choices.”
Pelowski’s terse remarks came midway through the committee’s first meeting of the year, days after Gov. Mark Dayton
unveiled a two-year budget proposal that includes $80 million in new
funding for the university. At Pelowski’s request, several university
administrators appeared at Monday’s meeting to give the committee a
basic overview of the university and its budgeting process. That
presentation included a slide summarizing more than $228 million in
cost-cutting that the university has done since 2006, from staff layoffs
to reduced spending on equipment.
But
Pelowski made it clear that he wants a more detailed accounting of how
the university’s programs have been hurt, criticizing administrators for
what he says is a habit of illustrating that harm “in such a big
picture it’s hard to comprehend.”
“We’d be happy to provide much more detail, if
that’s what you would like,” replied Richard Pfutzenreuter, the
university’s chief financial officer.
House members also expressed concern about rising
tuition and student debt, both at the university and nationwide. In
return for its requested bump in state aid, the university has pledged
to freeze undergraduate tuition for Minnesota residents for the next two years.
Pelowski has said that the committee will also be
taking a close look this session at the university’s administrative
spending – a hot topic since a recent Wall Street Journal article
singled out the university for ballooning administrative costs.
Legislators have requested a report on the topic that that university
plans to complete by March 15.
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