The University system prepared to protect the academic core of its schools by eliminating and consolidating unnecessary programs, raising tuition to offset cuts, and discussing lobbying efforts to maintain federal funds for financial aid.
The system’s Board of Governors met Thursday to prepare for the expected cuts in state funding of up to $405 million. Although Gov. Bev Perdue announced Wednesday that the state might be expecting a $2.7 billion budget shortfall, $1 billion less than what state officials originally predicted, board members are continuing to prepare for the worst.
“It’s clear that the economy is moving in the right direction,” said UNC-system President Thomas Ross. “It sounds great, but 2.7’s still big.”
UNC system to cut 60 programs
The board will vote today on the fate of the 60 programs systemwide that administrators believe schools can do without.
Eliminating those programs is the system’s first major stab at the academic budget. In the last three years, most of the cuts have come from the administrative side.
At UNC-CH the Slavic languages department could see changes, possibly merging with the German department.
Alan Mabe, senior vice president for academic affairs for the UNC system, said cuts are being made based on a list of priority programs that campuses submitted.
Tuition hikes to be approved