UNC-system schools are losing more than just funding. They’re losing faculty members.
Administrators across the 16 campuses are submitting plans this week for implementing the 15.6 percent, or $414 million, cut in state funding.
The latest round of cuts adds to the loss of more than $600 million in state funding in the last four years. Most of those cuts were targeted at administrative positions — but those are now cut to the bone, forcing administrators to look to the academic side for cutting costs.
Administrators predicted the elimination of 2,000 positions — mostly from the academic side — earlier this year when discussing the impact of a 10 percent cut. The revised number based on the final 15.6 percent cut is yet to be determined.
Faculty retention poses a challenge as budget cuts continue to take a toll on universities, said N.C. State University Chancellor Randy Woodson.
“We’ve got a lot of outstanding faculty on our campuses that are into their fourth year without raises and are looking at the budgetary stability of our system and wondering whether it wouldn’t be better to be at a different university,” he said.
Other administrators also said they expect faculty attrition, especially since the system-wide fund for faculty recruitment and retention is unusable for the 2011-2012 academic year.
“That’s going to make it very difficult to counteroffer when other universities come recruiting our faculty away,” said David Perrin, provost and executive vice chancellor at UNC-Greensboro.
“Unfortunately, when you don’t have increases for faculty for this number of years, the only way they can increase their salary is to
move.”