1 / 32

Budget Update March 5, 2010

Budget Update March 5, 2010. Today’s Presentation State of the State (FY 2012) Impact on Southern’s Budget Next Steps. *Presentation Prepared for the Appropriations Committee and the Finance, Revenue, and Bonding Committee by the Office of Policy and Management November 18, 2009.

tallis
Download Presentation

Budget Update March 5, 2010

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Budget UpdateMarch 5, 2010

  2. Today’s Presentation • State of the State (FY 2012) • Impact on Southern’s Budget • Next Steps

  3. *Presentation Prepared for the Appropriations Committee and the Finance, Revenue, and Bonding Committee by the Office of Policy and Management November 18, 2009

  4. Drivers for FY 2012 SUMMARY * • Based on the enacted budget, the state is projected to experience significant deficits at the end of FY2011-12, FY2012-13 and FY2013-14 that are unprecedented in our history. • The use of one-time revenues including federal ARRA dollars to support on-going programs and projects adds over $2.5 billion to these projected deficits. • The budget reserve fund balance will be exhausted during FY2011. • Debt service will continue to grow and consume a significant portion of the budget. • The state faces significant long-term obligations including debt, unfunded pension liabilities and unfunded post-employment retirement benefits that are estimated to exceed $61 billion in total. • Budgeted “below the line” savings targets may be difficult to achieve. • Stagnant economic conditions and low-growth revenue projections will continue to be the most significant challenges facing the State. • Presentation Prepared for the Appropriations Committee and the Finance, Revenue, and Bonding Committee by the Office of Policy and Management November 18, 2009

  5. PROJECTED DEFICITS FOR THE STATE OF CONNECTICUT FY 2012 $ 3.28 Billion FY 2013 $ 2.6 Billion

  6. What are the challenges to Southern’s financial situation in FY 2012 ?

  7. FY 2012 Challenges: • Declining Revenue State Appropriation as percentage of Southern’s E & G Budget:

  8. FY 2012 Challenges: • Increasing Expenses • 27th payroll $2,894,945 • Salary Increases 3,426,000 • Inflationary increases 549,585 • CSUS 2020 Public Safety 347,465 • No Furlough Days (3 Days) 750,000 TOTAL $7,967,995 • Deferred Payout, RIP TBD

  9. The CSUS Universities are to plan for a projected 5, 10, 15 and 20% reduction in their State Appropriation and how it may impact the institution.

  10. Is this just Southern? NO All of Higher Education

  11. State Appropriation reduced 20% or $14,241,311 also reduces other revenues • The $14,241,311 provides state support for 1,512 full time students. • If we reduce the number of students, our budget is reduced by over twice that amount.

  12. Total Impact of a 20% Reduction in Southern’s State Appropriation • 20% Reduction $14,241,311 • Loss of Tuition/UGF 10,647,492 • Loss of Auxiliary Revenue 4,670,860 • Total Impact $29,559,663

  13. Unacceptable

  14. There is no silver bullet. • There is no one fix. • The reality is that closing the gap will be with positions and programs.

  15. How do we make these decisions?

  16. Guiding Principles (March 2009) • Support and enhance the student academic experience • Support and enhance the student life experience on campus • Provide for sufficient qualified faculty and staff and an academically sound faculty/student ratio to support the teaching-learning mission of the university • Prevent lay-offs of full-time faculty and staff • Address budgetary gaps caused by vacancies (e.g., early or scheduled retirements) in a manner consistent with advancement of the USP • Maintain enrollment to reflect appropriate mix of students (11,800 and 12,300 students –distributed through retention, transfer students, part-time students and a growing graduate student population, with a maximum enrollment of 1,350 for full-time entering freshman) • Maintain a healthy (both physical and psychological) campus environment • Maintain appropriate student, faculty, and staff access to the campus and University services, such that student success and learning are not impinged • Ensure that University assets are safeguarded • Comply with all governing laws, policies and procedures set forth by governing bodies (Federal, State, NEASC, CSUS BOT) and accrediting bodies for academic programs/schools within the University

  17. Guiding Principles (March 2009) • Make budget decisions that are driven by facts, data, and reasonable projections without ignoring core values as identified in the USP • Do not eliminate a function that we think would have to be reinstated in the near future (2 years) • No use of reserves (balanced budget FY2010) • Reduce costs in areas that focus on one time expenditures and can be reinstated quickly when the economy changes (positively) • Establish alternative revenue streams • Before functions (resources, services, programs) are cut, alternative ways of meeting the needs those functions provide must be determined as expeditiously as possible • Support faculty and staff efforts to receive external grants • In dire budget crises where functions that advance the University Strategic Plan are adversely impacted by cost saving or revenue producing measures (e.g. increased student enrollment with decreased human resources to meet academic and support needs of those students), those functions will be given priority consideration for reallocation/allocation of resources when the economy changes positively • Continue support for our University’s academic and/or programmatic “unique strengths” • Maintain efforts to prepare students to meet the workforce needs of the Nation, and particularly the State of Connecticut

  18. These Principles give us guidance but do not solve (close) the gap.

  19. Next Steps

  20. The University Budget & Planning Committee will go through a budget exercise HOW?

  21. Building the University-wide budget from the bottom up. • A budget starting from zero and systematically adding in dollars to cover those services and costs that we are mandated to support.

  22. Where do we start? • Current contractual commitments (personnel, energy, debt service, etc.) • Required health and safety • What must all students have access to obtain a degree (classes, admission, registrar, financial aid, bursar, etc.) This would be our starting point and we would then build the budget by what we believe the students need using the guiding principles and strategic plan.

  23. The Budget & Planning Committee will extend an invitation to USPaAC to attend their next meeting on March 16, 2010. • The budget information developed by the budget exercise will be presented at a second Town Hall meeting. (Tentatively scheduled on April 30, 2010).

  24. Questions?

More Related