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To: all employee
From: Chancellor Richard Wells <wellsr@uwosh.edu>
Subject: Joint Finance Committee actions
Cc:
Bcc:
Date: Thu, 02 Jun 2005 14:11:54 -0500
June 2,
TO: University Community
FROM: Richard H. Wells, Chancellor
Yesterday’s action by the legislature’s Joint Finance Committee to cut an
additional $40.3 million from the 2005-2007 UW System budget is disheartening.
As System President Kevin Reilly says, it will diminish our capacity to
provide the state more baccalaureate and graduate degree holders, more
high-paying jobs and a brighter economic future. It will hurt students,
faculty and staff.
Actually, it could have been even worse, if not for efforts by area
legislators such as Dean Kaufert, Carol Roessler and Gregg Underheim to thwart
a proposal that would have meant nearly $50 million in additional cuts.
And the budget process is not over yet. The Assembly and the Senate must both
vote on the budget, and then it must get the signature of the governor. We
must all work hard to try to soften the impact of the cuts that the governor
and the committee have proposed.
Whatever happens, we will proceed with our current campus budget plans for
fiscal year 2005. A final budget may not be approved until late summer. Any
additional budget cuts will be made largely in the second year of the
biennium, after we carefully analyze all of our options.
With signs of an improving state economy, I hope the governor and the
legislature will consider a budget repair bill during the biennium and restore
some funding to UW, which has suffered significantly more than its fair share
of state budget cuts since 2001.
Chancellor Richard H. Wells
Statement by UW System President Kevin Reilly on June 1 Joint Finance
Committee action on UW budget:
“This afternoon, the Legislature’s Joint Committee on Finance voted to cut
the University’s budget by $40.3 million in 2005-07, from the level proposed
by the Governor. This cut follows others of $50 million in 2001-2003,
$250 million in 2003-2005, and cuts and reallocations of $65 million required
in the Governor’s budget proposal for 2005-2007.
“This cascading series of harsh cuts seriously diminishes the university’s
capacity to deliver what we all know Wisconsin desperately needs more
baccalaureate and graduate degree holders; more high-paying jobs based on
university expertise, research, and spin-offs; and the resulting higher per
capita income.
“That’s why I’m troubled and puzzled by this set of reductions.
I’m sure students and their families are also trying hard to understand the
message the state has been sending. Do we want to increase access to
higher education in Wisconsin, or limit it by shrinking enrollments? Do
we want to continue to raise tuition to offset budget cuts, or hold down
tuition increases? Do we want to stoke the university’s powerful
research engine and strategically connect it to job creation and the
discoveries of the future? And once the state decides how to address these and
other issues, how do we get there?
“We should not continue to cut our academic programs and student services
blindly without answers to these and other critical public policy questions.
I heard Joint Finance Committee co-chairs (Dean) Kaufert and (Scott)
Fitzgerald talk during the committee’s deliberations about wanting to make
future reinvestments in the university, and the need for a stronger, more
frequent, more collaborative dialogue and partnership with the legislature and
the state to accomplish that. The Governor has made the same points.
“Under these circumstances, I am proposing that the Board of Regents and I
work with the Governor and Legislature to appoint a bipartisan Commission on
the Future of the UW System. This Commission should clarify what the state of
Wisconsin wants from its public university, and what its citizens are willing
to support. Without this clarification, I believe Wisconsin will slip into the
backwaters of the 21st century knowledge
economy. With this clarification and the targeted reinvestment it will drive,
we can marshal the resources of the university to promote the economic
security and quality of life of all our residents.
“We will continue to work with the legislature and the governor to try to
make sure that the final 2005-07 UW budget is in the best interest of students
and the state’s future. In the meantime, I ask the legislature and
Governor Doyle to join us in supporting creation of a commission that will
engage the state in a candid, meaningful discussion about the future of this
great university that preceding generations of Wisconsinites struggled so hard
to build. Those earlier generations, and our kids and grandkids, deserve
no less.”
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