Are the cuts.....true cuts? or as politicians do it. Cut = A decrease in the annual increase
Are the cuts.....true cuts? or as politicians do it. Cut = A decrease in the annual increase
Politicians will never shutter a university in Louisiana. Nor will they merge, since the higher up the food chain, those folks tend to come out of the monster politics is. Most know the skeletons.
Not being an apologist for the State nor taking issue with anything written, however didn't TOPS funding and multiple tuition increases the past ten years offset quite a bit of these funding reductions? Taxpayers still footing the bills one way or the other.
Its been said on this forum before, but there needs to be serious reform efforts towards consolidation of administrative overhead in the statewide UL & LSU Systems. Finance, HR, VP's of this, that and the other, etc should be targets for cuts. Each campus operating in a silo is grossly inefficient considering today's technology. If the system won't reform itself and or the legislature won't push it, the governor will need to lead on forcing this issue as its doubtful UL & McNeese or latech/ULM/Grambling/NSU will suddenly collaborate on working together towards consolidating Admin overhead/functions for the greater good.
Yes, tuition increases have offset the cuts. But tuition increases also lead to enrollment declines which also means less revenue.
I’m personally not convinced that consolidating universities is an answer. Eliminating administrative redundancies might save money, but how does any university absorb another without spending hundreds of millions in new infrastructure to accommodate all the new students?
I dont think you're completely wrong on the matter, but I don't think it's as black and white as you may have painted it. There are many variables in this tale and I don't think we can just take it at face value. While I'm glad we had an Authement that was passionate about bulldogging (pardon the pun) his way to pushing the university to greater heights, I believe he was very myopic in his views on athletics. His agenda to push academics didn't mean he had to suppress athletics. And that is where a lot of disdain is leveled his way. It would have been one thing to push academics, and simply not care or do nothing for the betterment of our athletic program, but to go out of his way to suppress athletics is where I draw my ire from. So, while we can praise Dr A. for his immeasurable contributions to our academics, we can also credit him for why our athletics has suffered so bad to this day. His tenure, a dichotomy indeed, "the best of times, the worst of times"
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