{"id":7682,"date":"2011-04-27T14:36:26","date_gmt":"2011-04-27T18:36:26","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/news\/article.php?ArticleID=7682"},"modified":"2021-08-02T09:57:36","modified_gmt":"2021-08-02T13:57:36","slug":"7682_president-s-address-to-the-university-community","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/president\/2011\/04\/27\/7682_president-s-address-to-the-university-community\/","title":{"rendered":"President’s Address to the University Community, 2011"},"content":{"rendered":"

It is with pleasure that I greet you on this April day and hope that you all feel, as do I, the wonderful, energizing gift of spring. Just when the burdens of the year were beginning to get us down, here comes the sun, the blooms, the green that says “Go!” and, today, the taking of a moment to eat some ice cream and to glance backwards over our shoulders and see behind us with some surprise and justifiable satisfaction the accomplishments of the year.<\/p>\n

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In addition to a re-born earth, April also always brings us the full-blown and rather less glorious commencement of the annual New Jersey budget battle, which, this year promises to provide drama that is heightened, even by this state\u2019s standards. The higher education budget proposed by Governor Christie and most likely to be adopted by the Legislature, although this cannot be certain at this time, carries this year\u2019s level of appropriation into next year, in other words, a flat budget.\u00a0 We will continue to push for additional funding as the budget moves through the legislative process, but after several years of painful cuts in operating support for state colleges and universities, a level budget could actually represent a first step in restoring at least some minimal adequacy to higher education funding in New Jersey.<\/p>\n

As you know, the senior public institutions in New Jersey are woefully underfunded. The proposed budget for the next fiscal year for the nine state college and universities, including 精品成人福利在线, provides operating support approximately equal to what it was in 1997, when the sector enrolled 28,000 fewer students. If we look at what has happened just over the last decade, in the 2001-2002 academic year, the state provided 精品成人福利在线 $4,500 in operating support per full-time equivalent student. In the proposed budget for the 2011-2012 academic year, operating support per FTE student will drop to about $2,500. When the effects of inflation are also included, the level of support is so low as not to be justifiable or reasonable by any standard.<\/p>\n

As in the past, the lack of state support for higher education will not deter the University from moving forward on its long-term strategic goals. From FY2001 through FY2011, the University\u2019s operating budget more than doubled, growing from $141 million to $316 million. This increase reflected enrollment growth, an increase in full-time faculty positions and academic programs, and enhancements to information technology, facilities, academic support services, and student housing.<\/p>\n

With level funding next year, we will continue to focus on using available resources as wisely and efficiently as possible and on generating additional revenue from non-state sources wherever feasible. To the greatest extent possible, we will observe the following principles:<\/p>\n