August 29, 2001 

Contact: Lesley Deaderick

                                                                                                                            (614) 292-0569

 

OSU trustees approve final FY 2002 budget

$4.6 million from tuition increase set aside for undergraduate enhancements  

COLUMBUS -- Almost $5 million in The Ohio State University’s tightest budget in years will directly support the undergraduate experience through initiatives ranging from strategically added classes and computer lab upgrades to development of new living-learning programs and support for a student union renovation.

The university Board of Trustees on Wednesday (8/29) gave final approval to the Fiscal Year 2002 budget that authorizes spending through June 2002. The budget includes detailed recommendations for the use of $4.6 million in revenue set aside for students, which represents 3.3 percent of the 9.3 percent resident undergraduate fee increase on the Columbus campus for the coming year.

That student support will increase despite a disappointing turn in state support for higher education, said Edward J. Ray, executive vice president and provost.

“We intend to continue to make progress with respect to services for students despite this unfortunate budget year,” Ray said. “As a consequence of the budget outcome, faculty and staff received a minimal pay increase this year, which is simply not acceptable. We are developing plans immediately to increase faculty and staff salaries to competitive positions with respect to our peer institutions over the next several years as our highest priority.”

It turns out that the FY 2002 budget represents a historic moment in both university and Ohio history: For the first time since Ohio State’s founding in 1870, the amount of tuition income from students will surpass state funding that supports students on the Columbus campus. State student support amounts to $342 million this year, compared to $351 million in student fee income. As recently as 1987, the state provided almost $2 for every dollar of student tuition, noted William J. Shkurti, senior vice president for business and finance.

“Because of the decisions the state has made, it is shifting a greater share of the burden of funding education to students and their families, and to our colleges and universities who must provide additional financial aid,” Shkurti said. “That creates more financial barriers to students trying to access higher education, which affects the competitiveness of the state’s work force and, consequently, the generation of taxes and other revenues that would benefit the state overall. It’s a symptom of the long-term decline in Ohio’s relative economic position, because Ohio is not investing enough in higher education for its citizens.”

In preparing the most difficult Ohio State budget in seven years, university administrators have projected spending a total of $792.9 million in continuing general funds on the Columbus campus, an increase of 4.7 percent over last year. However, the increase in the university’s budget is only 3.2 percent, exclusive of student financial aid. The figure includes instructional subsidy from the state of $322.9 million, or 1.6 percent more than last year – the smallest increase in the State Share of Instruction in nine years. The total university budget, which includes general funds, earnings operations and restricted funding, exceeds $2.3 billion, up from $2.1 billion last year.

Much of the anticipated budget increases were absorbed by a variety of expenditures, including a 30 percent increase in health care costs, the largest in a decade, as well as the largest increase in energy costs in two decades. When the university began pursuing a tuition increase above the traditional 6 percent cap almost a year ago, officials promised to use that funding to benefit undergraduates. The spending plan approved by trustees lives up to that pledge. Of the $4.6 million set aside from the tuition increase, $2 million is committed to financial aid to ensure that no qualified students are prevented from enrolling at Ohio State because of the additional financial need associated with the tuition increase. And officials noted that even with the 9.3 percent increase, Ohio State remains a good value, ranking sixth in resident undergraduate tuition among Big Ten public institutions.

As in previous years, recommendations for allocation of funds were developed in consultation with student government leaders. Ray advanced a list of recommendations to trustees for the remaining $2.6 million, as follows:

Ray emphasized that evaluation of these strategies will be conducted routinely to ensure that the university is living up to its agreements and to assess student satisfaction. Data will be used to support any program changes.

Other strategic investments planned in the FY 2002 budget with earmarked general funds include meeting previously determined obligations to support Academic Enrichment and Selective Investment programs and a one-time $10.4 million investment to address universitywide technology support needs. This technology funding will include a major upgrade to the human resources system that will enhance its Web-based features.

In addition, the President’s Strategic Reserve, established in 2001 to provide seed money supporting Academic Plan initiatives, is to be allocated as follows: $1.25 million in support of development of a medical informatics program; $713,000 in one-time funds for library acquisitions; $360,000 for graduate student diversity recruiting; $200,000 in support of the P-12 initiative; $150,000 for outreach and engagement; and a $25,000 share in support of universitywide initiatives designed to attract new outstanding faculty.

“The bottom line is that Ohio State will still be able to continue to make some progress in meeting its academic goals,” Shkurti said, “but we won’t make nearly as much progress as our competitors in other states as we would if we were in better shape budget-wise. And we must make real progress with respect to compensation increases over the next several years.”

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