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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Eye On Olympia

In broad strokes, WSU officials lay out their plans if deep budget cuts become reality…

From tomorrow's paper:

Washington's two largest public universities painted a bleak picture Tuesday of looming budget cuts as the state grapples with a budget shortfall that lawmakers say could reach $8 billion.

State lawmakers won't finalize the budget for another two months, but state colleges and agencies have all been asked to show how they would deal with deep budget cuts.

The proposed cuts would mean “600 to 800 jobs, it's a 2-6 percent decline in enrollment...and it's 1-2 quarters of added time to degree,” University of Washington President Mark Emmert told lawmakers.

In Pullman, Washington State University officials are “doing our best to minimize the number of warm bodies that will lose their jobs,” Provost Warwick Bayly said. “But it is inevitable that there will be some.”

(Note: I included a TVW video of Bayly's entire testimony in this post. Click on the "continue reading" link below for more of this story and the embedded video.)

Under Gov. Gregoire's budget proposal, WSU would face a 12 percent cut in state funding. Boosting tuition by 7 percent – the current maximum – for the next two years would reduce that to just under 7 percent.

With Washington's revenues getting steadily worse, state lawmakers have asked both institutions to draw up plans for even higher cuts: 50 percent more than what Gregoire called for. Cutting that 18 percent would mean WSU would have to slash $93 million from its budget over the next two years.

Officials from both schools said they're not ready to name specific programs or services that definitely would be axed. But they sketched out the broad picture. At WSU, Bayly said, such cuts would reach deep – 41 percent -- into WSU's research and public service operations.

“We are trying to protect instruction to the extent that we can,” he said. Public services includes things like agricultural and natural resource outreach programs, nutritional services and small business development centers.

“They are all on the table and would in all likelihood be impacted by the reduction here,” Bayly said.

Also targeted in the plan: student services and administration. Student services includes things like recruiting, the registrar's office, tutors and admissions.

“Each and every one of those may suffer to some extent,” Bayly said.

Both Emmert and Bayly said they would like to hold tuition increases to 7 percent a year, although Emmert argued that tuition increases of even 14 percent would be preferable to the


likely alternative: students forced to stay in school longer to get into the courses they need.

“More people are hurting and money is harder to come by,” said Bayly. “We want to maintain enrollment to the extent that we can.” Even so, he said, WSU estimates that enrollment would drop by 1,000 to 1,500 students due to the cuts.

Sen. Ken Jacobsen, D-Seattle, repeatedly suggested that tuition at both schools is a bargain compared to many other colleges in the state.

Sen. Fred Jarrett, D-Mercer Island, told Bayly that he wanted WSU to use the current financial crisis to rethink the way WSU does business and pare back operations to a “stronger, leaner, more focused university.”

WSU's doing that, including eliminating 18 percent of courses, the provost replied. The school's trying to boost efficiency and identify programs that help the state's economy, he said.

“They're all very, very hard questions, because they're full of good people, and there's nothing that you can absolutely point your finger at and say `We don't need that,'” said Bayly. “They all contribute.”

“Those are hard questions,” replied Jarrett. “And one of the beauties of hard times is it forces you to deal with hard questions.”

Bayly said WSU considered furloughing workers for unpaid time off under Gregoire's 12 percent cut proposal. But under the Senate's 18 percent scenario, he said, “all it would be doing would be delaying the inevitable with regard to program elimination or layoffs.” A voluntary early retirement incentive, he said, would probably be better for the school's bottom line.

Sen. Paull Shin, D-Mukilteo, offered some sympathy.

“Let us endure, and hopefully beyond the cloud we will see the sunshine,” he said. “We feel for you.”

Here's the full video of Bayly's testimony. I left a little of Emmert's testimony at the beginning, because he succinctly summarizes the impacts on UW.




Short takes and breaking news from the Washington Legislature and the state capital.