Drowned out by all of the cheering
concerning a standstill higher education budget in Louisiana passed last month
was these dollars continue to flow in a way that props up an inefficient
delivery system, perpetuating waste of taxpayer dollars in a tight budgetary
environment that by law is becoming harder to justify.
The issue came to the
surface
at the latest Board of Regents meeting, where community colleges complained
that state money continues disproportionately to go to baccalaureate-and-above
schools, and to certain ones of those. The Board has a funding formula that
details how much of this money should go to institutions, based largely on
enrollment but also in recent years’ performance. But it also has a provision
called “stop-loss” that attenuates the impact of the formula the lower the
state subsidy goes, which means fewer dollars are subtracted than the formula
would indicate the lower enrollment goes for an institution.
This has been to the disadvantage
of community colleges because their enrollments have been growing. In essence,
because as a result the portion of money they receive through tuition and fees
continues to rise, this is used to supplant part of what they would get from
the state, which then is transferred to weaker four-year institutions that have
been losing students (ironically, those institutions have kvetched about
proceeds from tuition hikes substituting for reductions in taxpayer
subsidization). Generally speaking, with a shift to stronger entrance
requirements at senior institutions and continuing increases in tuition that
may price out some baccalaureate-and-above students and intended students, the
proportion of students attending junior institutions in Louisiana has been on the
climb over the past several years.
In 2009, 65.3 percent of
all students attended senior institutions in Louisiana, which by 2014 had fallen to
63.1 percent. At the same time, funding has weighed more heavily towards
institutions such as the Southern University System’s senior universities and
postgraduate school, which were down 13 percent in enrollment, and, with the
exception of the University of Louisiana-Lafayette and Louisiana Tech
University, the schools of the University of Louisiana System, down minus ULL
and Tech over 7 percent. In essence, community colleges have been subsidizing
the Southern system and all but the two most prominent UL schools.
They are growing discontent at
that, as was expressed at that meeting, and serves as another reminder of the
overbuilt nature of Louisiana higher education where it ranks ninth fewest in
population per institution (with every state below either significantly smaller
in population except for Georgia). That wouldn’t be so bad if it was because of
a larger community college headcount, but at 37.9 percent and
ranking 36th among the states, compared to a national average of 51.1
percent,
senior institutions are overweighed. This means for underclassmen instruction
higher costs than necessary are being paid just to place, in the words of Louisiana
Community and Technical College System President Monte Sullivan, “a priority on
keeping doors open at institutions, as opposed to serving students.”
The Regents need to address this
inequity because R.S. 17:3192.2 requires that
just after the new governor and Legislature are sworn in next year to report to
certain legislative committees a proposed outcomes-based formula for higher
education that distributes money in an “equitable” fashion, the criteria for
which has no room for stop-loss (although there is a provision mandating in formula
compilation funding maintenance in case of a “sudden” change in a school’s
fortunes). And given Louisiana’s relatively low level of competence of high
school graduates, who score near the bottom on
national standardized tests, senior institutions will have a more difficult time
in meeting the standards than if more students went first to community
colleges, where a premium is put on instruction of generally less capable
students that costs less.
This should mean one essential
thing to meet the goal of institutional success under the new formula: demoting
certain senior institutions to junior status to reap cost savings (and
combining others would complement this). To do so requires a long term plan,
and starting soon. Yet we’ve heard nothing from the Regents that would indicate
their willingness to take this step; they didn’t address any of the LCTCS
complaint at that meeting. Indeed, during this year’s legislative session there
only was talk about finding more money to keep doors open and offering a false
dichotomy of the sole alternative being the closing of some of these
institutions that would save little money in the near term.
A change in status of any
institution needs supermajority
legislative approval, and that will be a hard pull given the political
environment of legislators around the affected institutions that sees a
demotion as negative to their districts. Still, the Regents owe this kind of
plan as a corollary to the new formula, and if legislators refuse to go along
and institutions generally suffer on outcomes as the years go by, at least the
Regents did their constitutional duty and voters know who to blame and punish
in 2019.
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