State Rep. Patrick Connick
announced his intention to file a bill that would perform precisely that, four
years after legislative majorities probably could have accomplished, but
legislative supermajorities almost certainly would failed to engineer, the
same. Back then, both institutions still were reeling from the aftereffects of
the hurricane disasters of 2005, and SUNO had the additional distinction of
having the lowest degree completion rate in the country – but given that its
student body averaged a fog-a-mirror score of 15.5 on the American College Test
(the national average is around 21, with a minimum of 8), it’s a wonder any
student graduated from there.
Since then, matters have only gotten
worse. UNO changed systems after the merger attempt, which also would have given
Delgado Community College a formal link to the merged institution, but it
continued to lose enrollment, which now is almost half of what it was a decade
ago. SUNO got some brand spanking new infrastructure out of disaster recovery
dollars but the state’s move to get baccalaureate-and-above schools out of the
associates degree/certificate/remedial education businesses with a
strengthening of admission requirements flushed around a sixth of its
enrollment away, mostly full-time, first-time students.