Even as the announcement
serves as a scare tactic, the possibility that the Louisiana State University
System and perhaps others higher education systems or institutions in the state
could declare partial or entire financial exigency could pave the way to
helpful changes – or simply make the problem worse.
LSU System Pres. and LSU Chancellor
F. King Alexander announced that the system’s Baton Rouge campus was putting
together plans for financial exigency, a condition that allows an institution
greater latitude in making decisions about programs or personnel as a result of
adverse financial conditions. By way of example,
the LSU System receives such authorization from its Board of Supervisors for
any of the entire system, institutions within it, or academic units within an
institution, after an institution’s leader consults with the faculty and
petitions. This allows, for example, for a school to furlough, lay off, or even
terminate contracts with faculty members prior to these ending or in the case
of tenured individuals to bypass other for-cause requirements for their
discharge.
Of course, Alexander did not have
to tell the world that he had asked the institution to begin drawing up such plans,
so that served as a public relations move more than anything else (affirming
this primarily was a scare tactic by adding “We don't say that to scare
people”). He piled on with the imaginary terrors by stating “You'll never get
any more faculty” if declaring exigency and lamenting that, at budgeted levels
without changes in current revenue-raising capacity for the state of which the
Legislature is trying to alter, the taxpayer portion per LSU undergraduate student
would drop to $660.