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House plan would bar thousands of students from UNC

Enrollment cap, larger classes and library and other cuts will affect N.C. students from every walk of life.

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Officials from the North Carolina Research Campus currently under construction in Kannapolis held a groundbreaking and "topping-off" ceremony Wednesday (4/18/07) at the site of two buildings on campus. Representatives from many of North Carolina's public colleges and David H. Murdock, owner of the Dole Food Company and Castle and Cooke, Inc. were on hand at the event. The North Carolina Research Campus will combine the research and training power of North Carolina's universities and community colleges with the intellectual capital and economic assets of private industry to create a one-stop shop for the development of biotechnology discoveries, processes and products with an emphasis on health and wellness. The first phase of the project should be finished by spring 2008. Pictured is Erskine Bowles (CQ), the president of the University of North Carolina system, speaking about the campus projects. JASON E. MICZEK - Special to the Observer


From University of North Carolina system President Erskine Bowles on the draft 2009-11 budget in the N.C. House:

We are extremely grateful that House members made the very difficult decision to recommend a modest revenue package to help balance the state budget and thereby lessen deep cuts to education and other critical state services. The revenue package added to the House budget Thursday would restore about $75 million of the cuts that had previously been assigned to the university in the first year of the biennium.

As a result, our proposed net funding reduction for 2009-10 under the House plan would drop from $338 million (11.2 percent) to $263 million (8.7 percent).

Across our 17 campuses, this partial restoration of funding would save 600 jobs and enable us to teach 1,300 more class sections, helping our students get the courses they need to graduate on time. This vital funding would be applied directly to the university's academic core.

At Appalachian State University, for example, these additional dollars would save about 40 jobs -- more than half of them faculty -- and restore 175 class sections. Western Carolina would save another 30 jobs in an economically distressed region of the state.

Elsewhere, N.C. Central University would save more than 20 faculty and staff jobs and 75 class sections; East Carolina University would save 75 jobs, including nursing faculty; and UNC Wilmington would save another 50 jobs and 120 course sections. Restored funds would also help soften the impact of budget cuts on critical academic and counseling services and campus safety.

While this revenue package is an important step in the right direction, we remain gravely concerned that the remaining $263 million of cuts proposed by the House would have a severe and lasting negative impact on student access and the quality of education our universities can offer our students.

This reduced cut is still greater than the current state appropriations of our six smallest campuses -- combined. If cuts of that magnitude are implemented, students on every UNC campus can still expect to see:

Larger classes;

Less student advising and counseling;

Higher student/faculty ratios;

Lower retention and graduation rates;

Delayed classroom upgrades and laboratory renovations;

Fewer security personnel;

Reductions in library services;

And reductions in maintenance.

The House budget also proposes to cap our 2010-11 enrollment at current levels, resulting in thousands of N.C. students from every walk of life being denied admission to a UNC campus.

Education is the key to North Carolina's economic recovery. We therefore ask and encourage our legislative leaders to consider all reasonable options for further increasing state revenues.

For The Record offers commentaries from various sources. The views are the writer's, and not necessarily those of the Observer editorial board.

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