Interim Chancellor Hansen Introduces 9% Budget Realignment Plan
SIUE Interim Chancellor Stephen Hansen today introduced a nine percent realignment spending plan for the remainder of fiscal 2016 during the annual chancellor’s address Tuesday, Oct. 13, in the Morris University Center Meridian Ballroom.
Approximately 500 faculty, staff, students and community representatives heard Hansen deliver a proactive approach to the budget issues hanging over the University system as the state of Illinois government remains in a budget stalemate.
“We cannot fiddle while Springfield burns,” Hansen said. “SIUE must not merely survive, it must thrive.”
Hansen enumerated the challenges that SIUE faces:
- Declining state appropriations to higher education
- Variety of financial issues that include uncertain cash flow from the state, an unfunded pension system and the cost of health insurance
- Decline in total number of high school graduates and increased competition for those prospective students
- Need for program quality and rigor
- Need for new and expanded programs to meet the demand of prospective students
Hansen then outlined the FY16 Budget Spending Plan. “This nine per cent realignment will address the potential state reduction, address unbudgeted obligations, follow the strategies of University Policy5A2, and remove uncertainty and free action,” he said.
A University congress will be convened in November that will be comprised of all institutional constituencies. It will be asked to consider:
- How can SIUE continue to grow enrollment while operating with fewer state resources?
- How do we determine SIUE academic program priorities?
- Is there a more effective way to manage the budget to reward units for growth?
- How can SIUE increase revenue to replace the loss of state appropriated dollars?
- How can SIUE revise the curriculum and the delivery of the curriculum to improve quality and efficiency?
Hansen’s theme for the presentation was a William Shakespeare quote from The Tempest, “We are such stuff as dreams are made on …” He urged everyone to continue working together to make SIUE an institution that only grows stronger and more effective in the future.