Campus Forum October 26, 2005
National Context 634 public 4yr universities in the country 1,546 private non-profit 4yr institutions 350 private for profit 4yr institutions 6,481,613 students at public 4yr’s 3,600,719 students at private 4yr’s University with largest enrollment? State with highest college attendance rate?
National Context 82.1% of all university students did volunteer work Average tuition? Public 4yr = $4,630 Average tuition? Private = $17,902 Rockefeller University = $7,226,611 endowment per student ! Harvard = $1,161,786 University of Michigan = $87,811 Northern Michigan University = $2,083
State of Michigan Higher Education Factoids 287,864 students enrolled in public 4 yr 207,812 students enrolled in public 2 yr 108,407 students enrolled in private 4yr 15.1% adults possess a BA $31,954 Per capita income $6,015 average tuition (not including 05 !) $5,858 at NMU or 2 nd most affordable
Student profile at NMU Likely to be and female (54%) Less likely to be from the U.P. (55% and declining) High School GPA: 3.0 ACT: 22 and rising Enroll for 13 credits, needs financial aid, works and will take yrs to graduate
Functional challenges ahead Diminishing state commitment Unfunded state mandates How to contain tuition increases How to contain costs to educate each student without compromising academic quality Resist increasing admission standards Increase federal, private and state grants Increase entrepreneurial activity of university
What’s the problem? Total amount of general fund dollars to higher education will not increase. This amount is $1.14B Throughout Michigan’s history, schools have not received the same amount of per student funding. NMU gets $5424 and the lowest campus gets around $3000 per FYES : This is the GAP
The Legislative Response Don’t count on getting more money from the legislature The issue is how to distribute the dollars to reduce the gap Formula funding is imminent: What should a formula do? Formulas offer a methodology that improves upon current practice
NMU’s Legislative Goal ‘06 Critique the “WIN” formula The WIN is based in 3 parts: base funding for enrollments, type of program and research productivity. The WIN is based in 3 parts: base funding for enrollments, type of program and research productivity. Are dental hygienists worth 4x more than K-12 teachers? What is a ‘fair’ formula that preserves the autonomy and uniqueness of each campus? What is a ‘fair’ formula that preserves the autonomy and uniqueness of each campus?
Establish a Formula for NMU Rural, Comprehensive, Masters I University U.P. per capita income, per family income, type of student, high school preparation, population density, our location
The Action Steps We have to continue to grow 1000 off campus students We need to be more entrepreneurial We need to develop more research capacity through grants and partnerships Contain tuition increases Contain costs
EMERGENCY RESPONSE NMU has developed a comprehensive approach for planning and responding to emergencies. Emergency Response Committee Planning group – meets to review and develop response procedures and guidelines Makes recommendations to President Emergency Guidelines Written procedures used in an emergency Emergency Response Team (ERT) Senior staff designated by the President, representing all areas of the University
Emergency Response Emergency planning is an ongoing process involving plan development, plan testing, evaluation and critiques. All NMU community members, but especially supervisors should be aware of NMU emergency policies and discuss with staff on an annual basis.
National Weather Service via WNMU-TV National Weather Service broadcasts now available on NMU Public TV – 13 via SAP (secondary audio program) channel Available 24/7 and includes continuous weather broadcasts, emergency alerts, and important safety information Made possible by grant from NOAA with support from Charter Communications
Energy Awareness NATURAL GAS COST FY 2004/2005$3,000,000 FY 2005/2006$4,500,000 (estimate) FY 2005/2006 $1,500,000 added cost FUTURE – UNIVERSITY IS INVESTIGATING a)Co-Generation. b)Burning various fuels to include woodchips, coal, natural gas, fuel oil woodchips, coal, natural gas, fuel oil
ENERGY CONSERVATION MEASURES Energy Management System. Thermal efficient windows. Installation of more efficient heating and cooling equipment. cooling equipment. New lighting systems. Turning lights off. Regulating temperatures of University buildings. buildings. Closing exhaust hoods. Wells for irrigation.