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Education Desk: Colleges Already Feeling Budget Pinch

Courtesy of IBHE

Last anybody heard, Gov. Bruce Rauner wanted to cut higher education spending drastically, by more than 30 percent. But with the budget  stalled in the legislature, colleges have no idea how much money they’ll get.  

James Applegate, director of the Illinois Board of Higher Education, says this kind of chaos costs money.

“This is an extremely inefficient way to run a shop,” he says.

 

Take, for example, maintenance upgrades many campuses conduct during summers, when classrooms are empty.

“Basically, they were in the middle of doing this work. They stopped it — many of them as of June 30th — so these will now all cost more, in the long run, once you do that,” Applegate says. 

The budget quagmire has affected everything from the recruitment and retention of faculty to the Monetary Award Program, or MAP grants, for students.

“The MAP students are the first casualties of this budget impasse,” Applegate says. "And of course they’re the low-income students, the students that are the most vulnerable. Now some of our institutions, I know, plan to front the money for the students, in the hopes that they’ll eventually get paid. Not all of them can afford to do that.”

More than 125,000 students are eligible for MAP grants this year. 

After a long career in newspapers (Dallas Observer, The Dallas Morning News, Anchorage Daily News, Illinois Times), Dusty returned to school to get a master's degree in multimedia journalism. She began work as Education Desk reporter at NPR Illinois in September 2014.