Board of Trustees Tuition Planning Presentation FY17- FY20 October 28, 2015 UCUNN Agenda • • • • • Academic Quality Advancements Tuition is an Important Part of the University Budget Increasing Costs and Declining State Funding Measures to Mitigate Against Budget Gap Comparison of UConn Tuition to Peers and Competitors 2 Student Success by the Numbers • UConn is a Top 25 Public National University (19th) in U.S. News & World Report undergraduate ranking. • UConn’s outstanding Retention & Graduation Success has contributed to this recognition. • Among the 58 Public Research Universities, we rank:  14th in Freshmen Retention Rate at 93%  6th in Average Time to Degree at 4.2 years  15th in 6-year Graduate Rate at 83%  9th in 6-year Minority Graduation Rate at 82% 3 Outstanding Academic Success UConn has improved by leaps and bounds over the last few years, including reduced time to graduation and increased educational quality. UConn successes: • Hired 260 new faculty • Lowered student to faculty ratio from 18.3:1 to 16.8:1 • Increased number of class offerings by 33% • Reduced class size throughout general education and science courses UConn has made great strides and needs to continue moving forward 4 Tuition is 27% of Overall FY16 Operating Budget Expenses: $1,292.4M Revenues: $1,294.6M Research Other Fund Revenue 8% 2% Auxiliary Enterprise Revenue 17% Grants & Contracts 7% Debt Service / Projects 3% State Support 30% Tuition 27% Research Fund 8% Student Financial Aid 11% Utilities, Equipment, Food Service, Cleaning, Lab Supplies, etc. 18% Personnel 60% Fees 9% 5 Personnel Breakdown Expenses: $1,292.4M Debt Service / Projects 3% Research Fund 8% Student Financial Aid 11% Utilities, Equipment, Food Service, Cleaning, Lab Supplies, etc. 18% Personnel 60% Personnel Breakdown Faculty Professional Staff Police/Fire/Facilities/etc. Graduate Assistants Leadership Other (student labor, temps, etc.) 41% 33% 13% 5% 2% 6% 6 Some things tuition pays .3 .1: Professors 5 up- - 1 - . 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ESmaller Classes ?d?snrs Heat? 33? gLiu-ing Communities E_g .3 Teaching Assistants a Mentoring programs ang BaTeaehing Lahora_tories 5 I: HCampus Maintenance Eggs arsesStaff 55 3 Technology 3 g- 3 Cleaningu a? 3 E: Not a full list, for illustrative purposes only. 3 State Cuts to UConn Over last 8 years, UConn has been cut by approximately $82M: • $40M Rescissions • $19M Fringe Benefits Return • $23M Fund Balance Sweeps 8 State Support vs Mandated Salary/Fringe Increases Since FY13, growth in State funding has been $32.4M less than mandatory salary & fringe increases. $ Millions FY13 FY14 FY15 FY16 TOTAL $0.0 $17.0 $19.6 $23.8 $60.4 $11.2 $21.1 $2.7 $14.1 $49.1 $11.2 $38.1 $22.3 $37.9 $109.5 $6.1 $19.6 $20.2 $31.2 $77.1 ($5.1) ($18.5) ($2.1) ($6.7) ($32.4) Mandatory Increases Contractual Wage Increases Healthcare and Retirement Increases Total Mandatory Increases State Support Increase Funding Gap 9 Impact of Cuts UConn has done the following to balance the University budget as a result of State cuts: • • • • • • • • Workforce reductions Slowing down of faculty hiring Academic program elimination and reduction Fewer Library collections Reduced Library hours Consolidation of academic units Less maintenance of facilities A reduced amount of Financial Aid 10 FY17 Budget Projection • Current FY17 Projected Budget Gap is $40.2M • UConn is bracing for additional cuts in FY16 and a lower appropriation for FY17 due to recent State budget news 11 Going Forward Goal: Keep UConn great by protecting quality in the face of shortfalls in State funding, through generation of the necessary resources and encouraging efficiency and cost reductions. 12 Tools Used for Balancing the Budget UConn continuously uses the following tools to balance the budget: Revenue Options • Grow philanthropy • Increase enrollment • Offer more online and summer programs • Grow entrepreneurial programs • Increase Technology Commercialization & Business Incubation Expense Options • Reduce workforce through position elimination • Cut academic programs and departments • Streamline processes for cost reductions • Promote efficiencies • Slow down faculty hiring 13 Tuition Considerations As we consider tuition for FY17 – FY20, the University must balance the need for increased revenue by: • Ensuring a great education for students • Protecting the physical and mental health of our community • Promoting diversity – geographic, ethnic, socio-economic, etc. • Competitiveness • Accessibility and affordability for students and families 14 Cost of Attendance in FY16 Current FY16 rates for in-state and out-of-state students. In-State Tuition Mandatory Fees Subtotal Room & Board Direct Cost of Attendance Out-of-State $10,524 $32,066 2,842 2,842 $13,366 $34,908 12,174 12,174 $25,540 $47,082 Does not include costs for books, supplies, transportation, etc. 15 Financial Aid to Undergraduate Students UConn is committed to providing financial aid. Amount Awarded Number of Students Percent of Students $68.8M 10,600 46% $6.5M 2,393 10% Federal SEOG $0.75M 194 0.8% Federal Pell Grant $23.9M 5,684 25% Federal Perkins and Direct Stafford Loans $75.7M 11,166 49% Financial Aid from All Sources $336M 17,871 78% UConn Grant CT Governor’s Grant 16 Tuition and Fees for a Connecticut Resident vs. Competitors For Connecticut residents, UConn offers the best value Drexel University Boston College Boston University Fordham University Northeastern Quinnipiac University University of Vermont University of Delaware Penn State University of Maryland UMass University of Rhode Island UConn FY16 Published Rates $5,000 $48,756 $48,540 $48,436 $46,683 $46,154 $42,620 $39,130 $31,417 $31,346 $31,144 $30,504 $28,852 $13,366 $10,000 $15,000 $20,000 $25,000 $30,000 $35,000 $40,000 $45,000 $50,000 17 In-State Tuition and Fees Compared to Public Competitors In-state tuition and fee rates at competitor public flagship institutions Penn State $17,514 University of Vermont $16,738 University of Virginia $14,476 UMass $14,356 Rutgers $14,131 UConn $13,366 University of Delaware $12,520 University of Maryland $9,996 Stony Brook $8,858 University of North Carolina $5,000 $8,562 $7,500 $10,000 $12,500 $15,000 $17,500 18 Tuition and Fees for a Non-Connecticut Resident vs. Competitors For non-Connecticut residents, UConn is the second highest cost among public flagship institutions Drexel University Boston College Boston University Fordham University Northeastern Quinnipiac University University of Vermont UConn University of Delaware Penn State University of Maryland UMass University of Rhode Island FY16 Published Rates $5,000 $48,756 $48,540 $48,436 $46,683 $46,154 $42,620 $39,130 $34,908 $31,417 $31,346 $31,144 $30,504 $28,852 $10,000 $15,000 $20,000 $25,000 $30,000 $35,000 $40,000 $45,000 $50,000 19 Consequences of Inaction: What we want to avoid Possible consequences of inaction: • Drop in US News & World Report rankings • Closing of Regional Campuses • Increased class sizes • Fewer courses offered • Elimination of sports • Lack of police and fire personnel • Scarcity of mental health resources • Reduced maintenance of facilities • Less access for low-income students • Elimination of academic programs or departments • Less GA/TA support available 20 Next Steps • Due to State cuts and rising mandatory costs, UConn is projected to have a Budget Gap in FY17 • UConn will need to address the Budget Gap with multiple solutions, including cost reductions, efficiencies, and increased revenue or the University is in danger of losing the major gains that have been made with respect to academic quality, including faculty hiring, course offerings, and student success • Need to decide on tuition for FY17 – FY20 21