“Now More than Ever” – This is the title of Montgomery County Community College’s 2012 Annual Report to the community. It is a title reflective of the growing importance of community colleges, across this country, in being part of the solution to addressing workforce development and educational attainment gaps that are holding back the Country’s economic recovery.
It is this “now more than ever” need for community colleges that makes Wednesday night’s recommendation by the County’s CFO to the Montgomery County Commissioners to cut the allocation to the College by 25% – $5.25 million – so stunning and so potentially devastating to our community and its future viability.
In 1964, when the College was founded, the Montgomery County Commissioners were among the first in the Commonwealth to see and invest in the potential of this new invention – community colleges. Those early Commissioners committed to funding the operating and capital needs of the local community college. And, as a result of nearly 50 years of consistent and stable investment, our College has grown to be among the best in our nation, a hub for County workforce development and culture and recreation, and graduating our community’s future entrepreneurs, technologists, first responders, dental hygienists, nurses, teachers, doctors, lawyers and legislators.
Over the past decade, the County’s operating share of our budget dropped from 30% to 25%. Student tuition now comprises 50% of our budget. Ten years ago, students shouldered 35.8% of our operating costs. The County’s announced cut will move their contribution to less than 20%, and student share will exceed 50%. The last time the County funded the College’s operating budget at this level was in 2002-2003, when we enrolled 9,000 fall credit students. Last fall, the College enrolled nearly15,000 credit students. County investment per student resident citizen has been cut nearly in half over the last decade.
County funding is essential to our community’s viability. It preserves affordable access for so many residents where Montgomery County Community College is afirst choice, a second choice, perhaps a last choice, to gain access, or perhaps to stay in our country’s middle class. It is no accident that 95% of our graduates live and work in this region. Our students are part of the fabric of our communities and they remain part of that fabric as alumni.
This is a devastating cut – a cut that the College will manage through a combination of cost reduction strategies, including program and service cuts and careful management of personnel costs. Unfortunately, a cut of this magnitude can’t be managed by cuts alone and will require an increase in tuition and fees. This increase could shut out financial access for residents who most need the College’s affordable programs. As one graduate noted in a recent speech to her fellow students, “One tank of gas can mean the difference between completing a degree or dropping out of college.”
OurBoard of Trustees is working to develop a final 2012-2013 budget that puts the preservation of student financial access as a first priority, while also ensuring that we are capable of fulfilling our core mission. Your voice is important in helping us to work with the County to ensure strong public support as we move forward.
Dr. Karen A. Stout, President of Montgomery County Community College
Montco
11:54 am on Friday, June 8, 2012
cut cut cut!!!
danny roturra
7:30 pm on Friday, June 8, 2012
karen's heartfelt diatribe is intended to pry more money from those of us that pay taxes. students paying tuition isn't a horror, it's the way things use to be prior to higher education being perceived as a right. want to go to school, work and save. if you can't or won't then i suppose you just won't go.
the alleged educational leaders and the institutions they represent have been raising tuition at a rate that far exceeds the rate of inflation for years. they have inflated the cost of textbooks to the point that they are on par with gold. moreover, the next semester the book is invariably obsolete and the new book costs even more. higher education has become the latest 'mandate'. meanwhile, the quality of education has declined and the debt incurred by students has skyrocketed.
if karen feels so strongly about this perhaps she and her liked minded collage of compatriots should fund it...
Michael
1:11 am on Wednesday, June 13, 2012
I don't think you've thought this through, danny, but let's do our best to examine your opinion, as if it really is informed. Here are *some* of the important points you've missed in your gut reaction: Community College Students pay taxes. They live and work in your community. Neither they nor the college set the price of textbooks and that's a meaningless distraction here anyway. Both in-county and out-of-county students who choose to attend the college are investing in the college and the county as much as the county is investing in them. Want your friends and neighbors to someday have the money to invest in local businesses, and to be good citizens? They won't be able to earn their way into an Ivy League School on minimum wage, but they can work through an affordable community college, and get the vocational or career training that allows them to pay it all back and then some. This penny wise and pound foolish carping from people like you has got to stop before it hurts our region more then it already has.
linda spreeman
5:47 pm on Monday, June 18, 2012
Percentages are great and all, but dollar-wise what does that increase the per credit hour tuition from and to? If a student truely is needy, and the cost of the Community College is beyond their financial possibility, then filling out the FAFSA may make them eligible for federal or other grant money. If they don't qualify, then the FAFSA opens doors to Federal Stafford Loans. All in all, the per credit hour tuition at Community Colleges is attractive, even with the increase. I also don't know if
Community Colleges offer scholarships for academic performance in High School, but if they do then that's another alternative for a prospective student. With the increase, it's probably still a great educational deal, and alternatives exist for paying if the student and/or his/her family lack the funds up front. <Linda Spreeman, King of Prussia>