Home » UK president: Budget reductions pared back

UK president: Budget reductions pared back

Students at the University of Kentucky

LEXINGTON, Ky. (Nov. 5, 2012) — UK President Eli Capilouto announced Monday that he is paring back planned budget reductions for Fiscal Year 2013-2014 — the result of increased enrollment and tuition revenues as part of an outstanding first-year class.

However, the president quickly added that the University of Kentucky must more aggressively tackle retention and graduation rates, which have stalled, as both a “moral imperative in the fundamental mission we have to educate students and prepare them for lives of leadership, meaning and purpose, but also as a financial imperative in terms of this institution’s long-term stability and aspirations.”

“We are a first choice in Kentucky and the region for students — both undergraduate and graduate — and we are a first choice in terms of the cutting-edge research and profound service we provide,” Capilouto said during a campus-wide forum on the university’s budget Monday afternoon. “But our future — as the state’s flagship institution of higher education and an institution that offers the best in undergraduate and graduate education, research and service — depends upon our ability to aggressively move toward improving the retention and graduation rates of our students. That is our chief responsibility as an institution that has a profound promise to the state that we must honor.”

Specifically, Capilouto announced the following budget measures:

– A tentative budget cut for academic units planned for the next fiscal year — FY 2013-2014 — of 4.2 percent is being reduced to 2.1 percent. Academic colleges and units reduced budgets by 3.3 percent for this current fiscal year. An additional $8.3 million will be invested in academic units to further mitigate cuts. Interim Provost Tim Tracy will use a strategic initiatives pool to recognize effective efforts and performance in the university’s tri-fold mission of education, research and service.

– A tentative budget cut for administrative units of 6.4 percent for next fiscal year is being reduced to 5 percent. For this current year, administrative units had their budgets cut by 5 percent.

– Tuition revenues for FY 2013-2014 are projected to be about $11.9 million more than originally budgeted. UK had budgeted for a first-year class of about 4,500. More than 4,600 students are enrolled this fall, though, as part of the largest and most academically accomplished class in UK’s history. As expected, the first-year class contains more Kentuckians than previous years. But there is a higher percentage of out-of-state students in the class, who pay tuition at double the rate of Kentuckians.

– The budget for FY 2013-2014 will contain tuition increases of no more than 3 percent and a merit salary plan of 5 percent.

– The amount planned for the university’s debt service pool for critical infrastructure needs will be reduced by $5 million — from $7 million to $2 million for FY 2013-2014; $5 million was placed in the pool in the current year’s budget.

Capilouto said the modifications to the budget also are the result of feedback he’s received as part of an extensive budget process he outlined earlier this year. Thus far this school year, Capilouto has met with faculty and staff from more than half of UK’s 16 colleges, a process he will complete before the end of the fall semester.

The university president also has met with the university’s deans and academic chairs to discuss budget planning. And he has continued to meet regularly with small groups of faculty, students and staff and engaged in extensive dialogue with the University Senate and Senate Council. Academic colleges and units are scheduled to present budget plans to the Provost’s Office in November as a follow-up to meetings that occurred in September to make decisions about final reallocations.

“These decisions reflect a deliberative and collaborative process,” he said. “It’s the process we will continue to use over the next few months as we finalize a budget that reflects our values and that moves us forward as we seek to honor the Kentucky Promise for a new generation of students and for the commonwealth.”

Capilouto’s PowerPoint presentation made at the forum can been accessed here.