Academic Staff Assembly: monetary state cuts to UW unfair, too large
By Cheyenne Langkamp | Nov. 15, 2011The UW-Madison Academic Staff Assembly passed a resolution Monday calling recent budget cuts to the UW System too large.
The UW-Madison Academic Staff Assembly passed a resolution Monday calling recent budget cuts to the UW System too large.
UW-Madison representatives met Friday to discuss the future of the "Wisconsin Idea" as well as the relationships between the university and state and local communities.
UW-Madison faculty discussed ways to improve programs for first-year and transfer students at the annual First-Year Conference Friday.
When most of us think of astronomy, we imagine stars, planets and galaxies. But another integral component of astronomy is the study of enormous clouds of gas and space dust.
The UW-Madison Faculty Senate passed a resolution officially addressing recent budget cuts to the UW System Monday.
Police arrested 12 students and ejected 18 at Saturday’s Badger football game, some of the lowest numbers officials have seen all season.
Newly elected Associated Students of Madison representatives said they want to see more transparency within student government.
The Multicultural Student Coalition appealed the student government finance committee’s decision to deny them funding eligibility Thursday.
Representatives from student organizations across campus attended a rally Thursday planned by the Multicultural Student Coalition to protest the Student Services Finance Committee decision to deny the group’s funding.
College seniors who graduated from UW-Madison with debt in 2010 now owe an average $22,872 in student loans, a new study reports.
UW System President Kevin Reilly said the additional $65.7 million cuts in funding to the university from the state is disproportionate to total statewide cuts Friday. Administration officials announced Oct. 14 that they plan to cut $174.3 more in statewide funding over the next biennium because of a budget lapse. Cuts to the UW System make up 38 percent of the lapse. “The use of a lapse is not a surprise,” Reilly wrote in an editorial in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. “What is surprising, however, is the apparent reliance on the UW System to balance the state budget. Unfortunately, our students will suffer the unintended consequences of this approach.” Reilly said the timing of the lapse makes it difficult for the system to determine where to make the cuts. He said the system had already made budget allocations by the time the cuts were made mid-semester. “Students paid their tuition bills, came to campus and began working hard toward their college dreams,” Reilly said. “It’s our obligation to deliver a high-quality educational experience, but oversized funding cuts make it difficult to fulfill those promises.” In a letter to state Budget Director Brian Hayes sent last Wednesday, UW System Associate Vice President of Budget and Planning Freda Harris suggested the state lessen cuts to the UW System. Even if the state were to make Harris's recommended alterations to the lapse, the UW System would still absorb 11 percent of the $174 million cut. Reilly said UW System leaders are addressing the lapses by engaging in dialogues with state leaders and “reiterating the UW System’s role as an economic engine, and asking leaders to develop a fairer plan.” “There is still time to reconsider the methodology behind this midyear budget lapse and redress its inequities,” Reilly said. “By doing so, state leaders can send a message to all UW students and their families that higher education is a higher priority in Wisconsin.”