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United University Professions ‘Disappointed ‘By SUNY Campus Allocation Funding Plan - SUNY Leadership ‘Fails To Fairly Fund 19 Financially Distressed’ Campuses

Published Sunday, May 5, 2024
by UUP News
United University Professions ‘Disappointed ‘By SUNY Campus Allocation Funding Plan - SUNY Leadership ‘Fails To Fairly Fund 19 Financially Distressed’ Campuses

(ALBANY, NEW YORK) - United University Professions (UUP) President Frederick Kowal is disappointed by the State University of New York (SUNY) Board of Trustees’ decision to underfund 19 financially distressed campuses in its State aid allocation to the System’s State-operated Colleges and Universities.

For the second year in a row, the Trustees approved an allocation plan that sends the lion’s share of funding to the financially secure University Centers and doles out what’s left to the rest of the campuses - including those dealing with multi-million-dollar deficits.

Some of those campuses, like SUNY Potsdam and SUNY Fredonia, have announced program and Staff cuts to reduce deficits of $9 million and $17 million, respectively.

“Once again, SUNY leadership has been taken down the wrong road again by Chancellor John King Jr.,” said Kowal, who leads the Nation’s largest Higher Education Union. “By doing so, they continue to undermine the system they are supposed to lead.  The Chancellor and the Trustees have again refused to do the right thing by not allocating State funding to our campuses based on need.  It’s unconscionable and it ignores nearly two decades of SUNY underfunding under the (former) Cuomo Administration.”

While Kowal said the Trustees’ allocation plan will help the University Centers, they could have used those funds to wipe out a combined $146 million deficit at the 19 campuses, many of them located Upstate.

"Nearly ($300 million) in direct State aid to SUNY is in the enacted budget and can be used to make our financially strapped campuses whole,” Kowal said.

But the Trustees, following the Chancellor’s plan, chose not to do that.

“The deficits our nineteen campuses are dealing with are huge, and once again they aren’t getting enough,” Kowal said.

Most SUNY campuses have never recovered from massive Great Recession-era cuts to SUNY and more than a decade of austerity budgets under former Governor Andrew Cuomo.

Smaller campuses, such as Fredonia, Potsdam and Buffalo State, have been particularly impacted.

On April 29th, Kowal joined more than 200 Fredonia students, Faculty and community leaders at a rally to call on the Trustees to distribute direct state aid based on campus need.

To Continue Reading This Labor News Report, Go To: Press Release | UUP disappointed by SUNY campus allocation funding plan (uupinfo.org)

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