With few details of plan so far, ‘there are a lot of nervous people’
House lawmakers have begun slowing the pace of Gov. Chris Sununu’s proposal to consolidate the University System of New Hampshire and Community College System of New Hampshire.
Sununu set an aggressive timeline for completing the project.
House Bill 2, the companion to the budget, would establish by June the New Hampshire College and University System, governed by a single board of trustees. Its first task would be to hire a chancellor. By the close of this year, the unified board would recommend legislation to combine the two systems. And the consolidated system would be up and running by July 1, 2023.
“All the stars are lining up to get this done now,” the governor told the House Finance Committee on Feb. 26, when he introduced the proposal. “If you don’t do it now, if you stall, study and wait it ain’t never gonna happen and our systems are going to wither on the vine. We’re not going to be competitive.”
But after meeting with officials of the two systems, a House Finance Committee working group will recommend against proceeding as prescribed by House Bill 2.
“The
process needs to slow down,” said Rep. Rick Ladd, the Haverhill
Republican who chairs the House Education Committee. “We can’t say yes
or no,” he told the working group, which he said had raised more than 50
“questions and considerations” about the project.
Instead,
the working group will ask the Finance Committee to form a “council” or
“commission,” with a budget, to consider the threshold question of
whether a merger is the optimal means of addressing the challenges
facing the higher education systems.
Joe
Morone, chair of the University System of New Hampshire board of
trustees, says he foresees ‘a serious revenue crisis in higher
education,’ and that USNH and the community college system are in ‘a
uniquely weak position’ to face the changing market.
“It’s
ready, fire, aim rather than ready, aim, fire,” said Hopkinton Democrat
Mel Myler. “The aiming process needs to take some time, even in this
panic state we are in right now to get it right.” He was echoed by Dr.
Barbara Brittingham, recently retired president of the New England
Commission of Higher Education. Ladd suggested the Public Higher
Education Study Committee, established by statute, should also play a
part.
“I guess I expected that reaction from folks that aren’t really on the front lines,” Sununu
remarked at a March 18 press conference. He repeated that a merger will
create a “better product at the end of the day,” and said, “I’m very
confident that it will get done.”
‘School choice’ for higher ed
When he spoke to the House Finance Committee, Sununu said of his consolidation plan, “It’s not about saving money.”
But
a week later, Joe Morone, chair of the USNH board of trustees, in
expressing his support for the governor’s proposal, said in so many
words that it is about money, warning that higher education faces its
most severe challenge in decades.
The
boards of trustees of both USNH and CCSNH have endorsed the initiative.
At USNH, the trustees called it “visionary and timely.” Their
counterparts at CCSNH commended the “vision for flexible, seamless
pathways within and across the two systems.” But, with scant detail
about the plan yet to emerge, as Susan Huard, interim chancellor of
CCSNH, puts it, “there are lots of very nervous people.”
“It’s school choice for higher education,” Sununu said.
In
place of a baker’s dozen of institutions “competing against each
other,” he envisions a single public higher education system, integrated
at all levels, sustaining the unique and diverse missions of its member
institutions while offering students seamless access to most of its
resources.
“Allowing
students the ease of creating their own pathways to education will be
the defining characteristic of the modernized 21st century system,”
Sununu said. “It’s all about evolving our system so it doesn’t get
crushed. You have to evolve with the times and where the market is
going.”
Above all, the
market is shrinking as the number of high school graduates dwindles and
nowhere more rapidly than in the Northeast. Morone, retired president
and CEO of Albany International Corp., with extensive experience in
higher education,
said for the first time since World War II enrollment in higher
education is declining and will drop even more sharply beginning in
2025.
And, he added, a
growing share of the dwindling pool of students have greater financial
needs, which will weigh heavily on the finances of higher education.
“That
is half the problem,” Morone said, explaining the situation is
exacerbated by stiffening competition among colleges and universities
for the diminishing number of students.
He
pictured what he called “an all-out price war, an arms race,” as elite
schools, with financial aid as bait, poach top students from their
lesser counterparts, which in turn will prompt “cherry-picking all the
way down the food chain.”
Morone
said he foresees “a serious revenue crisis in higher education.” And,
he added, USNH and CCSNH are in “a uniquely weak position” to face this
changing market.
Significant challenges
According to the National Center for Education Statistics, during the past decade the
number of high school graduates in the state has declined by 15%, from
15,034 in 2010 to 12,790 in 2020 — a trend projected to continue as the
population ages. Among those enrolling in four-year institutions, about
half choose to leave the state.
Tuition
represents 78% of the university system’s revenue, the largest share
among public institutions in the nation, save for Vermont. USNH, Morone
said, charges the second-highest tuition and fees and receives the
lowest level of state support among public universities.
Likewise, at CCSNH, tuition accounts for half of the
system’s revenue, compared to the national average of a third. The
Community College Review reports the average tuition of more than
$11,000 is the second highest among community colleges.
“Neither system can raise tuition,” Morone said, stressing, “we have to reduce costs to lower tuition.”
“The
primary driver of tuition costs is the relatively low level of state
support per student,” said Catherine Provencher, interim chief
administrator and vice chancellor of finance at USNH.
“It’s too fast, too soon,” says Susan Huard, interim chancellor of CCSNH, of the proposed merger.
According
to data compiled by the State Higher Education Executive Officers
Association, in 2018 New Hampshire’s support per student of $2,871 was
the lowest among the 50 states.
And so was the 1.9% of tax and lottery revenue, the $94 per capita and
the $1.50 per $1,000 of personal income the state invested in higher
education.
Since 2017,
tuition and fee revenue at USNH has slipped from $329.5 million to
$302.3 million. Revenues from tuition and fees have also declined at
CCSNH, from $47.9 million in 2017 to $39.2 million in 2021.
USNH faces straitened financial conditions, which have been compounded by the pandemic.
Provencher
explained that, while swollen expenses and shrunken revenue from the
pandemic were somewhat offset by operational savings and federal funds,
the system was left with unrecovered costs of $46 million this year.
After projecting future revenues and costs and assuming flat state
funding at $88.5 million, the system is following a “road map,” to cut
costs by $70 million, or 9%, by the 2023 fiscal year.
“It
just catches us up to these trends by 2023. It doesn’t get us ahead of
them,” Morone interjected. “Then we can prepare for the waterfall. It’s
not going to be easy. It’s going to be very difficult and doing it
through crisis constantly.” He described the system as “relatively
overbuilt,” adding, “we’ve got too much cost spread out over too many
institutions.”
Morone
added: “Speaking for myself, I believe right now public higher education
in New Hampshire is not on a path to a sustainable, viable financial
future. I believe it’s on a path to a cliff.”
Experience
in other states indicates consolidating systems with distinct
characters and cultures, pursuing different missions and serving
discrete student populations poses significant challenges.
CCSNH
consists of seven colleges — New Hampshire Technical Institute
Manchester Community College, Nashua Community College, Great Bay
Community College, Lakes Region Community College, River Valley
Community College, White Mountains Community College — and five academic
centers. “We’re within a half-hour of everyone,” said Huard.
More
than 90% of CCSNH’s some 26,000 students are New Hampshire residents.
The system provides affordable education aimed at preparing students for
skilled and professional employment aligned with the needs and
opportunities presented by the economy. By contrast with USNH, just 22%
of community college students are aged between 16 and 20, while 38% are
between 21 and 25, and 40% 26 and older. Three-quarters are part-time
students and more than 85% are employed while enrolled.
CCSNH
offers more than 200 associate’s degree and certificate programs in the
humanities, business, health science, hospitality, industry,
manufacturing, education, social services and STEM. And the system
partners with local, national and international firms to offer training
programs tailored to specific trades and professions.
With
some 32,000 undergraduate and postgraduate students enrolled at six
institutions — UNH Durham, UNH Manchester, Plymouth State College, Keene
State College, Franklin Pierce Law School and Granite State College —
USNH is easily the largest higher education
institution in the state. It offers associate’s, bachelor’s, master’s
and doctoral degrees across the spectrum of arts and humanities, social
and physical sciences, business administration, engineering and more.
USNH
is also a research university, with more than $140 million annually in
projects supported by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, NASA, National Science Foundation and National
Institutes of Health.
Speaking
for CCSNH, Huard said the experience of consolidation in some 20 other
states suggests problems arise over community colleges.
“The
voice of the community colleges disappears,” she said, fearing CCSNH
would be “swallowed up” by USNH and its mission would suffer.
“There’s
a lot of good stuff going on in other states,” said Morone, conceding,
“there’s some stupid stuff.” He agreed “it’s a risk, but said CCSNH
would be well represented and protected by the governing board.
‘Short timeline’
Sununu
has set an aggressive timeline for completing the project. House Bill
2, the companion to the budget, would establish the New Hampshire
College and University System, governed by a single board of trustees,
by June, when its first task would be to hire a chancellor.
By
the close of this year, the unified board would recommend legislation
to combine the two systems. And the consolidated system would be up and
running by July 1, 2023.
“I’m
concerned about the idea of going into this without more of a road map
and with such a short timeline,” Huard said. “We appear in this
legislation to be starting at the end,” she added. “Why agree to a
merger before there is a plan? It’s too fast, too soon.”
On
the other hand, Morone urged lawmakers to make the commitment by
establishing the unified board, then providing it with resources to
undertake the planning and vesting it with the responsibility to develop
the road map. “Give the responsibility to the group that will own it,”
he said. “The governor’s got it right.”
When
he spoke to the House Finance Committee last month, Sununu said “all
the stars are lining up to get this done now. If you don’t do it now, if
you stall, study and wait it ain’t never gonna happen and our systems
are going to wither on the vine. We’re not going to be competitive.”
Meanwhile,
Sununu’s recommended budget for 2022-23 would reduce the combined
budgets of two systems by $17.6 million, from $295.6 million to $278
million. In 2023, the budget of the consolidated system would be $138
million.
According to a
report from the National Center for Higher Education Management
Systems, consolidation is “costly in terms of time and money,” while an
article in the Chronicle of Higher Education refers to the significant
initial investment required to merge information technology systems and
back-office procedures.
Provencher
said, “we’re not using current technology” and “we’ll have to have
everyone on the same platform. That will take money, that will take an
investment.”
When he spoke before the House Finance Committee, Morone urged “no budget cuts.”
“The best thing the state could do is give us a cushion,” he said.