With so many Illinois schools in the conference I thought I'd create one thread to be able to track what's going on and how it will impact our conference mates. For those unfamiliar with Illinois - it's broke. Schools are being but tens of millions of dollars, may end up closing, firing hundreds of employees, cutting programs, etc...
SIU announces 180 potential layoffs, broad cuts to programs, services
http://thesouthern.com/news/local/siu/a ... a98ad.html
CARBONDALE — Southern Illinois University will lose 180 faculty members and staffers and reduce or eliminate support for a bevy of programs and services if Gov. Bruce Rauner’s proposed 20 percent cut to public higher education holds muster in fiscal year 2017.
President Randy Dunn announced the potential cost reductions in an email to employees Wednesday afternoon.
In total, cuts to the Carbondale campus amount to $22.86 million. The SIU system would see $46.54 million in reductions and a total loss of 481 positions, not including student jobs and graduate assistantships.
In addition to the 180 layoffs, which amount to a $5.5 million savings, university officials also would:
• Eliminate academic programs and reduce the number of classes offered by 400. That decrease in options, administrators note, could increase the time it takes students to graduate
• Eliminate more than 300 student jobs, including on-campus jobs and assistantships for graduate students. The cuts comprise 7 percent of existing student employment opportunities
• Merge four colleges into two, eliminating two deans and support staffers in the process
• Cut men’s and women’s tennis
• Reduce hours at Morris Library, closing the building on Saturday and reducing journal acquisitions by 40 percent
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CARBONDALE — While working in a lab at Southern Illinois University this past summer, rumors…
• Reduce funding for counseling services, retention efforts and programs that benefit underserved populations
• Reduce state support of WSIU-TV to the tune of nearly $200,000
• Eliminate state funding for Touch of Nature, University Press, University Museum and the Center for Dewey Studies
• Reduce funding by nearly $900,000 for student research opportunities, including less support for 23 research centers and institutes
Administrators have not yet identified which employees specifically would be laid off. That will require a review of teaching loads for tenured and tenure-track faculty.
If lawmakers fail to pass an FY17 budget by Dec. 31, the university can expect $5.72 million in additional cuts, including elimination of all state support to the School of Law and to the vice chancellor for development and alumni relations.
One-third of the School of Law’s budget is derived from state support. Eliminating those funds from the vice chancellor’s office could result in the loss of 50 additional jobs. Administrators warned private support for SIU may wane if that office’s size is diminished.
This story will be updated.