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Education Desk: College Prezzes Describe 'Horrible, Perilous' Situation

John Avendano, president of Kankakee Community College, speaks while other higher education officials look on. They are (left to right) Larry Dietz, president of Illinois State University; Joseph McLean, former employee of Eastern Illinois University; Thomas Calhoun, president of Chicago State University; Catie Witt, president of EIU student body; Tim Killeen, president of the University of Illinois; and Jack Thomas, president of Western Illinois University.
Dusty Rhodes
/
NPR Illinois/Illinois Issues
John Avendano, president of Kankakee Community College, speaks while other higher education officials look on. They are (left to right) Larry Dietz, president of Illinois State University; Joseph McLean, former employee of Eastern Illinois University; Thomas Calhoun, president of Chicago State University; Catie Witt, president of EIU student body; Tim Killeen, president of the University of Illinois; and Jack Thomas, president of Western Illinois University.
John Avendano, president of Kankakee Community College, speaks while other higher education officials look on. They are (left to right) Larry Dietz, president of Illinois State University; Joseph McLean, former employee of Eastern Illinois University; Thomas Calhoun, president of Chicago State University; Catie Witt, president of EIU student body; Tim Killeen, president of the University of Illinois; and Jack Thomas, president of Western Illinois University.
Credit Dusty Rhodes / NPR Illinois/Illinois Issues
/
NPR Illinois/Illinois Issues
John Avendano, president of Kankakee Community College, speaks while other higher education officials look on. They are (left to right) Larry Dietz, president of Illinois State University; Joseph McLean, former employee of Eastern Illinois University; Thomas Calhoun, president of Chicago State University; Catie Witt, president of EIU student body; Tim Killeen, president of the University of Illinois; and Jack Thomas, president of Western Illinois University.

About a dozen college and university officials gathered at the capitol today to remind lawmakers of the desperate situation schools find themselves in. Most have gone for a year with less than a third of expected state funds. The coalition included presidents of institutions as enormous as the University of Illinois System and as small as the private liberal arts school Illinois College in Jacksonville, whose president warned that state funds need to come quickly.

Hear here."This is a horrible, perilous situation for both privates and publics, because we can go some of us for a little bit of time, but my message to the legislators and the governor is: Don't take us for granted."

Barbara Farley went on to say schools still need the money owed by the state for the soon to expire fiscal year plus a budget for the new year, which begins on Friday.  

For the past year, Illinois colleges and universities have gone without state funds, save for a stopgap measure approved a few months ago just as Chicago State University was threatening to close. But that amount was a fraction of what the state owed schools.

John Avendano, president of Kankakee Community College, described it this way:

"It resulted in 13 percent of our typical funding from the state. Normally $7 million; we received $915,000. That's like going through a desert, starving, thirsty for water, and just getting sprayed with mist, and just saying you should be happy you got that."

Lawmakers will return to the statehouse tomorrow to consider several stop-gap funding proposals. Gov. Bruce Rauner favors a plan that would give higher education institutions a total of $1 billion to keep them open through the fall.​

Copyright 2016 NPR Illinois | 91.9 UIS

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