(Wall Street Journal) � With the budget stalemate in Illinois in its 21st month, public universities in the state are going beyond belt-tightening to deal with a funding drought that has no end in sight.Campuses already have pressed pause on new construction and stopped hiring for vacant positions. Now, universities including Northeastern Illinois, Governors State and Southern Illinois are looking to fixes like hiking tuition, cutting academic programs or laying off student workers.
�We are in a crisis situation,� said Beth Purvis, the state�s education secretary. �The next set of cuts will affect outcomes for our postsecondary students.�
In fiscal 2015, the state appropriated $1.2 billion to public universities. Stopgap measures provided about 30% of that funding in fiscal 2016 and about half this year.
The state has also cut down on funding for a separate grant program that helps in-state students afford tuition. Last year, the state belatedly doled out about $320 million under the program, providing an average of $3,000 in aid to 107,000 students. That�s down from nearly $364 million in aid to 128,000 students the previous year. It hasn�t yet given any funds for the current academic year, and some schools have warned they can�t afford to keep fronting the money.
�Parents and students are beginning to lose confidence in public education in Illinois,� said Richard Helldobler, interim president at Northeastern Illinois, which has about 9,500 students. �You try to reassure them as best you can, all the while you�re down in Springfield saying, �Please, you�re starving us to death.� �
The Chicago school must cut $8.2 million to meet payroll through June. It will temporarily lay off 300 student workers during spring break and force about 1,100 employees to take a total of eight furlough days in an effort to save $2.8 million.
Amy Sticha, a biology major who works about 20 hours a week in a lab on campus, has been putting in applications at area bars and restaurants, and even at a bike tour company, in case her campus job falls through altogether.
�I have no idea if I will still have a job a month from now, and I�d like to have a backup,� said Ms. Sticha, who earns $10.50 an hour at the lab, which she says covers a big part of her rent and tuition.
Governors State, with about 3,900 students south of Chicago, said earlier this month that it would increase base tuition by 15% for the coming school year, to $9,390. It also is cutting 22 more academic programs, including undergraduate economics and a master�s in education, on top of 13 degree and certificate programs it eliminated in the past two years.
The school received about $18 million from the state in fiscal 2016 and fiscal 2017 combined, compared with $24 million in fiscal 2015 alone.
Citing the recent moves at Northeastern Illinois and Governors State, Moody�s Investors Service earlier this month warned that the budget impasse is harming the state�s public universities and community colleges. The ratings firm already classifies the debt of Governors State, Northeastern Illinois and other Illinois schools as �junk.�
Meanwhile, Eastern Illinois University has shed about a quarter of its employees, while Southern Illinois in recent months nominated for possible funding cuts its public broadcast center, a regional economic development office and counseling services. It also said it would eliminate its men�s and women�s tennis teams and trimmed scholarships for swimmers.
Chicago State University declared financial exigency last year in order to eliminate jobs quickly and remains in a fragile financial state after enrollment in the fall plummeted by 25% from a year earlier to 3,578�with just 86 freshmen. The school, which serves many adult students, has shrunk by more than half since 2010.