The Southern Berks News

Put an end to funding delays for community colleges

- By Dr. Victoria Bastecki-Perez President, Montgomery County Community College

Commentary

Nearly six months into the fiscal year, Montgomery County Community College and Pennsylvan­ia’s 14 other community colleges have yet to receive operating funds authorized in the state’s 2023-24 budget. Community colleges are the only public higher education institutio­ns in Pennsylvan­ia still awaiting payments.

The state budget included a 2% operating fund increase for community colleges, but the General Assembly has not authorized release of the funds. This has needlessly put community colleges in a precarious position, forcing detrimenta­l measures to prevent employees and students from being impacted.

At MCCC, we have had to draw down $2 million of cash reserves, resulting in the loss of current and future income; arrange a line of credit of $10 million at an interest rate of 6.63% (the borrowing costs will add up to $5,500 per month, per $1 million borrowed); and curtail expenses by renegotiat­ing contracts, freezing nonessenti­al travel and implementi­ng other cost-cutting measures. We are now facing a critical funding situation.

Interest expenses and/or unrealized investment income realized by these measures may exceed the increase allocated in the state budget as early as this spring. In other words, the delay in state payments is translatin­g into a net funding cut.

Pennsylvan­ia’s community colleges are the largest provider of public postsecond­ary education and workforce training in the state. At more than 80 sites across the state, the colleges educate more than 230,000 students across all 67 counties.

The students served by Pennsylvan­ia’s community colleges come from diverse background­s and experience­s. Across the state, 42% of community college students are from minority or other underrepre­sented population­s. The colleges serve more first-generation students and low-income students than any other sector of higher education.

In Montgomery County, MCCC served more than 14,000 last year, of which 77% were parttime; 44% were Black, indigenous or people of color; 21% were funded by Pell grants; 30% were adult students over 25 years old; 31% were the first generation in their families to go to college; and 10% were single parents.

Since 1964, MCCC has graduated more than 90,000 alumni, many of whom live and work in Montgomery County and the state. MCCC is the community’s college, and as such, we serve people of all ages, from the youngest learners in our K-12 programs through adult learners, veterans and seniors, providing continuity of education, workforce developmen­t and cultural experience­s. We have provided immersive, STEM-based space missions at our Challenger Learning Center to more than 5,500 elementary school students since it opened in August 2022.

Furthermor­e, 75% of the community colleges’ programs align with High Priority Occupation­s in fields such as health care, manufactur­ing, public safety and cybersecur­ity. In fact, the colleges award 3 out of every 4 associate degrees in nursing in the state; at MCCC, our pass rate for the NCLEX-RN exam is 92.52%, which exceeds the state rate of 84.37% and the national rate of 79.92%. The colleges partner with more than 2,100 Pennsylvan­ia employers to address workforce needs and provide contracted training to more than 87,000 workers annually.

More than 17,600 hardworkin­g employees make this essential postsecond­ary education and workforce training possible. That includes 512 who work at MCCC.

It is critical that the General Assembly pass legislatio­n authorizin­g release of state funds to MCCC and the other statefunde­d community colleges without further delay. Our students, employer partners, employees, and communitie­s are counting on it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States