
Faculty senators met June 5 on the HSC campus, where they were provided with a look at the proposed budget as presented by CFO Dan Durbin.
Durbin said the budget is meant to acclimate the Board of Trustees to the university鈥檚 priorities, but serves as a 鈥渟tatus quo placeholder鈥 this year, since we are on the verge of implementing a strategic plan. The two priorities are to be stable and predictable so we can start the work on that plan.
The proposed budget entails $23.8 million of costs, including a 2% salary increase. Durbin noted that this current year鈥檚 budget had $20 million of costs supported by one-time items, which is unsustainable.
鈥淭his budget is based on some assumptions, including the assumption that enrollment stays stable. If enrollment stays stable, we鈥檙e in good shape,鈥 Durbin said.
There are tuition and fee increases requested to fund some priorities. The proposed face-to-face tuition increase is 2.5% for undergraduates, while the online learning fees have been restructured to match the current per-hour rate plus a $50 tech fee.
鈥淲e have been careful not to price ourselves out of the market,鈥 Durbin said, showing a slide of our tuition, which remains lower than the University of Kentucky and Eastern Kentucky. Our proposed rates for the 2020 budget are also lower than UK鈥檚 proposed rates, including out-of-state, which is 2.5% at UofL compared to 6.2% at UK.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 think these fee increases place us at a competitive disadvantage,鈥 Durbin said.
Durbin also noted that 62% of all beds will cost less in 2020 versus 2019, so housing costs will also be lower.
He also discussed the foundation鈥檚 spending policy and how it is expected to impact the university. The foundation had to rein in some spending this year to ensure the endowment funds stayed intact and were positioned to grow.
鈥淲e looked at every line of the budget. We will have some pain this year, but in the longer term, we will be good,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e think of this year as a re-set,鈥 Durbin said. 鈥淚n our current state 鈥 with stable enrollment and adjustments and tuition and fees 鈥 we have a balanced budget.鈥
Durbin鈥檚 full presentation is .
President Neeli Bendapudi also provided an update for the senate, stating that she feels better about the budget than she did three months ago.
Still, administrators did recently discover the $20 million base budget covered by one-time dollars and had to make significant adjustments accordingly. One of those adjustments was in closing the Humana Gym. Doing this, Bendapudi said, saves UofL about $1 million a year.
Bendapudi apologized to the Faculty Senate for the way the administrators handled the decision-making and communication around the gym鈥檚 closing.
鈥淚 sincerely believe this decision was the right thing for the university. But we failed during the process. I will own that and I promise it will not happen again,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e learning. We鈥檒l do better.鈥
Bendapudi plans to host a retreat this summer with her senior leadership team to discuss a new rubric for these types of decisions, including who provides input, who approves and how to communicate.
Keith Sherman, executive director of the UofL Foundation, which owns the Humana Gym building, added there was no easy fix to this issue.
鈥淭he facility was well under water, so it became a question of how we stop the bleeding as quickly as possible,鈥 he said.
After going through each line of the budget, administrators have also discovered that the same dollars were promised to multiple deans.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 want this to happen again. We want a budget committee to be actively engaged and for every single person on our campus to be able to pull up our budget and understand it,鈥 Bendapudi said.
Bendapudi provided an update from the CPE, encouraging all faculty members to be mindful of our performance funding model.
鈥淭he best thing we can do is make sure our students succeed. It鈥檚 the morally, ethically and financially right thing to do,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hat we鈥檙e hoping is that no student graduates without an internship, co-op or student learning/experiential opportunity. That gives them the best chances.鈥
Bendapudi also briefly discussed the recent Passport deal, stating that she is confident it was the best outcome for the university and for the community. Because of non-disclosure agreements, she is still not able to talk much about the negotiations surrounding Jewish Hospital.聽She ended, however, by stating that she feels comfortable and confident.
Provost Beth Boehm also provided an update, noting that Vice Provost Mordean Taylor-Archer is retiring. Her areas include international and diversity. Diversity will be moved under the president鈥檚 office, and an聽open call for applications will be held for the diversity position with a short timeline.聽Boehm admitted that our culture needs to be improved so we stop losing faculty of color.
鈥淲e have to work on our environment so people don鈥檛 even look for jobs elsewhere,鈥 she said.
Meanwhile, the international office will be under the provost鈥檚 office.聽
Michael Mardis, dean of students, has agreed to take on the international office in the interim and will work to figure out what that office will look like moving forward.
. The next Faculty Senate meeting is July 3 in Chao Auditorium.


























