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Thursday, June 10, 2010

Louisiana Senate panel backs tuition increase bill - Boston.com

Louisiana Senate panel backs tuition increase bill - Boston.com

Louisiana Senate panel backs tuition increase bill

By Melinda Deslatte
Associated Press Writer / June 10, 2010
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BATON ROUGE, La.—A proposal to let Louisiana's public colleges raise their tuition up to 10 percent a year received the unanimous backing Thursday of a Senate committee that loosened the restrictions contained in the bill and sped up the allowed increases.
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As the proposal received approval from the House, schools would only be allowed to raise tuition if they meet performance improvement benchmarks, like increasing admission standards, improving graduation rates and boosting efforts to get students into jobs. The tuition increases could have begun in the 2012-13 school year.
But the Senate Education Committee reworked the bill to allow the schools to get two years of tuition increase authority, beginning in the fall -- before they have to meet the lengthy list of performance benchmarks required under the measure.

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The Portland School Board is prepared to close Jefferson High, co-chair says | OregonLive.com

The Portland School Board is prepared to close Jefferson High, co-chair says | OregonLive.com

The Portland School Board is prepared to close Jefferson High, co-chair says

Published: Thursday, June 10, 2010, 5:42 PM Updated: Thursday, June 10, 2010, 6:56 PM
jeffersonhigh.june10.2010.JPGView full sizeFive members of the Portland School Board have lined up behind a plan to close Jefferson High School in North Portland.
A majority of the Portland School Board is prepared to vote to closeJefferson High School and scale back to just seven neighborhood high schools, board co-Chair Trudy Sargent announced this evening.

She indicated that board members Dilafruz Williams and Martin Gonzalez are prepared to join with the three board members who already had said they want to close two schools -- Jefferson and Marshall -- to provide a more robust array of courses and services at the seven high schools that would remain.

Superintendent Carole Smith unveiled an eight-school plan in April for reorganizing Portland Public Schools' high schools, recommending that only Marshall close.


"More schools means weaker programs," said board member Pam Knowles, who favors closing Jefferson and creating a districtwide college-oriented magnet program on the Jefferson campus in partnership with next-doorPortland Community College.

Tony Hopson, head of Self-Enhancement Inc. and one of the highest profile champions of Jefferson High, decried the development.

"Once again, the decision was made on the backs of black children. That's how it's been historically, and here it is again," he said. Jefferson is in the heart of Portland's historic African American neighborhoods and is the only majority-black high school in Oregon.

"This decision will probably ignite a very serious ethnic discussion across this city," Hopson said.

Rutgers University freezes employee salaries in anticipation of N.J. budget cuts | NJ.com

Rutgers University freezes employee salaries in anticipation of N.J. budget cuts | NJ.com

Rutgers University freezes employee salaries in anticipation of N.J. budget cuts

Published: Thursday, June 10, 2010, 8:13 PM Updated: Thursday, June 10, 2010, 8:46 PM
rutgers-state-university.JPG
Rutgers University will cancel scheduled pay raises and freeze the salaries of its 13,000 employees as it faces an "extreme fiscal crisis" brought on by state budget cuts, school officials said today.
The state university expects to save $30 million with the emergency across-the-board salary freeze on the New Brunswick, Newark and Camden campuses. But the surprise move — announced in a campus-wide e-mail — angered union officials who said they may go to court to force Rutgers to honor its contractual agreements.
"Our union colleagues are concerned," said Philip Furmanski, Rutgers’ executive vice president for academic affairs. "We are in a very, very difficult situation. One that is unprecedented."
New Jersey has been gradually reducing state funding to its public colleges and universities for more than a decade. This year, Gov. Chris Christie’s proposed budget calls for a 15 percent decrease in state aid to Rutgers.
The university needs to plug a nearly $96.6 million hole in its budget once the state funding cut, scheduled salary increases and other mandatory cost increases are added up, Furmanski said. By eliminating the employee salary increases, Rutgers may be able to avoid eliminating classes, laying off employees and other drastic measures. Campus officials said salary increases may be reinstated in the future if the budget picture improves.
Representatives from Rutgers’ dozen employee unions said they plan to meet with their lawyers to consider legal action to fight for their raises. Last year, many of the unions voluntarily signed agreements to defer their raises until this year to help keep the university out of the red.
"We’re outraged," said Adrienne Eaton, president of the Rutgers Council of the AAUP-AFT, the union that represents nearly 4,500 professors, teaching assistants, part-time lecturers and other employees.
"We entered into that (agreement) with good faith," said Eaton, a professor of labor studies and employment relations. "They understood that this coming year was going to be worse."
The plan calls for thousands of Rutgers employees who were scheduled to receive raises over the next few weeks will see their paychecks frozen. University officials said professors and members of the faculty — who already received a 2.75 percent deferred pay raise in January — were scheduled to receive another 2.75 percent raise on July 1.