November 02, 2006
UA Regents Approve FY 08 Budget Request
For Immediate Release
Thursday, Nov. 2, 2006
The University of ÐÓ°ÉÔ°æ Board of Regents on Wednesday approved an operating budget
for the next fiscal year that would require $315 million from the state treasury,
about a third of the amount necessary to run the 15-campus system.» That amount does
not include extraordinarily high increases in the state-run retirement programs for
the coming year.
University generated revenue makes up the rest of the income stream, including federal
research grants, private donations and other funding sources.» The total operating
blueprint for the year, with all revenue sources combined, is $879 million.» That
compares to the current year's $774 million operating budget, which includes $282
million from the state.
"We asked many questions about this spending plan, and received thorough answers.
I think this is a good budget, a solid budget, and one that continues moving the university
forward, for the betterment of the state," said board chair Mary K. Hughes of Anchorage.»
"Many of our high-demand programs established in recent years were in direct response
to state needs. This budget keeps that effort on track."
The budget next goes to the governor for consideration and then the ÐÓ°ÉÔ°æ
Legislature.
The $315 million figure does not include increases necessary to cover the latest hefty
rate increase for retirement in the state-run Teachers Retirement Program, TRS, and
the Public Employee Retirement Program, PERS. Board members agreed with the UA administration
that extraordinarily steep increases in the TRS retirement ought to be paid directly
to the program, rather than pass through UA's budget first. That strategy, regents
agreed, would hold the university relatively harmless when seeking competitive federal
research grants. About 20 percent of UA's budget comes from federal research agencies.
In the past, retirement funding was included in UA's budget and then paid back into
the TRS program. With the ÐÓ°ÉÔ°æ Retirement Management Board's recent decision to
require a 54 percent employer contribution, however, the result to UA is an inflated
staff benefit ratio that could hurt the institution when competing for federal research
dollars.» The university already has seen its retirement costs double from FY 04 levels
prior to the ARM board's latest action.
UA's budget plan also provides for 5 percent program expansion, allowing for the continuation
of allied health offerings statewide, a dental hygiene program in Fairbanks, a doubling
of enrollment in the first year medical school partnership program (WWAMI), expansion
of the engineering program in Anchorage, and an investment in UA's competitive research.
In addition, regents approved seeking $332 million in state funding for capital needs
in the coming fiscal year.» The No. 1 priority, regents agreed, is $44 million for
facility and equipment renewal, renovation and code compliance statewide.» Second
on the list is $105 million for a new Biosciences Facility and West Ridge heating
capacity expansion at ÐÓ°ÉÔ°æ. The Biosciences facility would replace existing biology
teaching and research labs built prior to 1960.» The new facility, at 110,000 square
feet, would better serve those students and allow more hands-on research, regents
agreed.» Third on the capital list is $67 million toward deferred maintenance, renewal
and renovation across the system.
For a complete look at the Board of Regents' agenda, go to www.alaska.edu/bor.» Budget
documents can be found at www.alaska.edu/swbudget/.
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For more information, call Kate Ripley at 907/450-8102.