Indiana Universities Make Budget Pitches To Senate Lawmakers

By Brandon Smith, IPB News, and Stephanie Wiechmann, IPR News | Published on in Education, Government, Statewide News
Indiana University President Michael McRobbie testifies before the Senate Appropriations Committee. (Zach Herndon/WTIU)
Indiana University President Michael McRobbie testifies before the Senate Appropriations Committee. (Zach Herndon/WTIU)

Indiana’s public universities made their funding requests to Senate legislators Tuesday as that chamber’s budget hearings are underway.

The state’s Commission for Higher Education began the hearing by telling lawmakers the number of people completing degrees is up 15 percent over the last five years.

The university presidents emphasized that progress. Indiana University President Michael McRobbie says his institution’s online classes are a major factor.

“More than 30,000 IU students are enrolled in at least one online course … that’s about a third of the total student body of the university,” McRobbie says.

Purdue President Mitch Daniels used his pitch to emphasize his university’s continued push toward lowering the cost to students.

“Last year, I was very pleased when we saw that 58 percent of our graduates left with zero debt,” Daniels says.

Ball State President Geoff Mearns related that idea of value to the state as a whole.

“More than 70 percent of our graduates stay in the state of Indiana,” Mearns says.

The House version of the budget increases university funding less than the Commission for Higher Education recommends. The Senate budget draft will come out in the next few weeks.

Muncie Community Schools

Also during Ball State’s time in front of the Senate Committee, members asked Mearns about progress at Muncie Community Schools – after the state legislature authorized Ball State to run the public school district last year.

Mearns told senators that while the district was projected to lose 450 students to other districts and relocating this school year, it actually lost less than 50. He also highlighted the more than $3 million in private philanthropic funds Ball State raised from local donors to help run MCS.

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