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UM-Flint Chancellor Ruth Person urges Senate committee to reconsider
cuts to university program

 

by Beata Mostafavi | The Flint Journal 

Monday April 20, 2009, 2:34 PM

 

FLINT, Michigan -- It's challenging enough for students to go to college
in bad economic times, so let's not make it any harder -- that was
University of Michigan-Flint Chancellor Ruth Person's message to state
lawmakers.

 

Person testified before the Senate Appropriation Subcommittee on Higher
Education on Monday at UM-Flint, urging members to reconsider cutting a
program that funds transition, mentoring and other valuable services at
the university.

 

The state's proposed budget would eliminate funding for the
King-Chavez-Parks Initiative, which supports programs used by nearly 900
students at UM-Flint.

 

"In a state where we have far too many people who lack four-year
degrees, these programs are solutions to that problem," Person said. "I
urge you to consider the consequences of cutting this important
initiative."

 

The initiative sends nearly $400,000 to UM-Flint. It funds the
university's Bridges to Success program, which helps prepare students
from educationally or economically disadvantaged backgrounds for
college.

 

It also funds a transition program that helps ensure students at
community colleges make a smooth transfer to the university through
workshops and advising opportunities.

 

Person highlighted the university's success stories, such as record
enrollment, newly opened student housing and partnerships with the
community, that help Flint's revitalization efforts.

 

She said UM-Flint is designating $350,000 to help students affected by
the economy pay for school, leading freshman into the city through a new
first-year experience course and helping students do meaningful work on
alternative spring breaks.

 

Even during "an economic meltdown," there is hope for success, she said,
but higher education needs support.

 

"An investment in the University of Michigan-Flint and other public
universities in the state is an investment in more than a campus," she
said. "It is a commitment to a city, a region, a state and its citizens.
It means that we are competitive in the knowledge economy.

 

"That is why that even in these tough times, investments in our public
universities must continue."

 

State Sen. Bill Hardiman, R-Kentwood, said he appreciated UM-Flint's
investment in its students and community and wants to see it grow.

 

"I believe very strongly in what higher education can do. Its helped me
in my career," he said. "We have to make some tough decisions. It forces
us to prioritize ... we will do the best we can."

 

Committee members also were scheduled to hear testimony from officials
at Eastern Michigan University, Grand Valley State University, Michigan
State University Agricultural Experiment Station, Michigan State
University Cooperative Extension, American Association of University
Professors, and the Friends of Historic East Campus of Western Michigan
University.

 

 

Source:
http://www.mlive.com/news/flint/index.ssf/2009/04/umflint_chancellor_rut
h_person.html

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