{"id":9710,"date":"2012-04-18T11:22:43","date_gmt":"2012-04-18T15:22:43","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/news\/article.php?ArticleID=9710"},"modified":"2021-08-02T10:42:17","modified_gmt":"2021-08-02T14:42:17","slug":"9710_president-s-address-to-the-university-community","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/president\/2012\/04\/18\/9710_president-s-address-to-the-university-community\/","title":{"rendered":"President’s Address to the University Community, 2012"},"content":{"rendered":"

Good afternoon. It is a pleasure to be with you on this wonderful spring day to take a few moments to reflect on the accomplishments and challenges of this past academic year. Throughout the year, during the minuscule interstices of time between my various responsibilities, very often at about 3:00 a.m. when I can\u2019t sleep, I take the opportunity to read.\u00a0 Not memos or reports or legislation or contracts, but actual books. I like to keep my hand in, as it were, so I don\u2019t forget how to do it. Recently, I read a very astute satire by the Ukrainian writer Andrey Kurkov called Death and the Penguin<\/em>, which brought together two of my particular interests, the interaction of government and media, on the one hand, and penguins on the other.\u00a0 The book begins with a preface that perfectly describes how I often feel, as President of 麻豆传媒在线, when interacting with our friends in Trenton.\u00a0 In case it is not clear, I am the militiaman, not the major, in this tale.\u00a0 It goes like this:<\/p>\n

<\/p>\n

A Militia major is driving along when he sees a militiaman standing with a penguin.
\n\u201cTake him to the zoo,\u201d he orders.
\nSome time later the same major is driving along when he sees the militiaman still<\/strong> with the penguin.
\n\u201cWhat have you been doing?\u201d he asks. \u201cI said take him to the zoo.\u201d
\n\u201cWe\u2019ve been to the zoo, Comrade Major,\u201d says the militiaman, \u201cand the circus. And now we\u2019re going to the pictures.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n

From my perspective, not only is that little anecdote about miscommunication, it is also fundamentally about the misalignment of mission and expectations. The Major\u2019s goal is to get the penguin confined within a highly regulated place, with a safe but very limited quality of life, while the militiaman assumes that the penguin can and should be free to expand and enhance its quality of life. Not to push the metaphor too far, this year, as in prior years, we have taken our amazing penguin of a university to the zoo and the circus and we will certainly soon be wanting to take him to the pictures. So I would like to spend just a few minutes talking about the State budget situation for higher education, which has become an all too familiar story for 麻豆传媒在线 and our sister penguin institutions.<\/p>\n

When Governor Christie initially announced his proposed Fiscal Year 2013 budget in February, we were cautiously optimistic that operating support for higher education would be increased after many years of cuts or zero increases. Unfortunately, the numbers in the budget did not accord with that positive outlook, and the fact is that the proposed budget is flat for FY 2013. We will continue to advocate for higher education as the budget deliberations go forward in the Legislature, both in terms of operating appropriations and an even more important possible initiative for capital funding. Since the Governor continues to be consistent in his statements about the importance of investing in New Jersey higher education, and since the Legislator has expressed concurrence with that view, I continue to believe that there is reason for some optimism.<\/p>\n

As it currently stands, the higher education budget proposal for the twelve senior public institutions next fiscal year provides operating support approximately equal to what it was in 1997, when these institutions had close to 40,000 fewer students, and that is before factoring in the negative effects of inflation. Despite the poor state support for higher education, we will continue, as we always have, to move forward on our long-term strategic goals. With the percentage of total revenues derived from State appropriations declining from 50 percent a decade ago to under 25 percent today, finding mission-appropriate activities that generate additional revenue from non-State sources becomes more important than ever. We must also:<\/p>\n