By Joe Hadsall
jhadsall@joplinglobe.com
Belts will be tightened at Missouri Southern State University over the next fiscal year.
The Board of Governors will consider during its meeting today approving a $69 million budget that puts the university “in recovery mode,” said President Bruce Speck. The board will meet at 1 p.m. at Billingsly Student Center at MSSU.
Speck said no one’s job is on the line, but university departments will be asked to stick to their budgets and cut operating costs. The proposed amount is an increase over the current fiscal year’s budget of $64.4 million.
“We haven’t discussed cutting staff yet,” Speck said. “If there is a program we need to cut, then we will have to figure out what to do with the personnel.”
That proposal does not include pay raises for employees, said Terri Agee, senior vice president. The board will discuss whether to add salary increases, at a cost of about $300,000 for every 1 percent raise.
Already, the university has trimmed spending. A faculty dinner has been changed to a luncheon. Other traditional expenses, such as customized gifts for retirees and refreshments at graduation, have been replaced with cheaper alternatives.
The university is working to stop funding some scholarships, which account for about 25 percent of the budget, Speck said. He seeks to replace about $5 million in scholarships with private funding over the next few years. The first year’s goal is about $50,000.
The budget also calls for spending about $2.3 million to $2.9 million out of reserves, depending on what the board approves.
Board chairman Dwight Douglas said he would like to see the university get away from using reserves every year.
“The message to the university community is that we have to grow out of what is a deficit budget,” Douglas said. “We have to look at what areas we can trim. I hope this is the last year for deficit spending.”
About $24.6 million of the budget will come from the state, said Sen. Gary Nodler, R-Joplin. The amount includes a 7.2 percent increase in funding, the same increase that MSSU saw in the current fiscal year.
MSSU has received $13.5 million in additional funding over the past two years, in an attempt to make up for years of “historic underfunding,” Nodler said.
“Even with that extra funding, MSSU remains an underfunded institution,” he said.
New approach
The proposed budget, Speck said, is highlighted by what is not in it. The budget won’t have any deferred maintenance or numbers based on enrollment increases.
“The way we did the budget in the past didn’t reflect the actual things to take care of,” Speck said. “This year, our budgeting staff has given us real numbers. There’s not a lot of leeway.”
The budget assumes that enrollment will stay the same. In previous years, increases in enrollment were predicted.
University departments will held more accountable for staying in budget, Speck said.
“We can’t take the perspective of, ‘If we need it, we have to have it,’” he said. “That’s not going to fly. We all have to stay within budget.”
Many departments have gone over their budget allotments for the current fiscal year, Speck said. Those numbers were not available as of Wednesday, but Speck said part of the reason for the overages was increased gas prices.
Douglas said Speck’s attention to the university’s financial condition is one of the reasons he was hired early this year. During an interview, Speck was given a chance to ask questions of the board. The first thing Speck asked about, Douglas said, was the amount of overspending on the budget.
“He said the budget has a lot of parentheses that have to be dealt with,” Douglas said. “We knew about it, but him bringing it up on his own was important.”
Stadium money
State Sen. Gary Nodler, R-Joplin, said the Legislature is debating a bill that would allocate $2 million toward the construction of a locker room at Fred G. Hughes Stadium that also could be used as a storm shelter.
“There was some criticism of the bill on the House floor, and some good-natured ribbing in the Senate,” Nodler said. “But because of the recent tornadoes, storm shelters are no longer a laughing matter.”
Joplin Metro
MSSU in financial ‘recovery mode’
- Joplin Metro
-
-
Longtime Democrat dies at 81
Sapp, 81, died Thursday. Funeral services were Monday at the First Presbyterian Church of Joplin. A longtime Jasper County Democratic committeewoman and volunteer, Sapp for years was secretary to the county’s central committee.
-
Motivational speaker offers free marriage course
Presented by Mark Gungor, the course is being offered free to the community. The event is being held to aid in tornado relief.
-
District sends faculty, administrators on site visits
With the design phase of several buildings in Joplin Schools ending in May, the district has sent 66 administration, faculty, parents and community members on site visits to 22 schools and two technology company headquarters across the country.
-
Mural depicting Joplin High School dedicated
A four-paneled mural depicting the recent history of Joplin High School was dedicated at the Memorial 9th- and 10th-grade Center Tuesday morning. The mural will be moved to the new high school when it is completed in 2014.
-
Carl Junction chamber creating new committees
The Carl Junction Chamber of Commerce is kicking off three new committees this week with meetings scheduled Tuesday and Wednesday.
-
Body of missing Joplin man found
The body of a missing Joplin man was discovered this afternoon inside his home in the Royal Heights neighborhood of Joplin.
-
Wildcat Glades nature center receives $50,000 grant
The Wildcat Glades Conservation & Audubon Center has received a $50,000 TogetherGreen Innovation Grant, which is being provided through an alliance between the National Audubon Society and Toyota.
-
Joplin shooting victim’s name released
The Joplin Police Department today released the name of a woman fatally shot in her home early Thursday and acknowledged that the shooting was reported as a suicide attempt.
-
Barry Manilow to deliver donated instruments
Singer-songwriter Barry Manilow will visit Joplin next week to donate more than $300,000 in musical instruments to replace those lost during the May 22 tornado.
-
Extreme Makeover releases names of families
"Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" has released more details about the build in the 2400 block of Connor Avenue, including the names of the seven families. They are:
- More Joplin Metro Headlines
-







