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STATE SPENDING: Funding option floated

Rogers suggests counties aid community colleges

In his effort to save higher education from threatened budget cuts, Chancellor Jim Rogers has proposed raising taxes, tapping into the state's rainy day fund -- even diverting highway transportation funding to the university system.

None of those ideas has caught fire yet. So on Friday he brought forward a new idea: having cities and counties pay for a portion of their local community colleges.


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In another memo to Gov. Jim Gibbons on Friday that outlined what 8 percent budget cuts might do to the state's community colleges and state college, Rogers stated he will write to Nevada county commissioners and city leaders next week to solicit feedback on the idea.

"I'm doing a lot of fishing, and I'm hoping to catch some fish," he said Friday. Rogers said he doesn't have any details on the idea or how it might be implemented. He's just offering it up with all of his other ideas, which so far haven't been able to sway Gibbons away from cutting the higher education budget.

Having counties pay for their local community colleges isn't a new idea, but it could be an enormously complicated task.

It would require the complete overhaul of the Legislature's already complicated higher education funding formula, which could lead to more taxes.

And it could result in changing the scope and geographical areas of Nevada's six community colleges, some of which stretch beyond county and city lines.

Gibbons requested a list of possible budget cuts from most state agencies because of lower-than-expected tax revenues.

Should the higher education system cuts go through, they could hurt community college services statewide, according to college officials.

In an attachment to Rogers' memo, officials from Western Nevada College warned cutting its budget by 8 percent would force the closure of its Douglas County campus, its high-tech center in Carson City and four rural centers in Yerington, Hawthorne, Fernley and Lovelock.

And officials from the College of Southern Nevada said the college could be forced to close various "learning sites," many of which are on high school campuses.

Rogers said having local counties pay for their community colleges would benefit the colleges and their respective counties. Now, the Nevada Legislature funds all of the state's higher education system.

The notion is that community colleges, more so than universities, focus on community needs -- providing nursing and work force training -- and therefore should be funded by their communities instead of the entire state.

Other states, including Arizona, have adopted such funding structures.

The Maricopa County Community College system, with 10 campuses throughout the Phoenix area and roughly 200,000 students taking courses for credit, receives 43 percent of its funding through property taxes from county residents, according to college spokesman Tom Gariepy.

The rest of its funding comes from student tuition and fees, grants and other sources. Just 8 percent of its funding comes from the state.

"Fundamentally, our service area is for Maricopa County, so Maricopa County residents pay for it," Gariepy said.

But that structure could prove difficult and complicated to apply in Nevada, where some colleges cover massive geographical areas. WNC, for example, has sites in five counties and Carson City.

Rogers' idea was met with reluctance by some elected officials.

Washoe County Commission Chairman Robert Larkin said the chancellor should focus on pitching the idea to legislators instead of local officials because legislators are the ones who control the higher education budget.

"If the state Legislature wants to open that up as a dialogue point with local governments ... I think, speaking as an individual commissioner, I might be interested in that," Larkin said.

But he said the idea could create a problem by having residents taxed twice for college funding -- through state taxes and local taxes.

Clark County Commission Chairman Rory Reid didn't return calls seeking comment.

Assembly Speaker Barbara Buckley, D-Las Vegas, said she didn't have enough information to comment on the merits of the proposal, but said it would be a "complex undertaking," requiring coordination from multiple state and local boards and agencies.

Instead of that undertaking, the budget cuts could be avoided through some belt-tightening by the university system and by using the money in the state's rainy day fund, an idea that Rogers has trumpeted but Gibbons has turned down.

"I call it almost a no-brainer," she said. "I'm appalled it's not happening."

Contact reporter Lawrence Mower at lmower@reviewjournal.com or (702) 383-0440.

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Col. Tom wrote on December 08, 2007 06:37 PM:

Apparently Joe's and Todd's dreams of being completely ignorant have been realized.

By the way, you only need to press enter once, morons.


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Forget it Rogers wrote on December 08, 2007 04:34 PM: Rogers and Regents can forget about manipulating NSHE students while allowing CSN VPs to continue stealing from the state. Why don't they explain the Attorney General's raid of CSN campus? How much was lost to CSN VPs' thievery? The only truth you can find was from the CSN Richard Carpenter Watch Blog, yet it was blocked from the CSN campus computers.

http://www.richard-carpenter-watch.blogspot.com/


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Cronkite wrote on December 08, 2007 04:16 PM: Patte,

Thank you for the Chuck Muth observation. Muth BLASTED Senator Nolan last legislative seeion for having the termidity to require after school programs be paid for by the parents of the childern who participate. He simultaneously called all day kidnergarten "tax payer supported day care", obviously being oblivious to his call for after school "tax payer supported day care".

So for muth to be ctitizing these after school programs is, well, he is bizzare.


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Todd Kauffman wrote on December 08, 2007 03:04 PM: Col. Tom must be the product of Jim Rogers' NSHE. So sad.


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Joe wrote on December 08, 2007 01:32 PM: Peggy, don't worry about Col. Tom. He is a helpless nut job. He might mean totally opposite than what he wrote since he appears to have no understanding of English. We should ask RJ to limit posters to have at least 5th grade completed - the level that you were too polite to point out that he was below.

Good point on the corrupt politians. Keep your thoughts coming.


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Col. Tom wrote on December 08, 2007 11:59 AM:

Sure Peg. You are a laugh a minute. You missed the part about, "nor a very good formal education.".

Why don't you move to Mississippi where your dreams of ignorance can be fully realized. It is a state located in the Southeastern United States, ask your mom to point it out for you on a map.


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tim wrote on December 08, 2007 11:27 AM: i agree with patte, lose all the lame classes, if those are higher education classes,jokes on us. those classes must be what the atheletes use to keep their grades up.


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FamilyGuy wrote on December 08, 2007 11:23 AM: Patte, are those classes going to resolve the 8% budget cut being placed on our higher education system? Don't be a fool.

There is nothing wrong with recreation courses and human interest courses to ease the pressure of all the other harder courses that the students are taking, that encourage exercise and health and that makes the students a more rounded person. Also note, most of these courses have extra fees that make the students pay for the lessons or materials required. This is a very small expense to tax payers.

As this article mentions, an 8% budget cut would close down campuses and and stop building projects that allows our high education schools to expand with the increasing attendance. As a State who already shows little value for education, we can't afford to cut education anymore.


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Peggy wrote on December 08, 2007 11:19 AM: Do I even know you, Col. Tom?

"Suffer" from education? What do you mean?

Thanks for the laughs. I only have one PhD so I didn't "suffer" enough formal education. Well, since I enjoyed my education, I might never suffer from it. And it is not basket weaving, by the way. The "Educational Leadership" programs have produced the most detrimental leaders in higher education, but I don't know where Rogers' problems came from, he didn't even have that degree.

I couldn't start to guess Col. Tom's education level. But Col. Tom, when in doubt, please check a d-i-c-t-i-o-n-a-r-y to make sure the words you use mean what you think they mean.


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Col. Tom wrote on December 08, 2007 10:51 AM:

It appears that Peggy doesn't suffer from very much, nor a very good formal education. Which, when multiplied by all the children educated here, is a major problem facing Nevada now and in the future.

Nevada continues to race to the bottom.








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