Waquoit
Mr. Positive
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2011
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Has it?The state has cut funding
Has it?The state has cut funding
Can we have one thread about the Big East not turn Apocalyptic?
Rightly so, though. We're still adrift. I think it will go away if we get pulled in to the lifeboat.It appears the answer to this is "no". Every thread on the Boneyard about the Big East or UConn finances has to turn Apocalyptic.
From where it was. Yes.Has it?
Rightly so, though. We're still adrift. I think it will go away if we get pulled in to the lifeboat.
"What do the numbers say? According to the National Science Foundation, per student state support for higher education in Connecticut — when adjusted for inflation —decreased from $16,075 in 2001 to $12,344 by 2021. That is a decline of 23 percent."Has it?
We love our women’s teamWhat is your point?
We love our women’s team
almost as much as we love our men’s . However from zn objective business
prospective. Just pretend they‘re three different productd you produce.
X is a great product but in a market that’s limited
Y another great product with a larger market but also limited
Z is in the huge market however the quality of our product has restricted our potential market share
if I were a consulting firm hired by a company concerned with ROI , increasing the quality of Z would be a top priority.
X. Men’s basketball
Y. Women’s basketball
Z Footbzll
That doesn't mean the state cut funding."What do the numbers say? According to the National Science Foundation, per student state support for higher education in Connecticut — when adjusted for inflation —decreased from $16,075 in 2001 to $12,344 by 2021. That is a decline of 23 percent."
What's the cut off line in your view? Because if it's millions of dollars then we ought to terminate both men and women's basketball in addition to football.Even D3 schools lose money on sports, the Ivy leagues lose money.
So, to answer this question, there is a difference between losing a LOT of money and losing some money.
I answered the question you asked. If you don't like the answer, go yell at someone else.Wait, UConn has a revenue problem? Really? When did this happen?
Fun fact: EVERY REGULAR POSTER ON THIS BOARD GETS THAT UCONN HAS A REVENUE PROBLEM. Some of us just choose not to rain misery on every thread.
I thought the "cut" was merely not maintaining the subsidies that the state provided during Covid? Terminating subsidies which were designed to support the university during the pandemic isn't a cut.From where it was. Yes.
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UConn Put Onus on Academics as $70M Shortfall Leaves No Easy Answers
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So we should jeopardize our basketball team’s success by having our teams travel all over the country.. have to recruit players for a southern conference while we are a north east school.. and to top it off..play our conference championship in Kansas… for what?.. more money.. we might have the greatest men’s basketball team in the history of college basketball now.. why take the chance and throw it a way
The number I quoted is state funding. That's a cut in funding.That doesn't mean the state cut funding.
It's both. The state is both cutting funding and there is no more Covid relief.I thought the "cut" was merely not maintaining the subsidies that the state provided during Covid? Terminating subsidies which were designed to support the university during the pandemic isn't a cut.
Full disclosure though, I didn't click on the link I'm just working from memory, but I will later.
Let's not talk about UConn, because when your university is cutting $70m in academic courses & departments, you should be looking at everything.What's the cut off line in your view? Because if it's millions of dollars then we ought to terminate both men and women's basketball in addition to football.
Why? We lack their massive endowments and they lack our state subsidy. Seems like an apple to oranges comparison.$10-$15m is what I imagine Ivy Leagues lose on sports. So, that's what you should be shooting for.
OK so let's agree that not continuing to provide pandemic relief after the end of a pandemic isn't a cut.It's both. The state is both cutting funding and there is no more Covid relief.
I think we're losing the plot of the conversation here.Why? We lack their massive endowments and they lack our state subsidy. Seems like an apple to oranges comparison.
Yes, it is not.OK so let's agree that not continuing to provide pandemic relief after the end of a pandemic isn't a cut.
Regarding the remainder, are you saying that it is it not least level with pre-pandemic funding?
ctmirror.org
I think we did lose the plot of the conversation.I think we're losing the plot of the conversation here.
I was asked how much of a loss is reasonable. I only mentioned the Ivies because I knew what they lose.
You could cite the losses at any number of colleges of all stripes, endowments or not, and argue whether they are sustainable. The point is that the will to cut massive losses DOES NOT mean someone is advocating for the elimination of all losses.
Drop all sports and the Athletic Dept deficit disappears. It doesn’t if we go D3, though.MBB is helping put UConn in the red too. They lost 4 million in FY2023
If I remember correctly, state funding is up, but the COVID funding is going away. The COVID funding was not supposed to be used to increase spending on new positions, but to maintain spending or for one time things. Many town school districts took their COVID funding and increased spending and now they are "cutting" positions that were funded with the one time COVID boost. It is incredible when people were told the COVID spending was one time, but they increased permanent spending without thinking it through.It's both. The state is both cutting funding and there is no more Covid relief.
$13.8 million of which was money to Ollie. The deficit was $35 million this past year.Do you have a link to those figures?
The total net loss for the athletic department was well in excess of the $13 million you tribute to Football. I know for the 2022 budget the total deficit was approximately $53 million.
I mean, I guess you can have a deficit from your budgetary goals, but that's traditionally not how that term is used. Traditionally a deficit is an operational shortfall.This is why the school is reporting a 70m deficit from what they had planned.
I have to wonder why the author of the opinion piece randomly chose to compare 2010 to 2025. Was the 2010 block grant increase to cover specific needs? I don't know how useful those two data points are without seeing what the funding is every year and making comparisons. To data points randomly 15 years apart just seems to ripe for manipulation.In 2010, UConn received 235.5m from the state.
The proposal for 2025 was 219.6m from the state
Yep, and I feel like it was in the mid-40s prior to the Ollie payoff. So an improvement is definitely happening, whether or not it is enough, is a different question.$13.8 million of which was money to Ollie. The deficit was $35 million this past year.
I'm not making that last argument.I think we did lose the plot of the conversation.
After a poster suggested that we should cut football to "achieve solvency" I pointed out that men's in women's basketball lose money as well. You then posted to say there is a difference between a sport losing a little money and a lot of money and I asked Where is the point of between acceptable and unacceptable losses in your view.
Your reply was "$10-$15m is what I imagine Ivy Leagues lose on sports. So, that's what you should be shooting for." And I asked why should the Ivy League be the standard for us given that there are dramatic institutions between the endowment and sources of fund things for each institution.
So yeah we did get off-topic because the ivy league doesn't seem particularly relevant and you moved from a per sport analysis, I think, two an athletic department as a whole figure.
Again, if the notion is we can only support things that make a profit, then universities shouldn't offer athletics at all. Similarly states shouldn't subsidize universities at all because they're not making a profit on their own. That doesn't make sense, does it? That's usually a good indication of a red herring argument.
??I mean, I guess you can have a deficit from your budgetary goals, but that's traditionally not how that term is used. Traditionally a deficit is an operational shortfall.
I have to wonder why the author of the opinion piece randomly chose to compare 2010 to 2025. Was the 2010 block grant increase to cover specific needs? I don't know how useful those two data points are without seeing what the funding is every year and making comparisons. To data points randomly 15 years apart just seems to ripe for manipulation.