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They are doing their bests! LOLDemocrats and unions. Maybe they can do for UConn what they did for Detroit.
They are doing their bests! LOLDemocrats and unions. Maybe they can do for UConn what they did for Detroit.
Sounds like its time to raise tuition 7%. Underfunded pensions (and generous pensions) are the legacy of coy leadership over the past 30 years regardless of political affiliation. I'm glad to see they are beginning to tackle the issue. The burden will likely be similar next year, so look for that tuition to rise. If we are going to give out generous benefits, it costs money.
Ok folks -
please find in this document, where a hit like this to UCONN - was unexpected?
please find reference in this document to athletic department revenue.
http://www.finance.uconn.edu/BOT/6.26.13/Slides.pdf
This is a non-issue for athletics.
Yes, because the quality of life is sooo much better in right-to-work states.Democrats and unions. Maybe they can do for UConn what they did for Detroit.
Democrats and unions. Maybe they can do for UConn what they did for Detroit.
Yes, because the quality of life is sooo much better in right-to-work states.
Lame.
The school owes its existence to socialism.
The Rent exists because of socialism, and don't tell me UTC donated the land, UTC feeds off of the Federal Government.
You must have hated the UCONN 200o project, all that spending of taxpayer money.
Extreme right wingers should root for a private school, like Syracuse.
You are so easily fooled
The $1 billion budget is not fungible.
The vast majority of it is dedicated. Look at research alone in the range of $200-300 million. Then the hospital. Put those together, and what do you have?
$10 million is a huge amount of money for a university like UConn.
The elimination of pensions has been one of the worst public policy debacles of the past 25 years. And it will ultimately have huge negative consequences. Oddly it grew out of a good idea, giving people without access to pensions an opportunity to save for retirement. The finacial meltdown demonstrated how difficult the impact could be, with people seeing IRAs and 401k's losing 40% of their value at times. Fortunately, that occurred before the baby boomers started retiring in droves. Something similar happens in the next decade and it will be disasterous.
Don't forget TN. I know two couples who have moved in the area midway between Knoxville and Nashville. It has become a big retirement area. Low taxes too.Say what you want about the south (right to work states), nobody retires and moves up north.
I grew up with a lot of people from CT who have moved to FL, TX, NC, GA, and SC. They love the quality of life and aren't ever moving back to CT.
CT is aging, has one of the worst brain drains in the country, and has a shrinking middle class due to the college grads leaving the state. When the largest employer in the state, is the state, you're doing it wrong.
The fact that there will be almost no 25 year with one firm employees in the future is why a pension has become a moot point for them. The new employee is conditioned to go for the highest bidder on a regular basis. There is more to that than just money. There no longer is any job security. Companies move work off-shore or hire off-shore contractors to staff the jobs here. No loyalty from the employer means none from the employee. Everyone goes for the short term bucks. It is a bad situation. Big time brain drains.Wrong and wrong. Having companies/governments bear all of the risk of pensions is why many are going out of business. The 401k benefits the employer by taking the risk off of their books. It benefits the employee because they are now free to take whatever job they want. 30 years ago employees were beholden to their employer or risk losing their pension. I can take my 401k to any company I want. Plus I have an asset that I can leave to my heirs. People need to take responsibility for themselves because the government isn't equipped to take care of everyone. Also anyone that saw their 401k drop 40% also saw it recover over the next two years or so.
Susan hired McKinsey a while back to come up with restructuring ideas. They came forth with a lot of good ones. But she and her deans did not execute. (intentional play on words) This is her first real black eye IMO and shows that she has not completely reined in the asylum yet.
not sure your point....all i am saying is this is just the beginning and its the right thing. push the burden back to the students.The article clearly states that the state shifted the burden to the schools.
fair point....lets see where everything stands in another ten years. the unfunded liabilities in many of the northern - union states is reaching that tipping point we have seen coming for a while now....when the obligation to fund past retirement and medical promises begins to truly drown and limit the ability of the government and present tax payer to meet current needs. I am cheering for CT and the north, but its going to be tough sledding. We've got smart people...but many continue to move elsewhere when they become job creators.Yes, because the quality of life is sooo much better in right-to-work states.
Right. My comment was really dealing with the idea that the state should move away from defined benefits pensions. While I agree that "everyone is doing it" i also think, and there is some research backing this up, that the move away from pensions to IRAs was a bad policy, and will have negative long term consequences. Whether the state should contribute to bad policy is a legitimate subject of debate.
As the old cliche goes, socialism is a great system until you run out of people to tax.fair point....lets see where everything stands in another ten years. the unfunded liabilities in many of the northern - union states is reaching that tipping point we have seen coming for a while now....when the obligation to fund past retirement and medical promises begins to truly drown and limit the ability of the government and present tax payer to meet current needs. I am cheering for CT and the north, but its going to be tough sledding. We've got smart people...but many continue to move elsewhere when they become job creators.
Right. My comment was really dealing with the idea that the state should move away from defined benefits pensions. While I agree that "everyone is doing it" i also think, and there is some research backing this up, that the move away from pensions to IRAs was a bad policy, and will have negative long term consequences. Whether the state should contribute to bad policy is a legitimate subject of debate.
not sure your point....all i am saying is this is just the beginning and its the right thing. push the burden back to the students.
Of course, why would they want to pay(get taxed) for services they no longer need like educating their kids? you gravitate to a warmer, less densly populated, lower tax, lower service state. Then it becomes the thing that was left behind.Say what you want about the south (right to work states), nobody retires and moves up north.
I grew up with a lot of people from CT who have moved to FL, TX, NC, GA, and SC. They love the quality of life and aren't ever moving back to CT.
CT is aging, has one of the worst brain drains in the country, and has a shrinking middle class due to the college grads leaving the state. When the largest employer in the state, is the state, you're doing it wrong.
Democrats and unions. Maybe they can do for UConn what they did for Detroit.
Absolutely they will, by employing people. Thank goodness. I wish I had the courage and energy to build a business and create employment, its not easy, most fail.I'm sure the Walton family and the Koch brothers will continue to do great things for working families.
Someone better call China quickly and tell them their economic system hasn't worked all these years.Yeah - but communism doesn't work, because people like to own things. -Frank Zappa