Thursday, November 19, 2009

All Eyes on Pittsburgh

A most recent article on Inside Higher Ed has me concerned. Now, I'm all for working within the city limits of a mayor willing to temporarily change his name for a Steelers/Ravens game, but going after higher education makes me sick. I absolutely despise that education is the first to go when it comes to trying to balance a budget. I will be interested to see how this all plays out in the next few months, especially considering job applications will start soon.

Here's the article:

Pittsburgh mayor Luke Ravenstahl, just seven years out of college, is igniting ire with his plan to levy a 1 percent tax on tuition collected by the city’s 10 nonprofit colleges and universities.

Introduced as part of Ravenstahl’s 2010 budget less than a week after he won reelection on Nov. 3, the so-called “Fair Share Tax” would raise $16.2 million in annual revenue for the city, his estimates claim. “We value Pittsburgh’s nonprofit community,” he said as he announced the tax. “They are our major employers, and a big part of why our economy continues to be strong. However, we can no longer afford to provide city services to those who are not paying their fair share.”

Students would have to pay between $27 and $409 annually, depending on tuition, to their colleges and universities, which would then remit the money to the city. Students at the Community College of Allegheny County would pay the least and students at Carnegie Mellon University would pay the most.

The state-appointed Pittsburgh Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority -- which counts four university-affiliated panelists among its five members -- rejected the budget Tuesday on the grounds that it violates Pennsylvania tax law, but the mayor vows to fight on. Because the panel's decision hinged on the fact that it had never been approved by a city or state legislative body, the mayor is now pursuing the next logical move -- convincing the City Council to approve the tax. "I’m going to continue to fight for the residents, continue to fight for what’s fair,” he said Wednesday.

But to the administrators and students at Pittsburgh’s institutions of higher education, the proposal is anything but fair. “We’re opposing the principle of taxing tuition,” said Mary Hines, president of the Pittsburgh Council on Higher Education (PCHE), which represents the city’s 10 nonprofit accredited colleges and universities. “It’s the mayor’s attempt to try to tax us to make up for our property tax-exempt status."

Pittsburgh would direct $15.2 million of the projected tuition tax revenue to its ailing pension fund and the remaining $1 million to its library system to keep branches open. Hines said she finds it “convenient” that the projected revenues fit so squarely with what would otherwise be the city’s budget deficit, especially since PCHE has “no idea what model the mayor used to come up with the $16 million estimate.”

The editorial boards of the student newspapers at the University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon have blasted the proposal, arguing that students do pay plenty of taxes to the city. The added cost “could prevent prospective students from coming to Carnegie Mellon and Pittsburgh would be missing out on some of the best talent from around the world,” read a staff editorial published Monday in The Tartan.

Ravenstahl’s press secretary, Joanna Doven, said the mayor is “a huge proponent of higher education and firmly believes that this 1 percent tax on tuition is not going to change a student’s mind” about enrolling in a college or university there. The University of Pittsburgh, she said, plans a 4 percent tuition hike next year. “A 1 percent tuition tax … is a small fraction of what that increase is going to be.”

Hines said the mayor was missing the fact that most students “are not paying the sticker price” and that tuition increases aren’t haphazard.

First in the Nation

A tuition tax in Pittsburgh would likely be the first in the nation, and much attention is focused on western Pennsylvania.

“As far as our research shows, there is no other city in the country that is taxing students’ tuition,” Hines said. Since Ravenstahl announced his proposal, “we’ve heard an outcry from institutions across the nation. We’re very sensitive to the fact that a lot of people out there are looking to us, to see what happens here in terms of what it could mean for them.”

Kim Griffo, director of the Clemson University-based International Town and Gown Association, said her group is watching carefully. “This is a hot topic across the country” that is “quietly brewing in university and college towns,” she said. “All eyes are on Pittsburgh to see how they handle this and whether it works.”

Other cities are trying to find some way of generating tax revenue from the thousands of students who study there each year. Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino launched a task force in January to standardize and increase voluntary payments coming from the city’s colleges and universities, as well as its hospitals. David N. Cicilline, mayor of Providence, Rhode Island, this spring proposed a $150 per semester tax on students at the city’s four private colleges.

The Association of American Universities (AAU) first warned its 62 member institutions of the coming wave of municipalities looking to tax higher education about 18 months ago, said M. Matthew Owens, an associate vice president for federal relations. “States and localities look to universities as a revenue source in tough times,” he said. “The greater the pain gets, the more likely the momentum.”

Robert M. Berdahl, AAU’s president and former chancellor of the University of California at Berkeley, said Pittsburgh’s colleges and universities are facing a “perennial problem” of town-gown relations, where cities and towns search to find new ways of extracting revenue from the institutions that call them home. While he led Berkeley, he said, the city did “all kinds of studies” to try to find new sources of income from the university.

What Colleges Do Contribute

Beyond the challenges that municipalities face in trying to skirt tax-exempt status is the fact that many institutions do indeed make substantial contributions to their hometowns.
Colleges and universities, Berdahl said, don’t try to be free riders in their communities. Many “do contribute offset money for things like fire, police, sewage and so on …. They try to calculate their fair shares.”

In Pittsburgh, PCHE’s Hines said, the 10 colleges and universities pay $23 million annually in taxes to the city for payroll, parking, business privileges and any real estate not directly related to their educational missions.

Some also make voluntary contributions to the city’s public service fund, she said, although “fewer organizations are participating” than have in the past. The University of Pittsburgh Medical Center system has redirected a $10 million annual contribution from the fund to Pittsburgh Promise, a program created by Ravenstahl to fund college costs for the city’s top high school graduates. Others have backed out “for financial reasons, some for philosophical reasons.”

On Wednesday, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported, a member of the Pittsburgh City Council proposed a bill that would authorize a study of the value of property held by tax-exempt institutions and the costs the city incurs from providing services to its students. Under the plan, colleges and universities would then enter into negotiations to figure out acceptable values for their voluntary contributions.

In addition to institutional payments, students already contribute substantially to the city, said Hines, who is also president of the predominantly female Carlow University, where more than a third of undergraduates are over age 25. Many of her students, and students at other institutions in the city, also live and work within its borders, paying income and property taxes that compensate for their “fair share” of city services.

“There’s always been a sort of town-gown animosity, the perception that the students don’t give, they just take,” she said. “Towns and cities think students are just these rich, privileged 18- to 21-year-olds who just take from the city and then leave once they graduate. They’re not and they don’t.”

The Community College of Allegheny County serves the city “many of them who would be affected by this are Pittsburgh residents and so are already contributing through their wage taxes, property taxes, etc.,” said David Hoovler, a spokesperson. “With the population we serve, in particular, there are many students who struggle to pay our tuition, already the lowest in the city.”

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

So there's this photography blog...

that I follow religously. I'm not sure why I follow it, but I do. Anyway, I came across a recent post of a little girl who just turned two. Secretly, I hope the little girl we have one day will come out looking just as cute as she is! Great little bob hair cut and dimples... who'd be able to resist?!

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Remember that high I was just on?

Ya, that's gone. I opened up that athletics home page to find.... this. UGH! It's bad enough JP and I were going to have to leave early on Friday morning to make sure I was back by one.

I was okay with the idea of spending Thanksgiving with family, taking a quick nap, making it out to the sales with Alison, taking another nap, and leaving my 10:30 or so on Friday morning... JP driving of course.

With kick off move up to 11:00am, we'd have to leave by 8:00, and that's barring the fact that we *might* have recruits that day. Who in their right mind would come to an official recruit the day after Thanksgiving? I pray no one.

Stupid football. Stupid televised game on ESPNU. I know it's early but, bah humbug!

If anything is certain, it is that change is certain. The world we are planning for today will not exist in this form tomorrow.
-Phillip Crosby

Friday, November 13, 2009

Flying High

Over the past we weeks I have gone through a roller coaster of emotions related to my job. The boys are endlessly exhausting. The hours are awful. And yet I still go back. Something continues to drag my butt out of bed, into the shower, get dressed, and go to work.

Friday, two of my very favorite athletes stopped into my office. One to do some homework. Yes, I know. I have two degrees. But there's something really great about homework. I can feel my dad grinning from ear to ear. I love when students bring in work to me seeking, help and guidance. It makes me feel useful. More so, it lets me know that they see me as approachable. And that's all I really care about.

I also had another athlete come to me with a less than favorable situation. A professor seemed to be having difficulty honoring the travel letter, excusing athletes from certain assignment deadline if the team was required to travel. Long story short, and about six emails later, the professor admits she was wrong (and the student was right), and she agreed that the athlete could complete the assignment and turn them in late for full credit.

I was overjoyed. As an athletic advisor, it is our job to advocate and be the liaison between athletes and professors when necessary. And while the results aren't always what you hope for, you do hope that the professor and student-athlete can come to some form of an agreement for what is fair. I do not support that student-athletes receive preferential treatment. What I do support is the ability for the two parties to come to a common ground. For the professors to understand that when the athletes are not in the classroom, they are on the field. And when they're on the field, they are ambassadors to the university.

So I forwarded the final email from the professor to me, to my boss. I received nothing more than a "really good job" from my boss. He's not one for the mushy-gooshy/hippy-dippy praise that higher education and college student personnel professionals relish in, but it will most certainly do. What's more, my athletes are starting to realize that I am a tool for them to untilize and not just an individual that hounds them about making weekly meetings, weekly study hall hours, and does their homework.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Verteran's Day

A time to reflect on the heroes of the past, the heroes of today, and the heroes of tomorrow. Right, wrong, left, or right, there are men and women all over the world fighting for our country. Fighting for the freedom of others. Fighting for equality and justice.

Thank you for getting up every day and fighting and believing in a better place.
Thank you for sacrificing your safety for mine.

We are the land of the free, because of the brave.


Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Twitter

I'm not such a huge fan normally, but came across a page I actually think is pretty funny. I'm not sure if it's the bluntness of the father, or that fact that the son (writer of the Boomerang post below) has taken advantage of these one-liners and created himself quite a following.

ShitMyDadSays

Education Nation | Higher Education Blog

Read it : Education Nation Higher Edcuation Blog

It's good. Really good. Witty. What I would write about if I a)had the time and b)was witty.

Boomerang Offspring is especially entertaining... something I fear will happen in the next six months (sorry Jeff and Alison).

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Gettin' On with Gettin' On (Part 2)

This is going to be harder than I thought.

There's a knot in my stomach. WTH?

I've done this before. What's the big deal? Somehow, in the last go-around with applications, I managed to apply to 22 higher education institutions, and over 45 jobs. Why can't I get started? Instead of reformatting my resume and cover letter, I chickened out and decided to write a blog post instead.

My hands are shaky. WTH?

What's my problem? I'm ready to leave Athens... aren't I?

Maybe it's the idea of putting myself out there all over again with the prospect of rejection. Oh hell, I applied to my current position as a way of "hedging my bets." Literally. As I handed my current boss my application, and he asked "what's this," I told him I was "hedging my bets." So honestly, I feel by default I got this position. Like I told my dad a couple of years ago, I've never really been told "No" by a prospective employer. It happened one other time when I applied for a position at a fitness facility here in Athens. No? What do you mean no? But I'm awesome.

Apparently not. Or, at the very least, not as awesome as I thought. Fine. Maybe from now on I'll have to figure out how to print my resume on pink paper and scent it... you know, to "give it a little something extra."

When do I start looking? Is now too soon?

So it's back to the drawing board. Redo the resume. Freshen up the cover letter. Jump back in to the application pool. Maybe this time I'll come back up with a job.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Hello Lakewood, Ohio!

Hi! Hello! How are ya!?

I see you're a frequent visitor. Thanks for stopping by!

A Definition

1. wiggified: the state of elation that comes with being in the presence of ^a wiggy.


I like it!

Definition from Urban Dictionary