Originally posted by Sec10-A-14
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Originally posted by Horror Child View Post
And for every West Chester, Indiana and Slippery Rock, there are Mansfield or Lock Haven or Cheyney. Hopefully the state media starts to question those as wel.Originally posted by Horror Child View Post
And for every West Chester, Indiana and Slippery Rock, there are Mansfield or Lock Haven or Cheyney. Hopefully the state media starts to question those as wel.
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Originally posted by BlueJay View Post
Wow! I didn't know that about "the Boro"! I heard some talk, but never saw those numbers. That is quite alarming!Originally posted by BlueJay View Post
Wow! I didn't know that about "the Boro"! I heard some talk, but never saw those numbers. That is quite alarming!Originally posted by BlueJay View Post
Wow! I didn't know that about "the Boro"! I heard some talk, but never saw those numbers. That is quite alarming!Originally posted by BlueJay View Post
Wow! I didn't know that about "the Boro"! I heard some talk, but never saw those numbers. That is quite alarming!Originally posted by BlueJay View Post
Wow! I didn't know that about "the Boro"! I heard some talk, but never saw those numbers. That is quite alarming!
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Originally posted by Fightingscot82 View Post
Indiana is in just as bad of an enrollment issue as Cal, Clarion, and Edinboro. People still assume they're the biggest or strongest. Only Slippery Rock in the West has maintained enrollment.
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Originally posted by Fightingscot82 View PostConstruction. There's a moratorium on construction debt. I believe Cheyney is the only school that had taken out debt to cover operations.
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The difference is:
When in private industry, a company facing financial difficulties. I was in the airline industry during the Sept 11th attack. No one was flying. No bail out. I had an option take a $16K/yr cut (never recovered) or hit the street. If I worked for the state of Pennsylvania Higher ED well... Its just go on strike for higher wages, after all we can always raise taxes. Remember a $15 tax increase means a $10K/yr raise for educators. With our man Gov Wolfe we could raise that tax to $20 maybe even $25 per tax payer. The sky's the limit.
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Originally posted by Horror Child View Post
Well all I read about is declining enrollments, primarily due to demographics, which would decrease revenue. And I haven't read the corresponding stories about the schools are proposing to decrease costs.
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Originally posted by Sec10-A-14 View PostThe difference is:
When in private industry, a company facing financial difficulties. I was in the airline industry during the Sept 11th attack. No one was flying. No bail out. I had an option take a $16K/yr cut (never recovered) or hit the street. If I worked for the state of Pennsylvania Higher ED well... Its just go on strike for higher wages, after all we can always raise taxes. Remember a $15 tax increase means a $10K/yr raise for educators. With our man Gov Wolfe we could raise that tax to $20 maybe even $25 per tax payer. The sky's the limit.Originally posted by Sec10-A-14 View PostThe difference is:
When in private industry, a company facing financial difficulties. I was in the airline industry during the Sept 11th attack. No one was flying. No bail out. I had an option take a $16K/yr cut (never recovered) or hit the street. If I worked for the state of Pennsylvania Higher ED well... Its just go on strike for higher wages, after all we can always raise taxes. Remember a $15 tax increase means a $10K/yr raise for educators. With our man Gov Wolfe we could raise that tax to $20 maybe even $25 per tax payer. The sky's the limit.
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