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Keeping Them Honest at NIC |
July 20, 2008 |
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In last week's column, I reported that the NIC Board of Trustees
cut money from their number one strategic goal, Professional Technical
Education. A response from the NIC Trustee Vice Chair, claimed my
facts were wrong. She later admitted they were accurate but went
on to make excuses for the Board's decision.
My information is correct and has been verified by multiple people
within NIC.
The NIC Board lists Professional Technical Education (PTE) as
their top priority, but they cut money for its operating budget.
This is not the only contradictory action by the Board. They also
cut $150,000 from student financial aid, a fact confirmed by phone
with NIC's spokesperson, Kent Propst. Additionally, the Board
is raising student tuition by 7.4% next year and raising student
fees as well.
The Board's actions are not in line with the frequent public plea
to keep our community college affordable for our students.
Affordability is a top public concern, as documented by the college's
Strategic Plan Committee. I attended the NIC meeting in May
when this fact was presented. Yet in response to this survey
information, the Board increased tuition and fees, cut financial
aid and cut PTE's operating budget.
These actions point to one conclusion, in my opinion: Students
are not the top priority.
The taxpayers are not the top priority either, it seems. NIC's
Board plans to take the maximum tax increase and pulled foregone
taxes into their budget as well, which will increase the financial
burden on all taxpayers of Kootenai County. This tax increase
is not just for a year or two, it becomes part of their permanent
base, so the increase is forever. The Board is planning to pay $10
million dollars for the DeArmond Mill site but will not allow a public
vote and has yet to engage the public in an open dialog to answer
unfiltered, honest questions.
If the students and the taxpayers are not the main focus of the
NIC Board, what is? Well, they increased the President's salary
and benefits to total $179, 250, which includes $1000 per month for
housing. The Board also increased President Bell's expense account
significantly and raised their own Trustee expense account too. All
money left in these accounts carries over to the "Fund Balance" for
the next year which the Board can use for any purpose. As a
matter of fact, the Fund Balance for this year is well over a million
dollars but they did not use any of that money for their number one
goal, PTE, which they could have. They cut PTE the budget
instead.
Please recall, if you will, the purpose of this column. I
promised to cut through unnecessary distractions and clear the smoke
to discover the essence of the subjects. The personal attacks
and name calling that have appeared in letters to the Press and on
local blogs are distractions. They are attempts to divert focus away
from the behavior of our public officials. It's the old political
move where, if you can't answer the questions, attack the messenger. Well,
I'd like to challenge the NIC Trustees to explain the decisions I've
addressed in this column. Please tell us why you have used
our public money in ways that seem to contradict your goals and our
wishes. We want to understand.
Let's stay on-topic and work toward an honest dialog which will
help our community. The heart of this matter is the accountability
of the NIC Board of Trustees to the students, the entire college
and the taxpayers of Kootenai County.
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