IdaGriz01
Well-known member
Based on numerous eGriz discussions, I think most of us agree that the health (and problems) for college sports in general, and football in particular are all about the money. There is now a huge furor about funding for public colleges and universities … which, of course, includes most FCS school along with the FBS. Here's just one of the many hits I got if when I Googled "public university funding" :
http://www.npr.org/2012/06/21/155524647/are-public-universities-still-public
If you'd like to download the report that most of the state-level numbers came from, go here
http://www.sheeo.org/finance/shef-home.htm
According to the report you can download at the second link above, student tuition paid 43% of the annual cost for public higher education in 2011, across the U.S. Some of the numbers are shocking: Vermont college students, including at their FCS school, paid 83% of the cost of their education via tuition. New Hampshire (another FCS participant) was not far behind at 75%, Delaware just over 70%, and Rhode Island was about 67%. That is, in Vermont, New Hampshire, Delaware, and Rhode Island, the legislature is picking up less than a third of the tab for their public colleges and universities. Maine is about 56% tuition revenue, while the number for Montana, statewide, is about 53% … in case you're wondering.
Students (and their parents) are complaining about huge jumps in tuition charges, coupled with less bang for their buck: larger classes, fewer offerings (they have to wait longer for some classes required for graduation), more sessions taught by graduate assistants or inexperienced part-timers, and so on. Many already graduate, into a tight job market, with huge amounts of debt -- I believe the average is up to over $25 thousand. That can only get worse.
This funding crunch has got to be scary for lower-tier FBS and most FCS football programs, which don't come close to breaking even financially. Unless things turn around dramatically -- and no one seems to think it will, no matter who gets elected President in the fall -- I look for more schools to drop football, or at least suspend it for awhile. Fortunately, alumni pride will surely salvage some programs that are financial basket cases. Plus, students at least know what they're getting, pretty much, from the athletic department ... and parents know exactly what they're getting when they buy season tickets.
"Public" Universities???
BTW, considering these financial realities, I perhaps made a misstatement during our discussion of big-time schools being ripped off by bowl game organizers. I said legislators should be complaining about schools that lose money going to bowl games. Turns out, although the states generally own the land the schools sit on, a bunch of them don't pay even half the annual cost of running the damn school.
Keep in mind that the state does not pay all those costs not covered by tuition revenue (averaging 43%, see above). Private fund-raising, endowment returns, research grants (from government, industry, foundation sources, etc.) pick up a chunk of the rest. Based on a small sampling, it seems that state appropriations, on average, may now pay less than half the overall annual cost for "public" higher education.
Discrepancies for individual schools can be even worse, but the numbers are harder to dig out. Here's some extreme values, gleaned from that bunch of articles:
U Michigan "receives less than 5% of its total operating revenues from state appropriations."
U Virginia gets 6-7% from the Commonwealth of Virginia
UC-Berkeley : "state funding represents about 10% of overall revenue"
U North Carolina - Chapel Hill : "the state contributes only about 18%"
Rutgers : "state [funds] ... currently constitute just 19.5 percent"
That means the state Department of Education is not even a significant “stakeholder” in the day-to-day operations of these school. Maybe it is best if they “butt out” of any discussion of how the schools spend their money.

http://www.npr.org/2012/06/21/155524647/are-public-universities-still-public
If you'd like to download the report that most of the state-level numbers came from, go here
http://www.sheeo.org/finance/shef-home.htm
According to the report you can download at the second link above, student tuition paid 43% of the annual cost for public higher education in 2011, across the U.S. Some of the numbers are shocking: Vermont college students, including at their FCS school, paid 83% of the cost of their education via tuition. New Hampshire (another FCS participant) was not far behind at 75%, Delaware just over 70%, and Rhode Island was about 67%. That is, in Vermont, New Hampshire, Delaware, and Rhode Island, the legislature is picking up less than a third of the tab for their public colleges and universities. Maine is about 56% tuition revenue, while the number for Montana, statewide, is about 53% … in case you're wondering.
Students (and their parents) are complaining about huge jumps in tuition charges, coupled with less bang for their buck: larger classes, fewer offerings (they have to wait longer for some classes required for graduation), more sessions taught by graduate assistants or inexperienced part-timers, and so on. Many already graduate, into a tight job market, with huge amounts of debt -- I believe the average is up to over $25 thousand. That can only get worse.
This funding crunch has got to be scary for lower-tier FBS and most FCS football programs, which don't come close to breaking even financially. Unless things turn around dramatically -- and no one seems to think it will, no matter who gets elected President in the fall -- I look for more schools to drop football, or at least suspend it for awhile. Fortunately, alumni pride will surely salvage some programs that are financial basket cases. Plus, students at least know what they're getting, pretty much, from the athletic department ... and parents know exactly what they're getting when they buy season tickets.
"Public" Universities???
BTW, considering these financial realities, I perhaps made a misstatement during our discussion of big-time schools being ripped off by bowl game organizers. I said legislators should be complaining about schools that lose money going to bowl games. Turns out, although the states generally own the land the schools sit on, a bunch of them don't pay even half the annual cost of running the damn school.
Keep in mind that the state does not pay all those costs not covered by tuition revenue (averaging 43%, see above). Private fund-raising, endowment returns, research grants (from government, industry, foundation sources, etc.) pick up a chunk of the rest. Based on a small sampling, it seems that state appropriations, on average, may now pay less than half the overall annual cost for "public" higher education.
Discrepancies for individual schools can be even worse, but the numbers are harder to dig out. Here's some extreme values, gleaned from that bunch of articles:
U Michigan "receives less than 5% of its total operating revenues from state appropriations."
U Virginia gets 6-7% from the Commonwealth of Virginia
UC-Berkeley : "state funding represents about 10% of overall revenue"
U North Carolina - Chapel Hill : "the state contributes only about 18%"
Rutgers : "state [funds] ... currently constitute just 19.5 percent"
That means the state Department of Education is not even a significant “stakeholder” in the day-to-day operations of these school. Maybe it is best if they “butt out” of any discussion of how the schools spend their money.