The thread on Southern Miss hate towards MSU made me think (always a dangerous thing). Mississippi is a poor state with a smallish and possibly dwindling population, yet we have eight public universities (nine if you count the med center). Politics and emotions aside, most would agree that the state doesn't need all eight of these schools.
So let's say you're the governor with a compliant state legislature and IHL board--yeah, I know, but dream with me here for a moment.
Would the state lose anything of significant value if we closed USM, Valley, Alcorn, Delta State and MUW? That would leave State, Ole Miss and Jackson State.
The state provides about $74 million of taxpayer dollars to USM per year, $14MM to MVSU, $19MM to Alcorn, $20MM to Delta State, and $15MM to MUW, for a total of about $142 million per year.
If you close these schools, you'd certainly have some transition costs and would need to increase state funding at the remaining schools to some extent, but I bet you could ultimately save about $100 million per year by making this move. I think we could easily offset whatever value these schools bring to the state with this $100MM per year that would be freed up for roads, K-12 education, economic development and job creation incentives, etc.
I admit that I don't know much about Southern Miss as a school. Do they bring something to the table that can't easily be replicated at UM, MSU or JSU? At one point they had a well-regarded polymer science program. If that's still the case, it seems like such a program could be shifted to MSU without too much difficulty.
Yes, geography is a weakness in my plan, as it would leave the southern part of the state without a major university. But I think it would take only a small portion of the savings to provide things a weekly shuttle system from the coast and Hattiesburg to Jackson, Oxford, and Starkville. You could also provide students with a "transportation scholarship" or grant to offset any hardship in getting to Oxford, Starkville or Jackson.
And, yes, closing Valley, Alcorn and MUW brings race and gender arguments to the table. The Ayers case would rear its ugly head again. The savings from closing just these schools probably wouldn't be worth the political and legal fight, but if you add USM and Delta State to the list, the payoff becomes much bigger.
Discuss.
So let's say you're the governor with a compliant state legislature and IHL board--yeah, I know, but dream with me here for a moment.
Would the state lose anything of significant value if we closed USM, Valley, Alcorn, Delta State and MUW? That would leave State, Ole Miss and Jackson State.
The state provides about $74 million of taxpayer dollars to USM per year, $14MM to MVSU, $19MM to Alcorn, $20MM to Delta State, and $15MM to MUW, for a total of about $142 million per year.
If you close these schools, you'd certainly have some transition costs and would need to increase state funding at the remaining schools to some extent, but I bet you could ultimately save about $100 million per year by making this move. I think we could easily offset whatever value these schools bring to the state with this $100MM per year that would be freed up for roads, K-12 education, economic development and job creation incentives, etc.
I admit that I don't know much about Southern Miss as a school. Do they bring something to the table that can't easily be replicated at UM, MSU or JSU? At one point they had a well-regarded polymer science program. If that's still the case, it seems like such a program could be shifted to MSU without too much difficulty.
Yes, geography is a weakness in my plan, as it would leave the southern part of the state without a major university. But I think it would take only a small portion of the savings to provide things a weekly shuttle system from the coast and Hattiesburg to Jackson, Oxford, and Starkville. You could also provide students with a "transportation scholarship" or grant to offset any hardship in getting to Oxford, Starkville or Jackson.
And, yes, closing Valley, Alcorn and MUW brings race and gender arguments to the table. The Ayers case would rear its ugly head again. The savings from closing just these schools probably wouldn't be worth the political and legal fight, but if you add USM and Delta State to the list, the payoff becomes much bigger.
Discuss.