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What to do with tuition revenue?

The power shift in the General Assembly has the folks who run public universities nervous.

The Republican takeover brings with it some uncertainty. How will the new legislature view the university's budget request? Will it provide full funding for enrollment growth?

And another key concern: What will legislators opt to do with revenue gleaned from tuition increases?

That's a big issue on campuses, which are lobbying hard already to keep that revenue. In what has become an annual battle, some legislators would prefer to take that pot of money away and stash it in the state's General Fund, to help ease the budget deficit.

In today's story on tuition and fee increase proposals, State Sen. Phil Berger, an Eden Republican, chimes in with words UNC officials will likely be pleased to year.

Berger, expected to take over leadership in the State Senate in 2011, told me yesterday he thinks campuses should keep the revenue.

"If we're talking about increasing tuition, that should stay on campuses rather than going into the General Fund," he said. "I don't think you should be using tuition as a tax substitute."

A chat with Glenn Adams, NCCU's new trustee chief

Glenn Adams knows N.C. Central University needs higher standards and better retention and graduation rates.

But as the new chair of NCCU's Board of Trustees, Adams also doesn't want a cookie-cutter approach where all public universities are evaluated in the same way.

Adams, of Fayetteville, is a criminal lawyer who received his bachelor's degree from N.C. State University in 1981 and his law degree from NCCU in 1984.

He talked with the N&O recently about his new role as head of the trustee board and what he sees as the key issues.

Here are excerpts:

So what's first on your priority list for NCCU?

NCCU BOT has new leadership

The board of trustees at N.C. Central University has a new chairman.

Glenn Adams, a Fayetteville attorney, succeeds Kay Thomas. Charles Baron, who has served the board for four years, is the vice-chairman. And Dwight Perry, a two-year board veteran, is the new secretary.

The board welcomes three new members this week. They are: Harold T. Epps, Jr., Paul R. Pope, Jr., and Student Government Association President Dwayne Johnson.

 

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