Students,
faculty, and campus workers gathered at the state Capitol this week
under the banner of Fund Our Dreams, calling on lawmakers to reject
Gov. Ned Lamont’s proposed higher education budget and make real
investments in Connecticut’s public colleges and universities.
In
a press conference at the Legislative Office Building as lawmakers
begin deliberations this session, speakers were flanked by supporters
holding signs “Gov. Lamont Failing Our Students – Fund Higher
Education.”
Speaker
after speaker warned that years of underfunding have created a crisis
across the state’s higher education system — from community
colleges to state universities and UConn — harming students,
workers, and the broader economy.
Lisa
Calabrese. the campus enrollment supervisor at Connecticut State
Naugatuck Valley, and leader in the 4Cs union, said “Governor
Lamont is a train wreck for our public higher education institutions:
Connecticut colleges, Charter Oak State College, our four state
universities, UConn, and UConn Health.”
“There
has been a ripple effect on our workforce, our economy, and our
state,” she added. “Faculty, staff, and students oppose Governor
Lamont’s proposed budget for CSCU, UConn, and UConn Health because
it fails to make the necessary investments in our institutions, our
students, and our state.”
Students
described campuses pushed past capacity, where lack of funding is
happening while enrollment is rising, harming educational quality and
student well-being.
Heritha
Subramanian. Student body vice president at the University of
Connecticut, Storrs said. “It is no secret that education in
Connecticut is overwhelmed and underfunded.”
As
state and federal funding has declined, she explained, UConn has
increased enrollment and recruitment to compensate. “Unfortunately,
our school does not have the resources to meet the needs of our
students.”
“I
often hear from students who have never met with their advisor
because it is difficult to get a hold of them,” she said. “At
UConn, advisors have caseloads of up to 655 students per advisor,
while the national average for four-year institutions is 286.”
The
consequences affect classroom learning. “Higher enrollment levels
have led tolarger class sizes, and it is clear this is burdensome for
everyone involved,” Subramanian said. “Faculty are being asked to
do too much with too little time and too little assistance, while
students fade and disengage — becoming one of hundreds rather than
being supported to succeed.”
Cynthia
Stretch, a union leader and professor at Southern Connecticut State
University, said "endless cuts" to part-time faculty have
resulted in slashing the course options available to students.
Organizers
testified that Connecticut’s higher education crisis is not
inevitable, calling it the result of political decisions that
prioritize tax breaks and austerity over public investment.
“Public
higher education is a public good,” speakers said. “When we
underfund it, we deepen inequality, weaken our workforce, and
undermine democracy itself.”
"Connecticut
has the resources to do better. What we need is the political will."
said Valerie Duffy, a professor at UConn and president of Uconn-AAUP.
"The strain on higher education is not a failure of our students
or our faculty and staff. It is a result of policy choices,"
The
Fund Our Dreams coalition is calling on legislators to: increase base
funding for public higher education, stop tuition and fee hikes,
restore faculty and staff positions and invest in advising, mental
health, and student support services
As
budget negotiations continue at the Capitol, organizers made clear
they are not backing down.
“This
is about our future,” one speaker said. “And we are here to
demand that Connecticut fund our dreams — not dismantle them.”
The
demand to “Fund Our Dream” is part of the Stand Up Connecticut
legislative agenda of the Connecticut for All coalition. At a
February 7 press conference, The 4 C's community college union
president Seth Freeman said, “We are here to demand that Governor
Lamont and every elected state legislator STAND-UP, meet the moment,
and protect the residents and families of Connecticut. We are here to
demand that elected leaders fight for working-class families and
fight against the Trump billionaire agenda.”