By Benjamin Yount
SPRINGFIELD – Three of Illinois' university presidents have not yet given up hope of getting their money from Springfield. But the school chiefs say they know they can't continue to wait around.
Presidents from the University of Illinois, Western Illinois University, and Eastern Illinois University were at the Illinois Capitol on Wednesday to once again talk about their need for state funding.
The three schools are owed millions, and the payments have been delayed for months.
U of I Interim President Stanley Ikenberry said the lack of money, and the uncertainty of when more money may arrive, has forced him to tap into every available dollar.
Ikenberry had predicted a 20 percent tuition increase because of the university's budget problems. He now expects that tuition increase for new students next fall to be closer to 9 percent.
Eastern Illinois University President Bill Perry is also backing away from an earlier prediction of a higher tuition hike. Though he said the cost of a semester of classes will go up for incoming freshman.
Perry isn't saying what that other source of revenue might be, but he thinks schools across the state need to be realistic about just how long it might be before Illinois is able to pay all of its bills again.
"I think as universities we need to realize that we cannot depend all the time on state funding."
Al Goldfarb, president at Western Illinois University in Macomb, said he doesn't see a quick end or a quick replacement for the missing millions from the state.
Goldfarb joined Gov. Pat Quinn at a ribbon cutting for a new WIU campus in the Quad Cities earlier this month. Even though he's still waiting for a check for the main campus.
Quinn has proposed $1.3 billion in cuts to education from grade school through grad school. Quinn says a 1 percent "surcharge for education" is the key to fully funding education. But lawmakers, who see the governor's plan as a 33 percent income tax increase, are less than supportive of the plan.



