Revised community college merger plan moves forward

A new plan to consolidate all 12 state community colleges governed by the Board of Regents was approved by the board at its meeting on Thursday, June 21.

Last year, Connecticut State Colleges and Universities (CSCU) developed a plan to consolidate the system by 2021.

As part of that plan, 190 administrative officials would have been laid off and it would have merged the community college campuses across the state into one campus known as the Community College of Connecticut.

While the original plan was approved by the Board of Regents last December, the New England Association of Schools and Colleges (NEASC), which provides accreditation to CSCU, raised concerns.

The plan was subsequently revised by CSCU; the new plan was issued on June 18. A letter by CSCU President Mark Ojakian explained the changes.

All 12 state community colleges will now be consolidated into one college by 2023 instead of 2021, to keep the 12 separate accreditations. The schools will “develop a more gradually paced academic planning and transition process and maintain the current department chair structure.”

The revised plan could save CSCU $17 million when fully implemented — as opposed to the $23 million in savings projected in the original plan.

While the original plan called for laying off 163 employees, the revised plan calls for layoffs of 117 employees.

The revised plan also includes the regionalization of the community college system and the creation of a new leadership structure. 

The 12 colleges will now be divided into three different regions. Northwestern Connecticut Community College (NCCC) in Winsted will be part of the North-West Region 2.

Along with NCCC, the North-West Region 2 will include Asnuntuck, Naugatuck Valley and Tunxis community colleges.

“We will hire three regional presidents in spring 2019 while maintaining the 12 college-based CEO, CFO and CAO positions per NEASC standards,” Ojakian wrote.

He added that, as part of the revised plan, there will be an integration of administrative functions into centralized shared services and the adoption of a statewide general education curriculum. 

In an email to The Lakeville Journal, Winsted Community Lawyer Charlene LaVoie wrote that she is against the revised plan.

“Cutting the bloated central office bureaucracy by 50 percent would save the amount the Board of Regents is now claiming will be saved by this consolidation,” LaVoie wrote. “The state’s General Assembly must take back its historic role in higher education that it abdicated in 2011.”

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