The Minnesota Daily on Friday formally appealed a $90,000 cut from its expected student fees allotment, the result of a disagreement over its reserve accounts. In the final step of that appeal process, Daily representatives will speak Monday before Vice Provost for Student Affairs Jerry Rinehart as they seek to overturn the Student Service Fees CommitteeâÄôs recommendation to cut nearly one-fifth of its $556,000 initial student fees request. At issue is the newspaperâÄôs use of its reserve holdings, an account of nearly $690,000, which it claims should be preserved in case of future financial crises. Fees Committee Chairman Kenny Kapphahn said the newspaper hasnâÄôt adequately justified the size or use of that account. âÄúYouâÄôre not using that $600,000 to get through the economic recession, you donâÄôt have a list of projects youâÄôre saving it for,âÄù Kapphahn said. âÄúWhy, then, do you have a larger reserve?âÄù The student-run newspaper advocates a reserve model that blends industry and nonprofit standards. Daily Business Operations Officer Brandon Quittem said the groupâÄôs model justifies a reserve that could sustain the newspaper for six months. Current levels could buoy the paper for fewer than three months during the academic year, he said. Disagreement over the reserve stems from the committeeâÄôs view that less of the DailyâÄôs revenue should be considered variable, or nonguaranteed. That model reduces the amount of income the newspaper should hold in reserve to protect itself from unexpected loss. âÄúItâÄôs not our job to set these reserve levels or tell them when to use them,âÄù fees committee member Blake Thomas said. âÄúBut in this case, this year, weâÄôre trying to provide them with some sort of model for going forward in the future.âÄù The issue of its reserves has not historically stalled fees requests, Daily President Ashley Williams said. âÄúWeâÄôre trying to increase the disclosure to students who pay the fee,âÄù Thomas, a Carlson School of Management graduate student, said. âÄúI think itâÄôs really important that students know and understand that reserve account, because itâÄôs a huge chunk of the Daily.âÄù Student service fees for the coming academic year are projected to be close to the $348.41 students paid per semester this year. If the proposed cuts are approved, the fees would be reduced by roughly $1.50 per student, Kapphahn said. Disagreement over the holdings arose in mid-March after the committee initially recommended that the newspaper receive $550,000, nearly its full fees request. Two weeks later, the committee voted unanimously to reduce that allotment to $460,000 after further discussion and talks with Daily representatives. The committee ruled that the newspaper could âÄútap into its reserves to meet the difference between its request and the actual funding.âÄù The fees committee is a board of eight voting student-members appointed by student government and Rinehart. It is responsible for determining the fees allotments for student groups. Money for the allotments is levied through the student service fee paid each semester. The committeeâÄôs recommendation for student fees allotments for fiscal year 2010-2011 totals more than $26 million. Rinehart couldnâÄôt speak to specifics of the DailyâÄôs appeal, but he said the hearing is a critical step in the fees process. âÄúItâÄôs one final effort to make sure that serious damage isnâÄôt done,âÄù he said. If the Daily fails in its appeal, its board of directors, a group of industry professionals who advise the newspaperâÄôs management, and incoming managers will determine whether it will account for the lost revenue by drawing down its reserves or by cutting expenses. Faced with the $90,000 cut, Chuck Brown, vice president, treasurer and controller of the Star Tribune and a Daily board member, said he would support balancing the budget through cost-cutting measures as long as they donâÄôt âÄúsacrifice the brand.âÄù The Daily slashed more than $600,000, about 25 percent, from its operating budget last year in response to dramatic declines in advertising revenue. Those savings came through pay cuts, combining positions and eliminating a Friday print edition, but the group did not tap its reserve. Daily management said the majority of the proposed $90,000 cut would likely be balanced by cutting expenses rather than draining reserves. âÄú[That decision] shows that I donâÄôt even think they really know what their reserve account is for,âÄù Thomas said. Daily Editor-In-Chief Holly Miller said that being forced to use reserve funding would nullify earlier cost-cutting measures. âÄúIt seemed to me like we were almost being punished for not dipping into the reserve,âÄù she said. The committee has no mandate to reduce student fees, Kapphahn said. Its responsibility is to weigh fee requestsâÄô value for students. âÄúWhat are you getting for your student fees?âÄù he said. âÄúThatâÄôs the question that always comes up.âÄù
Minnesota Daily appeals student fees allotment cut
The fees committee intended for the Daily reserves to cover the reduction.
by Ian Larson
Published April 11, 2010
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