


Community colleges deserve to be a higher priority in Md.

Yet despite all this good will, the same governor who likes to boast about record levels of education funding during his time in office has chosen to slash community college funding — and not just for the coming fiscal year. Under the state budget and accompanying legislation Governor Hogan unveiled last week, Maryland’s community colleges would get just half of the increase in state aid anticipated under Cade (about $18 million less). But more disappointingly, it calls on a long-term reduction in Cade growth, essentially denying the schools a collective $100 million between now and 2025. That’s no small hit to schools and their more than 300,000 students. Cuts in state aid usually translate into increased costs to local government and in higher tuition.
Making matters worse is that
We would debate state finances with the governor, but his view of them seems to keep shifting. One day, the Kirwan proposal is unaffordable and a burden on local governments because of their matching share. The next, he’s unveiling a $1 billion plan to lower state taxes for retirees living on nearly six-figure incomes while simultaneously reducing promised aid to colleges and thereby cost-shifting that expense to local government. So which is it? Is state government flush or running a deficit? Must local governments be spared added cost or should they be expected to pay more for schools? It can be confusing to follow the Hogan fiscal logic — except to anticipate that this administration will make all kinds of tax-cutting promises knowing full well the General Assembly won’t approve them, nor should they. And that’s a win-win for the governor, polishing his reputation as a fiscal conservative without actually having to make any tough choices.
Mr. Hogan doesn’t like mandated spending. We get that. Governors often don’t. It gives them less flexibility. Current revenue projections don’t match current spending projections in future years leading to a theoretical budget deficit. We get that, too. But if anyone in Annapolis is going to get serious about assessing Maryland’s legitimate needs and its capacity to pay for them, it first needs to start with fewer flights of fancy — like the notion that a flood of seniors will choose to retire in Maryland if the state income tax is reduced when the reality is that
That leaves it up to legislators to restore community college funding this session and keep the state on track for full Cade funding by 2023. The young men and women who benefit from two-year degrees most may not be as politically important a constituency to Mr. Hogan as voting seniors but they ought to be. These Marylanders were made a promise before most were even born of an affordable, taxpayer-supported post-secondary education. It deserves to be kept.