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Manitoba

U of W blames province for cuts to faculty, sports teams

The University of Winnipeg says the latest provincial budget has forced the school to cut senior positions at the school, sports programs and a handful of faculty positions in order to achieve a balanced budget.

University of Winnipeg slashed $3.7 million from 2017-18 operating budget

The University of Winnipeg has made cuts to funding for sports teams to achieve the balanced budget required by provincial legislation. (CBC)

The University of Winnipeg says the latest provincial budget has forced the school to cut senior positions, sports programs and a handful of faculty positions in order to achieve a balanced budget.

"It's unfortunate but we had to make some tough budget decisions," saidChris Minaker, senior executive officer with the University of Winnipeg.

On Monday evening,the University of Winnipeg's board of regents approved $3.7 million in costcutsin the 2017-18 operating budget.

The bulk of the university's savings approximately $1.5 million will come from leaving vacancies unfilled.

The school is required by law to balance its budget.

The Progressive Conservative governmentsays itrespectsthe choices the University of Winnipeg is making.

"Manitoba faces a serious financial challenge that requires governments and publicly-funded institutions to make funding decisions to fix the finances of the province and put us on a road to responsible recovery," said Education MinisterIanWishartin anemailedstatement.

The University of Winnipeg is eliminating its men's baseball team, both men's and women's wrestling and has putmen's soccer on hold for the 2017-18 seasonuntil it can afford to hire a coach.

"Because of the situation that we're in, a frozen provincial grant increase, we can no longer afford to subsidize theteams," saidMinaker.

Approximately 60 students play on the affected teams. The school will save almost $400,000 from the sports cuts.

'We're really concerned,' say students

Laura Garinger, president of the University of Winnipeg Students' Association, said students will feel the cuts.

"I know that the administration is being put in a very difficult position right now," she said.

Premier Brian Pallister'sbudget on April 11 effectively cut funding to post-secondary schools when inflation is factored in.

The budget allocated$699 million for universities and colleges in2017-2018, up 0.29 per cent from last year. Canada's inflation rate is currently 1.6 per cent.

Garingerexpects the Manitoba government to approve new legislation this fall, Bill 31, that will allow universities to raise tuition up to five per cent.

"We're really concerned about that because the operational grants for the university [are] stagnant They'll have no choice but to raise tuition to the full extent that they can."

Cuts to senior management

Over the past decade, the university said it hasstreamlined administration and cut more than $16 million in annual expenses.

Since July it has eliminated 15 per cent of its senior management positions.

"We are one of the most efficient universities in the country when it relates to the amount of money that we're spending on staff versus the number of students that we have," saidMinaker.

While the school is cutting five faculty positions, Minaker added the board istrying to "mitigate" impact on students.

"We've really tried to preserve academic excellence," he said. "The focus really here is in reducing administration, reducing some expenditures and then the athletics restructuring."

The University of Winnipegreceivesthe smallestannual operating grant per student from the province in Manitoba.

Another factor squeezing the university's resources is that tuition increases are limited to 1.3 per cent, which works out to about $63 a year more for the average student.

Contracts with University of Winnipeg professors and those who deliver direct support to students do not expire until 2019 and 2020.

with files from Susan Magas