ONONDAGA, N.Y. — Some faculty members at Onondaga Community College (OCC) have until April 14 to decide if they will accept a voluntary early-retirement incentive. Citing declining enrollment, the OCC board of trustees on Feb. 28 voted to offer a voluntary early-retirement incentive to eligible faculty members. About 50 faculty members are eligible to take […]
ONONDAGA, N.Y. — Some faculty members at Onondaga Community College (OCC) have until April 14 to decide if they will accept a voluntary early-retirement incentive.
Citing declining enrollment, the OCC board of trustees on Feb. 28 voted to offer a voluntary early-retirement incentive to eligible faculty members.
About 50 faculty members are eligible to take the incentive, OCC tells CNYBJ in an email.
In its announcement, OCC said its enrollment has dwindled from its peak of 13,018 in 2012 to 7,032 in 2022.
Faculty members who turn 55 during this calendar year and have a minimum of 10 years of full-time faculty experience — or are regular part-timers at OCC — are eligible, the school said.
As for how OCC intends to fund the retirement incentive, the community college says its leaders have been “continuously” saving money in reserves despite the enrollment decline. The funding in those reserves will fund the packages.
“We are proud to recognize our faculty who have served so well and are interested in transitioning to retirement,” John Sindoni, chair of the OCC board of trustees, said in the school’s news release. “We thank them for their service and are confident this voluntary early retirement incentive package will go a long way towards helping them meet their future plans while also strengthening the college’s future.”
Taxpayer, student impact
The OCC announcement, which was set up in a question-and-answer format, explained why the development is “good for taxpayers.”
OCC says it will realize fiscal savings in the next budget year, which begins Sept. 1. For example, if 15 faculty members take the voluntary early-retirement incentive package, the savings will be between $1.5 million and $1.7 million.
Over the course of five years, those savings would total between $7.5 million and $8.5 million, OCC said. Those dollar amounts include savings in both salary and health-insurance costs, the college added.
As for why the school believes this is good for students, OCC says savings from the voluntary early-retirement incentive package will allow it to invest in student-success initiatives which will “help attract, support, and retain students.”
OCC’s current full-time tuition is $2,595 per semester, which ranks near the bottom third of SUNY’s 30 community colleges. Savings from the voluntary early-retirement incentive package will help OCC “continue to be one of the most affordable SUNY community colleges,” per its announcement.
“Thanks to the leadership of our Board of Trustees, we are fortunate to be in a strong financial position,” Dr. Warren Hilton, president of Onondaga Community College, contended. “We have financial reserves, we have a great campus thanks to our partners in County and State government, we have tremendous faculty and staff, and we are continuing to create new programs in conjunction with our partners in the workforce. Today’s action by the Board of Trustees will help us invest in the success of students.”