Site icon UT System News

UT President’s Annual Report to the General Assembly Cites History-making 2017

Joe DiPietro delivers State of UT address in February 2017

KNOXVILLE – An unprecedented third straight year of tuition increases held to an historic low is the lead highlight in University of Tennessee President Joe DiPietro’s 2017 Annual Report to the General Assembly.

Read the 2017 Annual Report

“Long-term sustainable funding is our responsibility, and our goal is to achieve it while keeping college tuition affordable for all Tennesseans,” DiPietro said.

A 1.8 percent undergraduate tuition increase for the academic year 2017-2018 is the lowest since 1984 and marked three consecutive years of increases at or below 3 percent—a first since the UT system was established in 1968. In 2016, tuition increased 2.2 percent and 3 percent in 2015.

The majority of fees did not increase and, of those for which UT Trustees approved a change, the net increase at each campus ranged from 0 percent to less than 3 percent.

Starting in 2015, DiPietro took a two-year set of self-imposed University budgetary restraints to the UT Board of Trustees for approval. The measures included limiting tuition increases to no more than 3 percent, assuming 3 percent annual inflation and no increase in state appropriations.

DiPietro credits unanticipated increases in state funding in the most recent three fiscal years with critical assistance in what he calls “a partnership to deliver future opportunity through higher education.” The budgetary restraints were extended for another two years in 2017, and the same limits on tuition increases remain.

Another highlight in the 2017 report is growing momentum at Cherokee Farm Innovation Campus in Knoxville, signaled by the arrival of two private tenants—following the 2015 opening of the UT-Oak Ridge National Laboratory Joint Institute for Advanced Materials building. Once the second building on the research and development property opened, Civil Engineering Consultants set up shop in April and was followed in October by Arkis BioSciences, a medical device company founded and run by a UT Knoxville graduate. DiPietro says he hopes to announce the start of construction on another new building at Cherokee Farm in 2018.

From left: Cherokee Farm Development Corporation President and CEO Cliff Hawks; UT Vice President for Research, Outreach, and Economic Development Stacey Patterson; UT Chancellor Beverly Davenport; UT President Joe DiPietro; and Arkis BioSciences CEO Chad Seaver.

In June, the special commission appointed by DiPietro in 2016 to review Title IX programs, policies and resources statewide issued its findings. The commission’s report acknowledged University efforts to provide education about and to prevent sexual misconduct, and it recommended creation of a system-wide Title IX coordinator position. That step was taken within a matter of weeks when Ashley Blamey, longtime director of UT Knoxville’s Center for Health, Education and Wellness, was appointed to the role on an interim basis while a formal search was launched.

DiPietro says he wants the University to establish the gold standard, nationally, in all of efforts around Title IX issues and compliance.

Other highlights:

Exit mobile version