to sync the cameras often although I you can hear how I react to that often they make the guest clap just before I say welcome I'd like to ask you it's really well applied for myself if that's I don't like it yeah anyway yes Wisconsinites are nice they are yeah so thanks for for the opportunity yeah we so appreciate you talking to us about it and yeah we can go ahead it's just being a lifelong Wisconsin residents and alum here you know what's happening with the UW system is it's something to see you know you never thought that you would see that but that's just the preamble because I do want to thank you for sitting down with us well I'm pleased to be here thank you for the invitation so you held a position at UW colleges where you managed enrollment how in your mind could this have been avoided well I think if there had been a collective approach to looking at what was going to be coming down the line in about 10 or 15 years with really acute thinking about what we wanted to be as a system as as universities as we approach 2030 and 2035 taking into consideration things that we knew were real demographics right we we've known for years not just in Wisconsin but across the country that there was going to be a major change in the demographics that we're going to impact colleges and universities that's certainly one thing but there are some things that we couldn't really anticipate you know one of those obviously being how people feel about a college or university education and what Gen Z was going to do or be interested in when they got the college or what type of experience they wanted how much they were willing to pay those things we couldn't really see but the thing that we could was simple demographics and had we started thinking about it in a proactive way early on I think we could have had a robust conversation and come up with some reasonable solutions I don't think that that would have meant that nothing would have changed or that there wouldn't have been things that might have contracted but it might have been done in a way that I think people would have found a little bit more reasonable it is true that people have been talking about that so-called demographic cliff for decades why the inaction well I you know I'll just speak broadly about higher education in general I've worked in a number of different states I think that there is this concept that if we continue to do what we're doing which is really really good truthfully if we continue to do it the forces the market forces the demographic forces won't impact us because what we're doing is really really good work and it's having a major impact on society and the economy so I think higher education has often been shielded from what businesses find to be a harsh reality and now in higher education across the country and of course Wisconsin as well we find ourselves in the middle right directly in the middle of that reality as to the two-year colleges which are the ones that are being announced are closing or have closed already was there ever a benefit to the duplication of the four-year and the two-year campuses sure there was absolutely four years and years the two-year UWs really behaved like the elastic band for the system so as enrollment changed over time sometimes there would be ballooning enrollments and then sometimes there would be a decline and so the UW colleges for years served as that elastic band that really managed I think quite well how many students were going into the four-year institutions and managing that on the front end and so I think there was a time where it did work really well the other thing is you know years ago there just wasn't the technology available to do anything remotely or by distance and that certainly over the past 20 or 25 years has changed things as well and I think also and this is just my opinion but there was a significant tie to local communities that students coming out of high schools had and that's changed quite dramatically as well what about the duplication with the really robust technical college system well I'm not sure that there's the amount of duplication that that people think certainly the technical colleges now offer the associate of arts and associate of science degrees which the the former UW colleges offer but there's very different students that go to the two different institutions and two different systems a lot of the students that come into the technical college system are very very part-time picking up classes when they can in the evenings after work and for those that are coming directly at a high school they generally know what they want to do and my experience in the UW colleges is that the students that came to the colleges were truly looking to transfer as their primary goal and that's not true of of many of the students that enter into the to the technical college system and yet that has been kind of pushed that you can go to a technical college and then transfer immediately into a four year that's true and we are quite honestly we are talking about that because that's the reality I think as it relates to the technical college systems technical college system but I'll talk about Waukesha because that's the college where I'm serve as president we really feel like we've got an obligation to offer all taxpayers everything we possibly can and not just some because we're really beholden to the taxpayers in our communities and so if they want to come to us for that type of degree then we should offer it and I just if I can make one final point on that for decades I think I came to Wisconsin in 2003 or 4 working for the UW colleges we have been talking about increasing the number of baccalaureate degree holders in the state and that's been a real priority but not a lot of things have been done to actually do that now we can argue that there are certain priorities and programs that have been put into place but by create by increasing the access points in the freshman and sophomore year to be able to transfer to a baccalaureate degree that's one of the ways that we're helping the state increasing the number of baccalaureate degrees across across all counties so you you speak to being accountable to the taxpayers in that regard technical colleges are flush with funding as opposed to the state university system why not just kind of have the technical college system take over the UW two years yeah so if I could make a couple of points there's no doubt that the technical college system is well funded but I think that there's been sort of a misunderstanding about one of the recent studies that came out that's that focused on full-time equivalencies most of the students at the technical college system are part-time many at a four-year university are full-time and so when you look headcount versus full-time students you get very very different funding structures the other thing I'll say is that the technical college system educates somewhere around 280,000 students a year I think the UW system is somewhere around 160,000 I think somewhere around there so the technical college system headcount is really really high and the way to think about the expense of a student is it's not based on how many full-time students you have it's based on the number of headcounts that you have because for each student there's an expense but let's get back to your original question and I think it was why not just merge these two systems together or the two-year systems together my immediate thinking on that is what merger does is it simply moves an existing issue or problem somewhere else it doesn't solve that problem so for example if the two two-year systems colleges and the tech colleges were combined the problem still exists the number of campuses the declining enrollments the number of faculty and the overall financial picture that doesn't change at all it shifts where that issue goes and who has to solve it and so for that reason merger isn't a solution it just moves the problem to a different place and yet I thought I read that you said that for example at your technical college you have capacity you have space you have the infrastructure so what does that mean well I can give you a real life example of what we're doing right now so a chancellor money chancellor's chancellor Moniz the chancellor at UW Milwaukee good friend and colleague of mine we've been talking for a number of years and recently you've probably heard that UW Milwaukee is closing their walker shot campus so what chancellor Mony and I decided to do was not simply bring those the majority of those students over should they want to continue to WCTC we decided to take a significantly forward and I think what could be a model for the state and that is we're going to build a UWM University Center right on our campus so that students can participate with WCTC as well as UWM and what we really know is going to happen is that a lot of students will start in their associate degree of a variety of fields and end up taking baccalaureate degree classes right on our campus the concept is that anybody in the community can take anything from a short-term certificate all the way through graduate programs right on our campus with seamless interaction so that students really don't feel the sort of jerky thing that happens during a traditional transfer process and how is that being looked at on the part of administration UW administration or other campuses like it is a model well I I think into their credit the other campuses are thinking we're going to wait and see if Chancellor Mony and President Barnhouse and their teams can pull this off we know that we will we're very excited about it and I think that the the response from both systems has been I would say very positive and really supportive and I think for the legislators that I've spoken with they're also quite supportive of us taking a different look at how we can provide higher education in a really strong partnership way almost like siblings and delivering for the community getting back to the announcements of the closures of the two year campuses what do you think of the way that's been managed well I'll just start by personally saying that you know I worked for the UW colleges for nine years initially as an assistant campus dean on the UW Shabogan campus and then as associate vice chancellor for student services and enrollment here in Madison so for me it's professionally certainly I understand the decisions that have to be made I do sitting in the seat of president I understand with enrollments and funding and competing demands that you have to make decisions particularly as it relates to enrollment and when enrollment reaches a certain point on any campus you have to make a decision about can we afford to do this or does it draw tremendous amount of resources away from the other parts of the university so for me there's a little bit of sadness because I know many of the faculty and staff that were on all 13 of the two-year campuses but I also understand professionally and practically that with declining enrollments and without a comprehensive plan university leaders college leaders have to make the decisions that are in the best interest of the long-term viability of their institutions and so you would still be calling for a comprehensive plan I think that ten years ago for sure if I'm thinking back to 2013-14 I think at that time there could have been some consideration given to what does a comprehensive plan look like and how do we put an enrollment plan in place for a system I think at this point in time all of us in in higher education are in the situation now that we were looking down the road at it's here now and so I still think that any type of plan would be beneficial it's just that when you're in the situation right once you're in the theater so to speak the time to build a comprehensive plan has changed is past perhaps what do you predict going forward well I think what we're going to see in the state of Wisconsin is largely what we're going to see across the United States and that is more campus closures and and more trimming of faculty and staff and of programs and colleges and universities making decisions on the curricular array that they provide and how robust and how comprehensive that can be I do think that the future in Wisconsin might take a look at what UW Milwaukee and WCTC are doing in building a university center on a vibrant technical college campus and I think that that UWM and WCTC will really show a path for the state and in many parts of the country about how we're able to move forward and still provide unbelievable public higher education and doing it in a way that's I think responsible of the taxpayer something that that legislative officials can get behind and something that ultimately delivers for for the community and for the region and for the state great rich Barnhouse thanks very much thank you very much that was great interview really yes it was really really good and really interesting and it really I think shed a lot of light on this circumstance that we find ourselves in and it's it's so awesome that you had that both that experience with colleges and now as the president of the walk shop thank you tech college I really thank you and it is really exciting this UWM thing has that already started or is that so we've we started with it's all legal right so we started with MOUs we've applied for accreditation because they need to accreditation to offer programs on our site but I'll be honest with you I didn't want to get into too much deep put out over my skis we're gonna offer PhDs on campus you know you know that that's some of our fact a lot of our faculty are terminally-degreed so some of our faculty will teach we already have Lakeland University on campus which I probably should have mentioned I apologize and so they're transferring they're why instead of walking across town or across the state they're walking down the hall and in and entering into the baccalaureate degree on campus with Lakeland and Lakeland like UWM they're gonna do what we need them to do which is be responding to what the local taxpayer local businesses needs are so you know we're not gonna offer a baccalaureate degree in medieval history for example right because the employers would say Rich what are you doing so but you know MBAs for sure economics finance accounting robotics you know we've got the first artificial intelligence program in the state at the undergraduate degree level and so what we're working with UWM we're looking forward to them adding artificial intelligence and machine learning because our you know we'll transfer right into there so the sky's really the limit I'm thankful that I've got a partner in Mark Money who just said yep let's do this and so when is the expectation that this so they're gonna we're gonna have some of their staff on campus in January so I would imagine some advisors some administrative folks and then we'll start offering classes whenever they're ready to do so and we're gonna we're gonna offer them all over campus so it's not like UWM's gonna be stuck in this one area you know you could be walking across campus and you could be going from a diesel tech program and walking past somebody working on a master's degree in something and a classroom over here seems brilliant to me thanks you know I just seems like common sense really it really really does Wow interesting awesome oh yeah we we started talking in the newsroom about this because I read an article about Minnesota and how their enrollments are up and they they have this huge budget surplus as we did and they poured a lot of that into higher education and their enrollments are up and you know it just sounded wonderful compared to right across the river and so I guess the question is what's different well simply adding money doesn't solve the problem so if you add a tremendous amount of money and there's no change that occur that that happens first or part of the process in my experience whatever state you're in you amplify the problem and it doesn't get better so without knowing exactly what they did in Minnesota I have some idea there has to be change made and there has to be a student population that's going to react to it in Wisconsin there's probably not the same student population that's going to react as we look at the demographic decline and to have that kind of enrollment boost they would also have to have some of the things in place that would improve the process for students so more students coming in but it changed in the way they sort of do business as well as the degree programs that students are looking for Gen Z is totally different right they want to what they're calling a skinny college experience so they want the very best academic training experience that they can get at the lowest cost without a lot of the frills which is totally different than the millennials and their parents for that matter who wanted they wanted the eighty million dollar recreation facility right and I'm not saying that no Gen Zers want that of course they do but they're looking at education differently and it's talked about in the Chronicle of Higher Education recently about students are looking at what is my salary gonna be what is my career gonna be 15 years ago it was you know I think I'd like to find myself and learn more about myself and I want to find my purpose and Gen Z certainly wants that but they're far more pragmatic and far more practical and so making sure that the degree programs are lined up for those students as well is different so I'm not a proponent of simply putting more money in that's helpful but it will amplify what's already there it won't solve what's there all right thank you I do know and we can we can stop the madness now we can stop recording well I'm gonna take that