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Room F-3293 Garden City, New York 11530

The NCC Administration’s Catastrophic Mismanagement and the NCCFT’s Cost-Saving Proposals to Grow Enrollment



10 Responses

  1. A travesty of mismanagement. Lack of concern for faculty moral. Lack of integrity between departments, chairpersons, faculty, the NCCFT, and Senate. Governance has become a dictatorship. Squeezing faculty salaries and health care.
    Total disregard for the well being of student’s academic career and life.
    Not offering classes to complete degrees,no areas for social activities and no food in campus. How can you run a college without supporting student achievement activities and socialization let alone not supporting their academic goals.

  2. Enrollment declines so hire more administrators?? I deplore what’s been happening and support the 6 positions outlined above. Good work!
    Dominick Grundy, Ph.D. (English Dept., ret.)

  3. Why isn’t the Admissions Department being held accountable for decreased enrollment? In all my years living in the communities surrounding NCC, I have never seen an admissions officer at any of the high school and/or community events.

    I applaud the efforts of the Union to address the fiscal corruption at NCC.

    1. To Jane Doe: In the NCCFT’s proposed 2025 Budget initiatives, we recommend hiring 3 more Admissions officers, preferably with bilingual skills, to bring the Admissions office back to capacity. We believe this has the potential to increase enrollment by 900 students.

    2. To Jane Doe: Is this a joke? We go to hundreds of events at high schools, during the morning, day, evening. Sometimes on the weekend. I’d let you know when the next one is, but you didn’t leave your name. -Tom

  4. Perhaps it’s because I originally worked in the for profit world that I feel people should be held accountable for their failure to produce in terms of recruitment and retention. In the for profit world, if what you are doing isn’t working, you are fired. Einstein said, “The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over expecting a different result.” Our administrators, not just in admissions, are sorely lacking in vision. Not only do they fail to innovate, they do not adapt, proving the old cliché true: If you always do what you’ve always done, you’ll always get what you’ve always gotten. BTW, if you think I’m going to name myself so that I can be targeted for harassment and subsequent dismissal (or better yet, it’s the tool the administrators employ to get people to move on of their own volition), I’m a tad bit smarter than that.

    1. To Jane Doe: Very unhelpful feedback and promoting nothing but division. My colleagues at the Admissions Office would have welcomed your questions and would have given you further information on all efforts to recruit. The whole idea is to help each other not bring us down with uniform criticism.

  5. Very interesting posting the actual report and budget would be helpful. Given that the school is in some $14 mil in debt and the departments are collapsing into each other, I’m wondering if my child should transfer to a 4 year with only one semester to graduate? We are realizing that is unlikely that the two courses that are left for her major are not available in the final semester. Getting advisement is very difficult. I understand that last week the TA in orgo chemistry baled and the professor had to improvise. I’m glad the professor was able to punt the class, but this shouldn’t be happening. I’m disappointed that she most likely not be able to continue at NCC as planned.

    1. Hi Isabel, the faculty will always do its best and provide a top education for each and every student, but parents like you should contact their local county legislator and tell them that these conditions are not acceptable and ask them to fully fund the college and demand a competent administration.

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