Diverse group of college students walking to community college class

The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated previously existing financial struggles for many colleges and universities, though community colleges appear to have been impacted more than their four-year and graduate institution peers. As all institutions, but especially community colleges, emerge from the pandemic and plan for the next semester, it’s imperative to consider the cohesive relationship and intentional roles required of leadership and the board to ensure a fiscally resilient culture. Institution leaders should determine what collaborative approaches and audit/risk management programs and frameworks are required to focus strategically, assess risk and establish an effective governance environment that drives decisions to ensure long-term sustainability.

Community colleges face challenges to maintain fiscal resiliency in current environment

For several years now, many higher education institutions have been faced with financial challenges due to a variety of reasons, including but not limited to:

  • Fewer high school graduates entering college
  • Pressure on institutions to keep tuition rate increases to a minimum
  • Increased costs related to facilities and instruction
  • Reductions in governmental funding

During the pandemic, these issues became heightened for many institutions, especially community colleges. According to a report from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, persistence and retention rates fell in fall 2020 by 3.5% -- and 2.1%, respectively, for community colleges. The decline is expected to repeat and likely exceed these numbers this fall. In addition, while rating agency, Fitch Ratings, recently raised its outlook for the higher education industry from negative to stable, wide gaps remain between those institutions with alternative sources of funding and those without.

COVID-19 forced community colleges to be reactive. Decisions had to be made and actions had to be implemented faster than ever before. Higher education has historically had the reputation of being slow to make changes, however the events of the past year have proved that is not the case. As an example, institutions were quick to implement safety protocols and move from in-person to remote instruction. This took an incredible amount of collaboration between faculty, leadership and governance. Maintaining that level of effort going forward is critical to the future success of many colleges. On a recent Baker Tilly podcast, our guest speaker Lenore Rodicio, a nationally recognized higher education thought leader, discussed the importance of now pivoting from being reactive to very proactive and strategic. This will require a collaborative effort between board members and institutional leadership to set a clear path forward and establish goals and fiscal targets that are well-defined, measurable and attainable.

Board and management collaboration and roles for solid fiscal resiliency oversight

The board and leadership must be on the same page (i.e., collectively drive strategic focus and define what a resilient future looks like). Of utmost importance is defining the specific outcomes sought and identifying the potential risks and barriers that stand in the way of achieving those outcomes. Cost efficiency in a vacuum is not a driver of productive change, therefore the bigger picture must be clear – how specifically is what is being proposed better for students? The board is the first stop to consider and clearly articulate options and potential impacts.

Effective and cohesive leadership is crucial to drive transformative change and should be expected to:

  • Put students first, emphasizing their success above all else
  • Drive action through an analytical, goal-oriented approach using comparable measures
  • Embrace radical transparency
  • Adopt inclusive and consultative processes that respect traditions of shared governance
  • Ground the changes to be made in defined and agreed-to core principles
  • Oversee the evaluation of and plans to mitigate risk

The board must effectively play the dual role of objective assessor and (when warranted) advocate. A cohesive board/management relationship will support outside-the-box thinking and ensure that recommendations are based on data and facts that align with the institution’s mission and strategic objectives. Boards should ask the tough questions and insist on candid answers. Once board members are convinced, it is imperative they commit to unwavering support of, and advocacy for, the transformative change proposed (e.g., shared service, consolidation, partnership) to address resiliency. And above all else, all leaders should be sure that outcomes and accountabilities are clearly stated, monitored and adjusted as needed. For example, below is what the quarterly board oversight sequence might look like relative to resiliency plans broken out by key fiscal drivers (e.g., retention/completions; new program enrollment growth; fiscal ratios; debt management; net tuition improvements; overall cash, liquidity and net tuition improvements; etc.). 

Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4
Year 1
Approve strategic outcomes and direct management to develop plan, including KPIs Review plan, set KPIs and report baseline metrics and approve reporting structure Identify risks and assign to relevant board committee and management members for oversight Receive first report on plan progress and collaborate with leadership on recommended next steps
Year 2
Review and accept risk mitigation plans Receive fall report on key drivers of fiscal position and assign follow-up action to committees and leadership No action required Review progress to plan, discuss mid-course corrections and discuss/approve required investments or changes in allocations (positive or negative)

In addition to proactive oversight of the resiliency plan, clarity around institutional principles as it relates to student success and risk should also be distinctly defined. A key step to ensure accountability to these principles is to align institutional policy. For example, if one of the institution’s key principles is that resource allocation ROI correlates with direct impact on student success, fiscal policy and budgeting procedures would support behaviors that prioritize allocations with positive student success impact. In this example, the board’s role relative to addressing the top risks of enrollment decline and fiscal health should be to set fiscal policy that prioritizes student centric investments and allocations and consider the budget as a whole for approval purposes. Decisions related to specific budgeting procedures and line-level decisions should be the purview of management.

It’s evident that the current environment has created an elevated awareness of the criticality of high-quality fiscal management and effective governance. At a time of unprecedented declines in retention rates and when implementing strategic initiatives is as important as ever before, institutions must ensure positive relations between and effective governance frameworks for cabinet leadership and board members. Yet, while good relations are essential, clearly established governance roles and responsibilities, including a clear sense of one’s role within the leadership decision-making hierarchy and governance framework, are key. Recently, several cases where trustees have been accused of crossing the line into management and interfering with operations have come to light. Trustees who attempt to make hiring and firing decisions, introduce conflicts of interest or overstep their strategic role elsewhere, for example, potentially cause a division that will make implementing any initiatives much more difficult and can even result in legal action. Don’t let this happen at your institution! Perception is reality. So whether any such actions are made with the best of intentions, once there is a perceived conflict, there is a risk of disruption and failure of executing agreed upon initiatives.

Community college leaders and board members have several audit and risk management frameworks at their fingertips to help them focus, evaluate and manage their strategy and related risks, one being enterprise risk management (ERM). As previously stated, the risk of not being fiscally viable into the future is a key concern of senior leaders and board members. Therefore, these decision-makers are wise to consider how a regular, consistent approach to assessing all top risks, can allow them to oversee risks and make key mitigation and management-related decisions in a timely and strategically aligned manner.   

In the ERM relationship, leadership’s primary responsibility is to establish and implement ERM at the institution, including identifying risks and risk owners, and to oversee risk areas and mitigation plans. The board serves to provide oversight, approve the ERM process and provide feedback to leadership on risk mitigation and its alignment to strategy.

An effective and successful ERM program can be implemented successfully at the community college level by following the steps below:

  • Set the strategy and risk management tone: ERM aims to identify risks that could impede the success of an institution’s strategic objectives. When leadership and the board demonstrate their commitment to managing risks that could get in the way of achieving strategic outcomes, that tone flows down through the organization and encourages buy-in across the institution
  • Identify risks: Once the strategic objectives of the organization have been established, leadership can begin to identify risks that may pose potential roadblocks or challenges. By aligning strategy with risk identification, risks can be readily tied back to support the institutional objective of realizing their goals
  • Prioritize risks: The higher education risk universe is vast. The risk identification process can detect many more risks than an institution can thoughtfully manage. Therefore, the prioritization of risk focus is key
  • Develop a risk response/mitigation plan: Once leadership has identified and prioritized their key risks, they need to evaluate whether risk response and/or mitigation plans are in place to prevent or respond to the risk, should and adverse event occur
  • Monitor risks and plans and communicate: The last step in the initial ERM process includes monitoring risks and communicating back to leadership and the board on the status of mitigation plans, adverse events, KPIs and other trends that indicate impact to the institution. Many institutions regularly report on ERM to the audit and finance committees of the board of trustees

To address fiscal resiliency as a top strategic risk, the ERM framework can help ensure that there are risk management activities and ongoing assessment and discussion among all leaders about specific actions, threats and opportunities to manage that specific risk in place. In practice, this could look like regular discussions of fiscal or operational risks (e.g., enrollment decline, changes in net tuition, increases in variable expenses due to pandemic requirements, loss of academic program accreditation) and involve a review of dashboards with defined KPIs as indicators of the need for risk mitigation action or evidence of successful performance. It also might involve the board directing changes in budget allocation or debt management policies to better align fiscal management behaviors with accepted level of risk tolerance. Additionally, the framework should establish regular accountability points for both the board and leadership through regular reporting, periodic auditing and cross-function (management and board committee) discussion of enterprise-wide impacts. The benefit is not the ERM framework itself, but the strategic discussions and decisions that come. For example, a shift in recommended action relative to a capital project, third-party partnership or new academic program initiative may result based on the comprehensive, consistent and collaborative conversations driven by risk management frameworks.

Internal audit as a fiscal resiliency tool

The board and management can also leverage the internal audit (IA) function as a key fiscal resiliency tool and to manage risk, assessing the processes and controls in place to mitigate risks that could impede the success of strategy. IA, while designed to be an independent and objective function within the institution, can serve as a trusted ally and strategic advisory partner by supporting the risk monitoring effort of the ERM program.

IA can work with risk managers and owners to evaluate the effectiveness of risk mitigation plans around risks impacting community college fiscal resiliency, including declining enrollment, student retention and persistence, holistic student support and frameworks for course delivery. IA can assess the effectiveness of internal controls, identify gaps that could lead to control breakdowns, adverse events or the institution’s inability to effectively respond to risks and make recommendations to address identified gaps.

For example, internal audit may include the following audits or advisory reviews in its annual audit plan specific to fiscal resiliency. IA’s work in the following areas can help ensure that risk owners, leadership and the board are on the same page in driving successful change:

Fiscal and institutional performance audit
  • Determine the presence of a consistent and effective method of reporting fiscal position to the board (e.g., reports, dashboard, etc.)
  • Assess and confirm that KPIs align with key drivers of desired outcomes (e.g., if retention rates are a KPI, student support spending trends and initiative results [both quantitative and qualitative] should be part of the information audited)
  • Perform testing procedures to verify accuracy of data governance, figures reported and sources of fiscal position information
  • Evaluate the level of effort to prepare report or dashboard
Strategic budgeting/fiscal resiliency audit 
  • Assess whether the institution has an effective fiscal resiliency oversight framework
  • Review the clarity of and adherence to financial planning/budgeting and resource allocation policies and procedures
  • Assess budget development and monitoring practices for foundational components of strategic design and execution adherence
  • Evaluate for effective, consistent and accurate method of reporting fiscal position and performance in comparison to budget to the board (e.g., reports, dashboard, etc.)
  • Review and assess fiscal decision-making and budgetary approval frameworks and governance structure
  • Perform testing procedures to verify the accuracy of data governance, figures reported and sources of fiscal position information

As an independent function, IA reports directly to the board of the institution, typically to a designated audit committee. Boards, in their capacity as strategic and fiduciary overseers, are responsible for ensuring that institutions have effective internal controls to manage institutional resources. IA and the board are well-positioned to work together to assess and oversee fiscal resiliency risk and hold management accountable for addressing identified gaps and implementing the processes and controls the institution needs to manage those risks.

Conclusion

Given the increasingly challenging higher education environment – and the significant complexities involved in operating a student-focused and fiscally viable institution – strategically aligned board and management leadership with proactive risk management is essential for community college resiliency. All board members should be asking if the institution has clarity and alignment regarding the risks faced, and more importantly, has the required governance framework (including a robust internal audit program) to regularly assess and address issues that could get in the way of student or institutional success.

For more information or to learn how Baker Tilly’s higher education specialists can help your institution manage risk and achieve fiscal resiliency, contact our team.

Christine M. Smith
Managing Director
Adrienne Larmett
Principal
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