| Benson thanks CU employees while warning of further tough times
    University of Colorado President Bruce D. Benson today lauded  employees for "pulling together as a team" in the face of budget challenges,  but warned of more difficult times ahead.
      |  Glenn J. Asakawa/University of Colorado
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      | CU President Bruce D. Benson
 |  Benson spoke to system administration employees in Boulder  this morning at the Grusin Music Hall for the president's annual convocation  address. He will speak to system employees in Denver at 7:30 a.m. Friday at 1770 Sherman St. "It's a team effort across the campuses and with central  administration, and I can't tell you how much I appreciate what you do," Benson  said. "I know how hard people are working. We have all made a major commitment  to our students and the state. "We've been around for 133 years, and our job is to sustain  and enhance this great university." He cited several examples of faculty and staff pulling  together, including the phased implementation of the Integrated Student  Information System project by staff in University Information Systems, Employee  Learning and Development's creation of specialized online training courses and  the electronic imaging project in Payroll and Benefits Services that is  converting 1.7 million pages to electronic files. Benson said teamwork is particularly important in light of  news this week that the state budget continues to head south. Gov. Bill Ritter on  Monday announced that recent revenue estimates show the state is short an  additional $240 million in the current fiscal year. Higher education's portion  of the shortfall has yet to be determined."The state is pretty broke and it's only going to get  worse," Benson said. "These are really troubling numbers."
  In response, the president said CU would take a  three-pronged approach to balancing its budget: improve revenues, enhance  efficiencies and make strategic cuts. A key facet of the first two strategies will be to work with the governor and  legislature in the upcoming session of the Colorado General Assembly on  legislation that will free CU and other higher education institutions from  onerous regulation in areas such as purchasing, financial aid and tuition  setting. Benson said the university has "done a really good job  operating with the small amount of funding the state gives us." Yet he also  said the university cannot continue on its current path, where some 40 percent  of state funding has been cut over the past two budget years. 
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