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WKU president urges state funding for research, Gatton Academy, Mesonet and a $350M student housing P3
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Summary
Western Kentucky University President Timothy Caboni told the House Budget Review Subcommittee WKU seeks a 4.5% base-appropriation increase, expansion of the performance pool, continued Mesonet funding, $2M per year for the Gatton Academy and authorization for a multiyear Elevate WKU student-housing public–private partnership totaling hundreds of millions.
Timothy Caboni, president of Western Kentucky University, told the House Budget Review Subcommittee on postsecondary education that WKU has reached record student-success milestones and is seeking state budget changes and capital authorizations to sustain research, academic programs and student housing.
Caboni told the panel WKU posted its highest-ever graduation rate (59.1%), awarded 4,688 degrees in 2024–25 and raised first-to-second-year retention to 79.4%. He said the university’s FY26 budget is structurally balanced "without the use of one-time cash reserves," and that recent research expenditures are at their highest level since data collection began in 2010.
Caboni said the postsecondary budget request includes a 4.5% increase in base appropriations for each public university in each year of the biennium and asked for a larger performance funding pool, outlining a requested $30 million increase in year one and $515 million in year two. "The model must evolve if it truly is going to support, encourage, and reward student success," he said.
He credited the passage of Senate Bill 77 with creating a pathway for WKU to offer its first PhD program in data sciences beginning in 2027 and said expanding doctoral offerings would help WKU compete for federal and private research funding.
On financial pressures, Caboni said tuition waivers are effectively unfunded mandates and that WKU spent nearly $4.7 million on mandated tuition waivers in fiscal year 2025 — an increase of about 40% since fiscal year 2021. He thanked Representative Tipton for sponsoring House Bill 497, which Caboni said would require FAFSA completion and make the tuition waiver last-dollar to maximize federal grant funds.
Caboni also requested additional targeted funding: an extra $2 million in each year of the biennium for the
