Media releases

  • Brock University returns to balanced budget

    MEDIA RELEASE: 29 May 2017 – R00102

    For the first time in a decade, Brock University is starting a new fiscal year with a balanced budget plan in which expenses are met by revenues.

    Earlier this month the University’s Board of Trustees approved a 2017-18 financial plan that comes in at just under $324 million. Brock’s fiscal year runs from May 1 to April 30.

    Being one of the area’s biggest employers, two-thirds of Brock’s expenses — more than $213.3 million — are wages and benefits. Brock has 1,570 full-time and 1,100 part-time employees, and in a typical year, can employ 4,000 temporary contract staff. The University further impacts the Niagara economy through goods or services purchased from local businesses, spending more than $23 million locally during fiscal 2016-17.

    On the income side of the new budget, about 70 per cent of revenues will come through tuition, student fees and other sources such as parking, facility rentals and conferences. The Ontario government’s operating grant this year will come to $96.3 million, or about 30 per cent of budgeted revenues.

    In terms of dollars per student, Brock has received the lowest provincial grant funding of any Ontario university, though Brock officials are hopeful this discrepancy will be addressed later this year when the Province unveils a new funding formula for universities.

    While the budget calls for completing the year with no deficit, that result is dependent upon a significant factor: Brock must generate an additional $3 million by exceeding the base enrolment forecast by three per cent, either through greater student retention or new student recruitment or a combination of both. This means increasing the headcount by between 255 and 390 students (depending on the mix of international and domestic students), in an era when Ontario universities are competing to grow domestic undergraduate enrolment from a shrinking pool of applicants.

    Brian Hutchings, Vice-President Administration, said the scenario is not without challenges, but he feels momentum is on the University’s side, given Brock’s emerging reputation and growing sense of itself.

    “For several years Brock employees have worked hard to tackle deficits and help the University regain control of its future,” said Hutchings.

    “It hasn’t been easy, hasn’t been painless and we are not yet out of the woods. But the effort has had a unifying effect. There’s a sense of confidence and determination around campus that we will continue to make Brock a destination for more and more people.”

    For more details and breakouts for Brock’s 2017-18 budget, see the full report.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:
     
    * Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

    Brock University Marketing and Communications has a full-service studio where we can provide high definition video and broadcast-quality audio.

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Brock teaches the business of lemonade to future entrepreneurs

    MEDIA ADVISORY: 29 May 2017 – R00101

    A freshly squeezed business idea from Brock University’s Goodman School of Business will help teach Niagara’s future entrepreneurs what it takes to turn lemons into lemonade.

    Goodman Lemonade is leading a Grade 4 class at Power Glen Public School through the process of building a for-profit business. After learning some entrepreneurship basics from Goodman student leaders, the Power Glen students have been planning and designing lemonade stands that will be set up at the Brock University Farmers Market from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. on Thursday, June 1 in Jubilee Court.

    “This is a novel way for our students to share their business knowledge with the next generation of leaders and it’s a great chance for Power Glen students to gain entrepreneurial skills through experiential learning,” says Goodman School of Business Interim Dean Barry Wright.

    Goodman Lemonade, which is supported by both the Goodman Student Engagement Office and BioLinc, Brock’s business incubator run by Goodman, is designed to teach the students how much planning goes into a one-day sale.

    With a maximum budget provided by the Goodman School of Business, the young students have spent the last few weeks carefully crafting their business strategies and making decisions on everything from the type of lemonade being served to the garnishes and colourful decorations adjourning their stands.

    Eight different lemonade stands will be on display at the Farmers Market Thursday as teams of four students from Jennifer Millin’s Grade 4 class compete for sales from Brock staff and faculty attending the weekly outdoor market.

    The team with the highest profit at the end of the sale will earn the chance to choose what their class will purchase collectively with the total profits.

    The project has students excitedly creating posters, making business decisions and calculating expenses while they count down the time to market day, says Millin.

    “We can’t wait until we can come to Brock University and put all of our entrepreneurial skills to good use,” she says.

    What: Goodman Lemonade
    Who: Power Glen Public School – Jennifer Millin’s Grade 4 students
    When: Thursday, June 1, 11:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.
    Where: Jubilee Court, Brock University (follow signs for Brock Farmers Market)
     

    Members of the media are invited to attend and interview opportunities prior to or following the event can be arranged.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

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    Categories: Media releases