Originally posted by boatcapt
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PASSHE Institutions Merging
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Originally posted by Fightingscot82 View Post
Not any of the six campuses involved. All except Indiana are in small remote towns, and then Indiana County isn't exactly in a growth pattern. Nobody is buying dorms. The ripple effects of cutting 75 jobs in a small town is immediately.
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At this level, a $1 million budget deficit in athletics is purely measured against budgeted expenses. They don't have revenue going against salary and operations. So a profit/loss analysis doesn't consider the tuition revenue the department directly generates. Nearly all athletes wouldn't be attending if not for their roster spot.
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Originally posted by boatcapt View Post
So keeping the campuses fully open and fully staffed is a "make work" project for the local communities?
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Originally posted by Fightingscot82 View Post
Of course not. But these schools are indeed major economic engines so a reduction in staff or students hurts right away. Reducing both students and staff at the same time when you cut athletics hurts the university and the town together. It's likely that the tuition losses from such a cut outweighs the operational burden.
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Originally posted by CALUPA69 View Post
For my own information, in a town like Clarion or Indiana versus California or Slippery Rock, how much economic impact does being the county seat have versus being a college town. I know they could roll it up in the borough if Cal ever closed.
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Originally posted by Fightingscot82 View Post
Of course not. But these schools are indeed major economic engines so a reduction in staff or students hurts right away. Reducing both students and staff at the same time when you cut athletics hurts the university and the town together. It's likely that the tuition losses from such a cut outweighs the operational burden.
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Originally posted by boatcapt View Post
Seems like the student body is self reducing without the permission of thePASSHE. Question is will back of house consolidations and staff attrition be enough to stem that tide OR would it be better to get ahead of the problem and build another beach head at 8 to 10 schools? Are the current schools worth defending ala the Magenou Line in WW2? French thought so...didnt work out so well.
Every school is shedding faculty and staff right now. I don't know numbers, but dozens of experienced faculty and staff at Edinboro took the system early retirement incentive over the summer. Lots of people making >$100k. That helps a lot. I've also heard there are already some changes coming to the "collaboration" model. Mansfield reported a big jump in enrollment - up almost 10% over the last two years. That's big. For them, that's about $5 million in additional revenue after just trimming personnel expenses.
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Originally posted by Fightingscot82 View Post
Kind of. I believe with some noteworthy tuition program the schools can survive. I call it the "Aldi principle". The prices are so low that many people question the validity. Eventually, 'typical' people realize its just as good or close enough to the name brand commodity that they have a hard time rationalizing paying more for the household name. That's the challenge - the state has allowed the cost of attendance to creep up into the range of the Pitt and Penn State outlet stores and regional private schools figured out how to manage running their schools while discounting sticker price by 50-60% like they're a furniture store.
Every school is shedding faculty and staff right now. I don't know numbers, but dozens of experienced faculty and staff at Edinboro took the system early retirement incentive over the summer. Lots of people making >$100k. That helps a lot. I've also heard there are already some changes coming to the "collaboration" model. Mansfield reported a big jump in enrollment - up almost 10% over the last two years. That's big. For them, that's about $5 million in additional revenue after just trimming personnel expenses.
The bottom line is there are too many colleges competing for too few students. The market is going to correct itself one way or the other.
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Originally posted by boatcapt View Post
Bottom line is that there is a shrinking customer base and too much competition. When a business finds itself in a situation like this, there really only 2 ways to go. Either make yourself elite and charge fewer customers more money (the Cadillac effect) or you cut overhead and prices to the bone and go for volume (the Crazy Eddie effect). Probably the worst thing you can do is to try and be in the middle...not quite elite and not cheap.
The bottom line is there are too many colleges competing for too few students. The market is going to correct itself one way or the other.
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Originally posted by ironmaniup View Post
I don't agree, a better analogy is the restaurant business. Students follow trends, as well as the cost, so there is a sweet spot for many different status/cost ratios. Universities can operate effectively with 1000-2000 students, if staff is managed properly so most schools have a way to go before they will fold.Question is, will the morale be high enough to do anything credible after they cut 10% of the youngest and most energetic faculty ? With PASSHE, there is also the question of state funding - who knows where that will go with Covid expenses coming due the next few years. Chancellor Dan wants to target Adult learning, and will focus on providing certification of skill stacks instead of degrees for people. It does cut out the gen eds that non-traditional students resent taking ( for good reason), But if this works is a 5-10 year kind of question. .
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This conversation has been going on for sometime, at least back to 2016-2017 when Mansfield was sharing back-end services with Bloomsburg. As someone said about the push for potential changes, now is not the time to let a crisis go to waste.
https://www.insidehighered.com/news/...ight-future-be
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