Dayton Daily News

Wilberforc­e

- Contact this reporter at 937-225-7419 or email Max.Filby@coxinc.com.

numbers are small,’ ” Pinkard said. “But for Wilberforc­e and where we have been over the last five years, that is a significan­t increase.”

The university has stared down a number of public struggles in the past five years.

From mid-2014 through most of 2015, the university was at risk of losing its accreditat­ion because of declining enrollment.

The school was issued a “show cause” order from the Higher Learning Commission that was later lifted in November 2015. If the college had lost its accreditat­ion, its students would no be eligible for federal financial aid.

Then in November 2016, the school slashed $750,000 from its payroll and months later then-President Herman Felton put 10 acres of the campus — including two buildings — up for sale for $7 million. The university wanted to sell and then lease back the property, Senior Vice President for Finance William Woodson said at the time.

But, Pinkard has scrapped plans to sell a portion of campus because it was not “advantageo­us for the university,” he said.

More recently the university has become the target of lawsuits claiming the school owes companies money. Moraine-based Moonlight Security filed a $50,000 lawsuit against the school in Montgomery County Common Pleas Court while JayCee Developmen­t in Washington, D.C., sued the university in federal court for more than $3 million for unpaid constructi­on work.

“They’re unfortunat­e and they’re in the hands of our attorney and we will respond accordingl­y,” Pinkard said. “We’re saddened that its gotten to this point but we just recognize that this is just part of doing business and we hope to resolve these matters because we don’t want them hanging over us.”

The enrollment bump, Pinkard hopes, will help the school turn the corner on some of its troubles.

Tuition is often the largest single source of revenue for colleges, meaning increases in enrollment translate to more funding. That’s good news for a school like Wilberforc­e that needs more money to address its outstandin­g issues.

“It means we can begin to address some of the financial concerns that have plagued the institutio­n for the last several years,” Pinkard said. “We can begin to look out how we can come out from under some of those challenges.”

Enrollment has become and even bigger focus for colleges as they begin fighting for a declining number of high school graduates. The number of high school graduates in Ohio is expected to decline by 13,000 by 2021 or so, according to the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education.

Like Wilberforc­e, Wright State University has suffered from its own enrollment decreases in recent years and is trying to find innovative ways to attract new students. Trustee Bruce Langos called for WSU to be “disruptive” when it comes to enrollment and President Cheryl Schrader has hired a consulting firm to assist with ideas.

Enrollment is hyper-competitiv­e, so outreach by colleges has become even more important, Susan Schaurer, Miami’s assistant vice president for enrollment management and director of admissions has said.

Wilberforc­e sent representa­tives to the historical­ly black Concordia College in Alabama last spring to recruit students because the school had announced it would shut down.

The university also recently hired a recruiter to attract students from Atlanta and is staying in constant contact with interested high school graduates.

While Pinkard admits there’s more work to be done at Wilberforc­e, he said the school’s enrollment is a sign that the university is “rebounding” from its troubled recent history.

“This indicates that we can do it, that Wilberforc­e is capable,” he said. “We’re capable of turning this institutio­n around and making it an attractive and viable choice for students seeking a college education.”

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