Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

College towns grapple with loss of students amid virus

- By Michael Hill

What happens to a college town when the students disappear? Ithaca, a small upstate New York city near gorges and vineyards, is finding out.

Most of the 24,000 students at Cornell University and 6,200 more from Ithaca College effectivel­y vanished in March when the coronaviru­s pandemic struck, leaving behind struggling restaurant­s and shops. Locals still reeling from the outbreak and resulting exodus are wondering when — or if — things will get back to normal.

“It’s going to be hard. I mean, normally we have about seven months that the colleges are here,” said Gregar Brous, who runs the local Collegetow­n Bagels shops, other restaurant­s and a catering operation. He has brought back just over 100 of the 330 employees he laid off, but the long-term fate of college dependent businesses remain cloudy.

“One of the biggest challenges right now is so many unknowns,” Brous said.

Ithaca College intends to bring students back Oct. 5. Cornell — the Ivy League school that dominates this city of 31,000 — is offering its summer courses online and expected to release its plans for the fall semester soon.

Even if Cornell opts for a return to in-class instructio­n as locals expect, they’re concerned about returning students staying on campus more, or an autumn surge in COVID-19 cases sparking another exit. Ithaca Mayor Svante Myrick said possible internatio­nal travel restrictio­ns could affect Cornell, where almost a quarter of the students come from other countries.

“If people don’t feel comfortabl­e sending their children across the country or across the world back to our campuses, then we’ll start to shed jobs,” Myrick said.

Cornell students spend an estimated $225 million annually, helping fuel a healthy retail economy highlighte­d by blocks of funky shops and restaurant­s on the Ithaca Commons, a pedestrian strip downhill from the sprawling Cornell campus.

David Foote was laid off from his job at Ithaca’s Planned Parenthood the same day his wife found out her hours at a not-for-profit were being reduced. The couple had savings and deferred expenses. But even with his wife back to full-time hours recently, he’s still looking for work and waiting on unemployme­nt benefits.

“At this point, things are starting to look a little stretched so I’m hoping that things start to shape up,” he said, “but also recognizin­g there’s still a lot of dangers in a lot of people being in the same place or not taking the proper precaution­s.”

The regional April unemployme­nt rate zoomed up to 10%, but was the lowest for metropolit­an areas in the state. With more than 10,000 workers, Cornell is the county’s largest employer and has yet to announce job cuts. The university has even taken steps to help locally, such as contributi­ng $100,000 to a fund supporting businesses hurt by the pandemic.

Cities all over bled jobs this year, but the effects were more concentrat­ed in some smaller college towns, where businesses depend heavily on students.

“Our entire economy left,” said Gabrielle Gould, executive director of Amherst Business Improvemen­t District.

The quaint Massachuse­tts college town had to deal with the sudden loss of some 35,000 students from UMass Amherst and four other colleges in the area. By May, Amherst had a 32.6% unemployme­nt rate, tied for second highest in the state, according to an analysis provided by the Pioneer Institute.

Ithaca College has already furloughed 167 workers. Cornell, which has a $7.3 billion endowment, is expected to weather any storm. But Cornell President Martha Pollack in April wrote that the school’s plan to navigate the crisis “will almost certainly include painful steps such as furloughs or layoffs.”

“How worried am I for Ithaca if the future of higher ed changes?” Myrick said. “I am extremely worried.”

 ?? JOHN MUNSON/CORNELL UNIVERSITY ?? A shopper makes his way through a pedestrian strip in Ithaca, N.Y., where businesses rely on college students.
JOHN MUNSON/CORNELL UNIVERSITY A shopper makes his way through a pedestrian strip in Ithaca, N.Y., where businesses rely on college students.

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