The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Paine College: Tiny Augusta school looking for a lifeline

Enrollment has plunged amid fight to keep accreditat­ion; new president exudes optimism.

- By Eric Stirgus estirgus@ajc.com Paine continued on A17

— Paine College’s AUGUSTA new president is a religious man who’s attempting a Hail Mary to keep his school afloat.

Jerry Hardee’s plan includes an unusual recruiting tool: freshmen pay nothing for room and board. Hardee also wants to build new dorms for 750 students, although he said Paine’s enrollment is 425.

“It’s a chance, but it’s a good chance on my part,” Hardee, 79, said in an interview.

Paine College, just a few miles from Augusta National Golf Club, is in peril. Enrollment has declined by more than 50 percent since 2010. Its six-year graduation rate is 22 percent, according to federal data, barely one-third the national average for all colleges. It’s in a yearlong legal battle with the Southern Associatio­n of Colleges and Schools to keep its accreditat­ion that caused enrollment to dive. Paine had 922 students when SACS put the college on probation in 2014.

Paine administra­tors and student leaders, though, tell an upbeat story. They say the worst of Paine’s financial troubles are past; it has strong academics and note many graduates have carved out successful careers, such as DeKalb County CEO Michael Thurmond.

“From an aesthetic viewpoint,

you might not think it’s the best school ... but I believe we’re one of the best HBCUs in the country, period,” said Terrance Rodgers, 23, a senior.

Said Thurmond, its board chairman: “I have faith that Paine College will survive.”

Paine, despite its challenges, is still graduating students. Its students mentor high school students. Paine educates much of the region’s black middle class.

Hardee, who came out of retirement, said it’s critical for places like Paine to survive to help low-income students desiring a chance to better themselves with a college degree. Nearly 90 percent of its students receive federal student loans, which is about twice the national average.

“You need HBCUs because they provide opportunit­ies for a lot of people who cannot afford to go to college,” he said.

Founded in 1882, Paine is one of nine accredited HBCUs in Georgia. It was founded by Methodist church leaders, black and white, with donations — including pennies from former slaves. Paine had a high school in its early days that, for decades, was the only such school for black students in Augusta.

Paine sits quietly near a busy stretch of town, close by the Augusta University Medical Center. The 65-acre campus consists primarily of red brick dorms — some largely empty — office buildings and a cavernous chapel with a cream-colored walls and purple cushioned pews (the school colors) where students gather once a week for an assembly.

The program at one assembly included a presentati­on on the Harlem Renaissanc­e and an interpreta­tive dance that drew loud cheers from the 200 or so students there. Hardee invited visitors to drop in on any classrooms that afternoon. But some classes had just a handful of students.

Paine’s current problems, Hardee and others say, began after the Obama administra­tion tightened regulation­s to get loans under the PLUS program in 2011. Enrollment tumbled, he said.

Some students held a protest in 2012, complainin­g of financial aid checks that bounced and of mold and leaks in their dorms. Paine’s net assets were in the red four consecutiv­e years, SACS said. And court records show the college had a $10 million shortfall in 2014.

Paine admits some wounds were self-inflicted. “Questionab­le financial decisions were made by prior administra­tions. As a result, the college’s financial condition has been severely compromise­d,”

it said on its website. One such decision, many agree, was a failed attempt to restart its football program. Paine also delayed making cutbacks other colleges had done during the Great Recession.

The Southern Associatio­n of Colleges and Schools pulled Paine’s accreditat­ion in September 2016, about the worst thing that can happen to a college. Unaccredit­ed schools aren’t eligible for federal student aid, and degrees conferred may carry no weight with employers or graduate schools. Paine obtained an injunction to stop SACS from revoking accreditat­ion, saying the agency did not accept audited statements that show the college was in the black. Hardee said he’s working on a settlement with SACS.

Thurmond, like many Paine students, was the first in his family to attend college and believes it’s his duty to help the school at this critical juncture. Thurmond’s mother wanted him to become a minister, so he majored in philosophy and religion. He initially worked as a dishwasher in the school cafeteria to pay his tuition.

He credits Paine, where he ultimately became the student body president and editor of the campus newspaper, with giving him, the son of a sharecropp­er, self-confidence.

When SACS came calling in 2016, Thurmond reached out to the man who defeated him in the 2010 U.S. Senate race for help, Johnny Isakson, because of the senator’s connection­s in Washington and also his connection­s to Paine. Isakson spoke at a Paine commenceme­nt. That September, Thurmond, Isakson and about 30 prominent business and political leaders met to discuss what they could do for Paine. Several offered donations that day.

Thurmond’s role has included legal advice and mentoring students like Paine senior Deonte’ Moses.

Moses left Paine in 2015, recruited to play basketball at another college, but he returned the following semester. He’s started a campus organizati­on called “Devoted Disciples” that’s conducted spiritual outreach on campus.

“Our institutio­n lies in the students’ hands . ... You can’t just leave,” said Moses, 24.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/ AJC ?? Founded in 1882, Paine is one of nine accredited HBCUs in Georgia. It was founded by Methodist church leaders, black and white, with donations, including pennies from former slaves.
CURTIS COMPTON/ AJC Founded in 1882, Paine is one of nine accredited HBCUs in Georgia. It was founded by Methodist church leaders, black and white, with donations, including pennies from former slaves.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON PHOTOS / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Chellita Carlyle buys a Straight Outta Paine shirt during a college spirit event on the campus at Paine College in Augusta recently.
CURTIS COMPTON PHOTOS / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Chellita Carlyle buys a Straight Outta Paine shirt during a college spirit event on the campus at Paine College in Augusta recently.

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