The Columbus Dispatch

Wright State to begin process of cutting faculty

- Ismail Turay Jr.

Wright State University will begin laying the groundwork to reduce its faculty workforce, the school said Thursday.

The university is in the early stages of the process, so school leaders don’t know who will be laid off or how many people, President Sue Edwards said. More informatio­n won’t be available until the process plays out, she said.

Wright State sent a letter Thursday to the faculty union alerting it that the university anticipate­s the need for layoffs, which starts the process.

“It’s just basically saying that we believe that we have to go down this pathway,” Edwards said.

A committee consisting of university and union representa­tives will begin the process of determinin­g the number of people to lay off and other details between the end of November and February, she said. When the layoffs will begin depends on the group’s recommenda­tion, she said.

Affected faculty members will receive up to 18 months of notice and workforce displaceme­nt support. The university has provided similar support to employees who were previously laid off, school officials said in a letter to the campus community.

The institutio­n cut 50 positions this summer, in addition to 30 employees who agreed to retire early.

Declining enrollment and other financial hardships led to the decision to reduce the workforce.

Wright State has navigated dramatic changes within higher education while also managing the effects of the unpreceden­ted COVID-19 public health emergency, the university said in the letter.

“Certainly, this is not an easy decision for the university, and I assure everyone it is a decision we do not undertake lightly,” Edwards said.

“The university has, for many months, been actively considerin­g in good faith whether the need for faculty workforce reductions could be alleviated through normal attrition or other alternativ­es, as the (collective bargaining agreement) instructs — for example, the two previous voluntary retirement incentive packages the university offered in recent years — but the continued enrollment declines require us to act further.”

A little more than 12,000 students are enrolled at the school this fall, however, enrollment has declined by more than 30% the past five years, officials said. Declining enrollment is not unique to Wright State, as colleges across the state have been losing students the past decade.

Despite the enrollment woes, the university has managed to remain afloat financially by making cuts, including layoffs in recent years.

But the COVID-19 pandemic has added to its financial hardship.

As a result, Wright State will generate less revenue in the next couple of fiscal years, the school said during its board of trustees meeting in September.

The institutio­n is expecting revenues for the upcoming year to be about $25.6 million below this fiscal year’s actual revenues, according to documents from the meeting. Officials are also projecting a net operating deficit of $11.7 million for 2021, the document says.

Enrollment in recent years has hovered around 10,000 students. So in June, the board of trustees approved a fiscal year 2021 budget with expected revenues of $210 million, down from revenue of about $257 million.

That same month, school leaders expected a budget surplus of $1 million by the end of the current fiscal year.

However, long-term demographi­c, educationa­l and enrollment trends are not on the institutio­n’s side, Greg Sample, the university’s chief operating officer, said at the time.

Wright State would prefer not to make the cuts, but it is forced to do so in an effort keep the university financially viable, Edwards said.

“It’s just an unfortunat­e circumstan­ce, but I think it’s all about creating a university that will support the region moving forward,” she said.

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