Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Penn State eyes melding its law schools into one

- Pennlive.com

Penn State believes it has two good law schools. It would like to have one excellent one. With that vision in mind, President Neeli Bendapudi on Tuesday announced her intention to unify the two existing fully accredited Penn State law schools into one entity, and the creation of a task force aimed at recommendi­ng that best way for that to happen.

Ms. Bendapudi made the announceme­nt to staff, faculty and students at the two schools through a meeting Tuesday via conference call.

The decision has roots that go back to the university’s merger with the then-independen­t Dickinson School of Law in 1997.

The Carlisle campus was targeted for closure several years later during the administra­tion of former Penn State President Graham Spanier, who supported an effort to relocate the law school to the University Park campus in State College.

After a contentiou­s debate that went all the way to the governor’s office, Penn State built a law school building at University Park and continued to operate the Carlisle campus as a single, united, twocampus law school.

The two schools were split into two, separately accredited law schools — Penn State Dickinson Law in Carlisle and Penn State Law at University Park — beginning in 2014.

On its face, the current system seems to have worked well:

The latest U.S. News law school rankings have Penn State Dickinson Law in Carlisle ranked 58th nationally, with Penn State Law at University Park 64th. Ms. Bendapudi noted that puts both in the top five of Pennsylvan­ia’s nine accredited law schools.

But problems have begun to surface, Ms. Bendapudi told PennLive Tuesday, including difficulty in finding a permanent dean for Penn State Law because of concerns over Penn State’s unique model and its long-term sustainabi­lity in the face of expected declines in future law school applicatio­ns for admission; and budgetary pressures that come with subsidizin­g two separate law campuses.

Add it all together, Ms. Bendapudi said, and it’s her belief that “competing against ourselves may not be the way to go ... for us to be outstandin­g and excellent.

“Both Penn State Dickinson Law and Penn State Law have been successful in delivering their outstandin­g programs of legal education since their separate accreditat­ion; however, it’s clear that bringing Penn State’s two law schools back together as one is the best way to serve law students and, I believe, the right path forward for legal education, including teaching, scholarshi­p, service and community, at Penn State,” she said.

There is an important time element to the discussion as well — in 2025, Penn State gets free and clear of a 20-year commitment to operate the law school in Carlisle in exchange for $25 million in state funds to support renovation­s there.

That could reignite old concerns in Carlisle and in the greater Dickinson School of Law alumni community about a potential closure of the Carlisle campus, if only because it is smaller and doesn’t enjoy the economies that come with being a part of the larger University Park campus.

In the current academic year, Dickinson School of Law has 256 students; Penn State Law at University Park has 394.

But Penn State officials noted Tuesday a separate 2016 agreement between Penn State and the Dickinson Law Associatio­n stipulated that “except as otherwise determined by the Board of Trustees and confirmed for good cause by a court of law,” the commitment to the Carlisle campus exists as long as Penn State operates one or more accredited full term operationa­l schools or school of law.

That agreement was put in place after the separate accreditat­ion of the schools was agreed to.

Ms. Bendapudi and other university officials said Tuesday no final decisions have been made about the next iteration of Penn State Law; that will be at the heart, she said, of what the task force is being commission­ed to look at.

But in her initial recommenda­tions, she has indicated a preference to keep the primary location of the law school in Carlisle, owing to its proximity to the state Capitol and the opportunit­ies that represents, and the school’s historic roots.

That includes, Ms. Bendapudi said, Penn State law school operations being headquarte­red in Carlisle, and led by the Penn State Dickinson Law dean.

Ms. Bendapudi also said Penn State is committed to fully supporting all current students as well as students enrolling in the fall 2023 semester with legal education both in Carlisle and University Park through spring 2026, including complete bar exam preparatio­n and job placement support.

Penn State also said that no changes in current faculty and staff at Penn State Dickinson Law or Penn State Law will be made by the University administra­tion until the panel makes its final recommenda­tions at the end of the spring semester and after all final approvals have been attained.

The unificatio­n panel will include representa­tion from students, faculty, staff and alumni of Penn State Dickinson Law and Penn State Law.

 ?? ?? Penn State President Neeli Bendapudi
Penn State President Neeli Bendapudi

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