The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Commonweal­th U not a solution

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Once upon a time in Pennsylvan­ia, every town of a certain size or importance seemed to have its own college.

Many of these schools were started in the early half of the 19th century, when traveling 30 miles was a long haul. More schools and closer schools meant more opportunit­y.

They helped develop towns into cities and farming communitie­s into educationa­l centers. The colleges nurtured our businesses and were a significan­t part of the growth of Pennsylvan­ia. Today, the state ranks 10th in the nation in the number of degrees awarded annually.

Unfortunat­ely, all of those graduates don’t stay. The state also is known for its “brain drain” — people who go to school but leave for greener, better-paid pastures.

State-related universiti­es such as Pitt and Penn State have some of the highest public school tuition in the country. Even the smaller schools — many of the ones that used to be those local colleges but were knitted together into the Pennsylvan­ia State System of Higher Education — have costs that translate to huge student loan debt and can demand higher salaries.

In 2021, the universiti­es in California, Clarion and Edinboro announced they would take on the new name Pennsylvan­ia Western University, with campuses that identify their old names including PennWest California and PennWest Clarion.

But this week, the other three in the northeast made an announceme­nt that resists that. They will be the Commonweal­th University of Pennsylvan­ia, but you won’t ever know that. They will continue to go by Bloomsburg University, Lock Haven University and Mansfield University, using the old logos and colors of each.

This does not solve the state system’s problem. It cuts it into chunks. Instead of one state organizati­on that tries to manage 14 schools trying to do their own thing, the Commonweal­th University becomes a microcosm of it with multiple campuses struggling to maintain their identities.

To get a happily ever after ending, the state system and the Commonweal­th University should follow PennWest’s example and fuse one identity while still serving their local communitie­s.

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