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Sub-prime college
- Subject: Sub-prime college
- Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2007 09:23:24 -0800
To: Retort
Via: AG
On the Brink of Bankruptcy
Elizabeth Redden
November 29, 2007
Facing a 41 percent downturn in enrollment after a tumultuous summer, New
College of California is considering filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and,
as of this spring, suspending programs and instituting moratoriums on
admissions - although the college's spokesman stressed that a recent visit
from the accrediting agency went well, and that New College is not going out
of business.
Questions about final decisions on the spring semester at New College -
where things fell apart after the Western Association of Schools and
Colleges placed it on probation in July - are still in the air. Will the
college file for Chapter 11, which would allow it to continue to operate, as
a strategy to gain needed space from financial creditors during a massive
reorganization? Will it admit any new students at all in the spring, or
admit students only to certain programs? To what extent will faculty face
layoffs or cutbacks in duties?
Answers are expected within weeks. New College should be hiring a new
president as of December 1, its spokesman, Adam Cornford, said. (Cornford is
also a veteran faculty member who co-coordinates a bachelor's degree program
in humanities.) An interim leader has been in place since President Martin
Hamilton stepped down this summer following a WASC special investigation not
only into the college's fiscal instability and shoddy record keeping, but
also allegations that Hamilton had intervened to change the grades of an
international student he (wrongly) believed to be a potential million dollar
donor.
The progressive California college, founded in 1971 and "committed to
education in support of a just, sacred, and sustainable world," is in
trouble on several fronts. In addition to suffering a dramatic drop in
enrollment this fall to fewer than 500 students, New College has not been
able to access much of its students' federal aid. Facing heightened
monitoring from the U.S. Department of Education, registrar office staff and
trained faculty volunteers must clean up each student record individually
before they can submit them to the government for financial aid purposes. So
far, they've sent a batch of 70 files in, and another 140 are almost ready
to go. "We're going through every single transcript for people who are still
students in the college and reviewing them and cleaning them all up, and it'
s taking a long time," said Cornford. "There was inconsistency in course
numbering from one registrar to the next, and cases of incorrect data
registry."
Working under the assumption that they don't get any more cash from the
Education Department, New College needs a minimum of an extra $1 million in
the bank to meet the department's reserve fund requirement, and between $1
million and $2 million to cover operating expenditures and liabilities.
One option on the table is to cease new enrollments entirely for the spring
to give the college extra time to reorganize for the fall, Cornford said.
However, the more likely alternative is that certain programs will stop
accepting new students this spring while others will not (a review of
programs is currently under way). Given the drop in enrollment, the
student-faculty ratio is hugely distorted now, Cornford said. New College
has about 60 core faculty members and about 70 adjuncts, and faculty are
working on a plan to minimize layoffs, Cornford said, with the goal that
many will voluntarily scale back from full- to three quarters-time, for
instance.
At the same time, Cornford - and several faculty members contacted -
expressed optimism about a recent accreditation visit and enthusiasm for the
progress that has been made in such a short time. WASC is expected to make a
decision on the college's accreditation in February.
"The housecleaning that's going on is phenomenal, but also has revealed to
us the depth of the problems that the previous administration allowed to
accumulate," Cornford said. "The amazing thing is that people have hung in."
"It's truly amazing that in a school where there was a paycheck that was two
weeks late, and many of the students have not received financial aid,
everyone kept coming to classes and doing their work. It is remarkable the
degree to which we've been able to hold this place together under the
conditions."
"I feel that New College has definitely moved in the right direction," said
Melissa Patterson, a core faculty member and instructor in New College's
consciousness, healing and ecology concentration. "There has been a
tremendous shift in the foundation of the college, in how it's run. My main
concerns right now are the financial pieces that are being affected, from
the low enrollment as well as from the Department of Education actions that
are happening."
"What I can say is from my perspective, there are some very good efforts to
try to put the college back on track but it's a real uphill battle," added
Richard Heinberg, a core faculty member in the culture, ecology and
sustainable community program. "The immediate problem is that all of the
very, very rapid changes at the school that have been necessitated by the
WASC report and so on have dramatically reduced enrollment and have resulted
in some bad publicity for the college, which reduces the likelihood of
future enrollment."
"In many respects, I think the changes that are happening right now are very
good - the greater involvement of faculty, the leaving of the previous
administration and their temporary replacement with a plan for permanent
replacement, and so on. All of those are very good things. But meanwhile we'
ve gotta have students."
Reached on his cell phone Wednesday, one former student leader who formed an
"Interim Independent Student Council" amid the turmoil this summer could not
be found on campus, but instead at work in technology support at Google. On
a leave of absence because of the uncertain climate at New College, he
expects to withdraw from his master's program. "At this point I'm not
confident that I'll get the support I need to finish my thesis," said Jeremy
Zimmer.
"And I'm on a different career path now."
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