Current:Home > ScamsStudents, faculty and staff of Vermont State University urge board to reconsider cuts -Secure Growth Academy
Students, faculty and staff of Vermont State University urge board to reconsider cuts
View
Date:2025-04-16 20:33:20
The board of the Vermont State Colleges said Monday it continues to back a plan to cut and consolidate some programs and reduce faculty at Vermont State University after hearing from faculty and students who urged it to reconsider, including student government groups who have voted no-confidence in the board and administration.
The plan calls for discontinuing 11 programs, consolidating 16 others, and eliminating 20-33 full-time faculty positions out of the current 208. It’s estimated to save $2.1 to $3.3 million after three years from the faculty reductions. Faculty have been offered buyouts.
“For the first time in recent history, Vermont State University has a smart and actionable plan to right-size course offerings and restructure administrative operations to reflect the needs of a rural, unified university with multiple campus settings,” the board said in a statement. “These changes align Vermont State University with peers and set the entire Vermont State Colleges System on a path where financial stability is within reach by Fiscal Year 2027.”
Vermont State University is comprised of the merged campuses of the former Castleton University, Northern Vermont University in Johnson and Lyndon, and Vermont Technical College in Randolph. It welcomed its first class this year. The Vermont State Colleges System has struggled financially for years.
On Monday, the board took public comment during a Zoom meeting, during which students and faculty said they were not consulted in what is best for the school.
“We believe your decision in the recent optimization vote has failed our institutions by eliminating positions within departments that are not only currently understaffed but also heavily overworked,” said Zack Durr, treasurer of the Castleton Student Government Association. “You have turned these positions simply into points of data and salaries on a page rather than real people who have improved students’ lives every day.”
David Mook, who teaches part-time in Castleton, said the Vermont State University transformation has been mismanaged, including what he said was “huge failure” of leadership to meaningfully engage with students, faculty, staff, alumni and communities around the institutions. The inaugural president who drew fierce opposition when he proposed all-digital libraries stepped down in April less than three months before the Vermont State University’s official launch. He was replaced by interim president Michael Smith, who worked for years in a number of state government positions, most recently as the secretary of the Vermont Agency of Human Services during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Last month, Smith released the cost-savings plan currently supported by the board.
“It’s left us with instead of an engaged student body, we have an engaged student body,” Mook said. “We have dedicated faculty and staff that are so demoralized it’s sad for me to come in and talk to them.” Alumni are frustrated and citizens are concerned, said Mook, who suggested adding faculty, staff and more students to the board.
The board said in a statement Monday that it’s time to implement the plans and focus on “growing high-demand programs such as nursing, plumbing and electrical apprenticeships, mental health counseling, teaching, advanced manufacturing, aviation and more.”
____
Rathke reported from Marshfield, Vt.
veryGood! (9)
Related
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- President Joe Biden's Family: A Guide to His Kids, Grandchildren and More
- The Secret Service acknowledges denying some past requests by Trump’s campaign for tighter security
- Moon fests, moon movie and even a full moon mark 55th anniversary of Apollo 11 landing
- Small twin
- The Barely Recognizable J.D. Vance as Trump’s Vice Presidential Running Mate
- Scout Bassett doesn't make Paralympic team for Paris. In life, she's already won.
- Fact-checking 'Twisters': Can tornadoes really be stopped with science?
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- WNBA All-Star game highlights: Arike Ogunbowale wins MVP as Olympians suffer loss
Ranking
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Fact-checking 'Twisters': Can tornadoes really be stopped with science?
- Woman stabbed inside Miami International Airport, forcing evacuation
- NASCAR at Indianapolis 2024: Start time, TV, streaming, lineup for Brickyard 400
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- 8.5 million computers running Windows affected by faulty update from CrowdStrike
- Yemen's Houthis claim drone strike on Tel Aviv that Israeli military says killed 1 and wounded 8 people
- Xander the Great! Schauffele wins the British Open for his 2nd major this year
Recommendation
SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
San Diego Zoo's giant pandas to debut next month: See Yun Chuan and Xin Bao settle in
Israeli military says it has struck several Houthi targets in Yemen in response to attacks
Christina Sandera, Clint Eastwood's longtime partner, dies at 61: Reports
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Salt Lake City wildfire prompts mandatory evacuations as more than 100 firefighters fight blaze
Man in custody after 4 found dead in Brooklyn apartment attack, NYPD says
Florida man arrested, accused of making threats against Trump, Vance on social media