SUNY Potsdam looks to eliminate 14 more programs to close M deficit


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The State University of New York at Potsdam is looking to eliminate 14 academic programs over the next few years — including bachelor’s in chemistry, public health and theater — as it tries to bridge a $9 million budget gap.

SUNY Potsdam President Suzanne Smith unveiled the cuts in a speech Tuesday, at one point growing teary-eyed as she detailed how the public institution will attempt to recalibrate its academic array in the wake of sliding enrollment and subsequent financial deficits.

The university will need to significantly reduce faculty numbers, Smith said during her remarks, although she did not offer the exact number of positions it will seek to cut. 

Regardless, the process will be painful, but will enable SUNY Potsdam to lean into its strengths as a regional public college, Smith said.

These cutbacks come as the higher education landscape remains as harsh and competitive as ever, pressuring institutions of all types. While college closures this year have been at private institutions, publics have not been immune to financial stressors.

Even West Virginia University, a public flagship, has started phasing out degrees — more than two dozen — in the face of its own $45 million budget deficit, though faculty critics fault management for the financial hole.

The WVU cuts have majorly frayed the professor and administration relationship, and something similar could play out at SUNY Potsdam, with the union representing faculty already pushing back on leaders’ austerity plan. 

SUNY Potsdam’s problems

The university is part of the State University of New York, the largest comprehensive public system in the country, enrolling about 364,000 students. But despite the system’s prominence, its enrollment — and SUNY Potsdam’s — has plummeted.

SUNY Potsdam at its peak had more than 4,400 students in fall 2012, which fell to about 2,500 now, according to institution data. University officials have blamed the decline on inhospitable demographics — essentially, there are fewer high school graduates to attend college.

“The pool we have to pull from is going to continue to shrink, probably at least for the next decade,” Smith, the university’s president, said during a press conference Tuesday.

As enrollment slipped, SUNY Potsdam tried to scale back. Administrators said Tuesday they brought down spending by almost $12 million over the last decade, almost entirely through employee attrition. 

The university had 791 full-time equivalent employees in 2012-13, which fell to 609 FTE faculty and staff in 2022-23.

It also started phasing out four academic programs earlier this year, including bachelor’s degrees in computer science education and geographic information science. Now, it offers 46 undergraduate degrees, 15 graduate degree programs and 2 advanced certificates.

What’s on the chopping block?

None of this was enough to remedy the university’s financial straits, and it’s now mulling more drastic academic reductions. Rumors have already been swirling: The university’s faculty senate chair, Greg Gardner, told colleagues in a letter earlier this year to brace for “program and headcount cuts of an order beyond anything we have seen on the campus in living memory.”

Over the next three to four years, SUNY Potsdam wants to weed out a dozen bachelor’s programs and two master’s degrees in music performance and public health. 

Officials said these are low-enrollment programs — students in them represent about 6% of the university’s population.

Students in the programs will “receive support to complete their degree here, enroll in a different major or transfer elsewhere, based on their personal circumstances and desires,” a document summarizing the plan states.

SUNY Potsdam so far won’t disclose the number of faculty who could be laid off. Smith said the administration is waiting, for instance, to see how many faculty members accept buyouts, which are being funded by the Potsdam College Foundation, its endowment manager.

Not every faculty member in the disciplines facing cuts may necessarily lose their jobs, either.

“Just because we’re discontinuing a program doesn’t mean we’re discontinuing the courses in that field,” Alan Hersker, SUNY Potsdam’s interim provost, said during Tuesday’s press conference.



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Jeremy Bauer-Wolf

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