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Notre Dame de Namur University in California Struggling to Avoid Closure

Notre Dame de Namur University in California Struggling to Avoid Closure

“decision announced last Monday not to admit new students is buying time for university leaders to find a way to keep the university open”

This school was having issues before the current crisis hit.

Inside Higher Ed reports:

Bay Area University Works to Stave Off a Closure

Notre Dame de Namur University’s interim president said a decision announced last Monday not to admit new students is buying time for university leaders to find a way to keep the university open.

Faculty members are less hopeful. One faculty leader described the decision as a temporary stay of execution.

The unsettled situation demonstrates why it’s so difficult to close a college or university. Faculty and staff members resist the idea of giving up on their employer’s future — and their own jobs — too early. Leaders who want to do right by current students and staff are left with few paths forward and are very often criticized for giving up on the colleges they lead.

Similar situations have unfolded in the past. Hampshire College’s leaders tried last year to suspend admissions and seek a merger partner, only for alumni to revolt and force the institution to reverse course. Before that, Sweet Briar College leaders attempted to close the college and wind down operations because of poor enrollment and financial trends but were stopped by outraged alumnae.

Both situations were marked by acrimony between college leaders and those fighting to maintain the college’s independence. Notre Dame de Namur appears to be different — at least so far. Faculty have called for many of the university’s leaders to resign but said in a letter to interim president Dan Carey, “Dan, you can stay.”

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Comments

It’s not surprising this school is likely to close. It is yet another Catholic college that is more interested in social justice activism than the Catholic faith.

What is surprising is that so many of these so-called Catholic colleges and universities have survived as long as they have.