
Last year, nearly 20 colleges went out of business and this year a dozen more are in trouble.

This couldn’t happen to a nicer group of people: Both Moody’s and Standard and Poor’s have issued negative assessments of the overall financial condition of higher education.
The National Association of College and University Business Officers (NACUBO) and the Commonfund also issued an annual report on college endowments, based on data from 657 schools with nearly a trillion dollars in assets.
Despite the strong stock market, universities are spending endowment funds to cover expenses at a much higher rate, up 11 percent from the previous year. Chickens are coming home to roost. Major irate donors have been reducing or eliminating expected financial commitments.
The Trump Administration has also started imposing big fines on schools that have ignored laws, Supreme Court decisions or regulations prohibiting DEI-style racial, gender or religious discrimination – such as permitting sometimes violent anti-Semitic campus demonstrations.
Here’s a list of some of the small east coast liberal arts colleges that are facing financial troubles:
American International
Connecticut
Lesley
Roger Williams
Assumption
Curry
Merrimack
Sacred Heart
Babson
Emerson
Middlebury
Saint Anselm
Bates
Emmanuel
Mount Holyoke
Saint Michaels
Bay Path
Endicott
New England College
Salve Regina
Bentley
Fairfield
Norwich
Springfield
Bryant
Gordon
Our Lady of the Elms
Stonehill
Champlain
Holy Cross
Providence
Suffolk
Clark
Husson
Quinnipiac
Trinity
Colby
Johnson & Wales
RISD
University of New England
Colby Sawyer
Lasell
Our view is that it wouldn’t be such a terrible thing if some of these schools went out of business and then maybe the rest would actually start to concentrate on giving kids a return on their $200,000 or more investment.
The post Colleges Went Woke; Now Many Are Going Broke appeared first on Unleash Prosperity.

