Birmingham-Southern College will close when the current semester ends in May. Reverend Keith Thompson, Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the college, announced yesterday:
As Chair of the Board of Trustees of Birmingham-Southern College, it is my sad duty to let you know that BSC will cease operations on May 31, 2024. The Board of Trustees voted unanimously to close the College after a 2024 bill designed to amend the 2023 legislation that established the loan program on which our future depended failed to win sufficient support in the Alabama House of Representatives. Without that funding, the College does not have the resources to continue. This is a tragic day for the College, our students, our employees, and our alumni, and an outcome so many have worked tirelessly to prevent. We understand the devastating impact this has on each of you, and we will now direct our efforts toward ensuring the smoothest possible transition for everyone involved. BSC leadership has already begun detailed planning for students who will be forced to transfer to other institutions as well as those who had planned to complete degree requirements this summer. Individual meetings will be scheduled when students return from spring break. BSC will also offer as much help as possible for employees, almost all of whom will be displaced by May 31, with the rest to follow over the summer. Between now and the end of spring term, BSC will continue normal operations, including classes, athletics, and extra-curricular activities. Forward Ever Day, the Grad Expo, Honors Day, Capping, and Commencement will happen as planned, and we are working on plans for meaningful events for alumni prior to closure. We know everyone will have questions, and we are committed to providing the answers. More information for students, families, faculty, staff, alumni, and friends of the College has been posted at www.bsc.edu and will be updated as details become available. Today is also a terrible day for Birmingham, for the neighborhoods who have surrounded our campus for more than 100 years, and for Alabama. Through this challenging year and a half, we have talked a lot about BSC’s more than $90 million annual economic impact on Alabama, with $68 million of that right here in our city. Beyond that loss – which is enormous -- the loss of a nationally ranked liberal arts college that has contributed so much to this state and to the world – and still had so much to give – is incalculable.What Happened in Montgomery?Over the last 18 months, BSC has exhausted every option to obtain the loan through the Distressed Institutions of Higher Learning Revolving Loan Fund, which was established by the Alabama Legislature and signed into law by Gov. Kay Ivey in June 2023. The original Act put the State Treasurer in charge of the program, for which BSC met the statutory qualifications. After months of delay, the Treasurer denied the loan in October 2023. On February 6, the College’s legislative champions – Sen. Jabo Waggoner ’60 and Sen. Rodger Smitherman – introduced a bill to amend the 2023 Act. That bill, which moved the administration of the loan program to the Alabama Commission on Higher Education, added a layer of review to ensure the state’s position, set the loan terms, and specified a time frame for approval or denial, passed the Alabama Senate on March 5. On March 20, through the efforts of Rep. David Faulkner, the House Ways & Means Education Committee approved a substitute bill that further strengthened the State’s position. Even so, conversations last week with House leadership confirmed that the bill did not have enough support to move forward. Upon receiving that confirmation, the board meeting was scheduled for today. While holding the meeting during spring break was not ideal, doing so allowed time for trustees to review all options and for those who live outside of Alabama to arrange to be present. The $30 million set aside in 2023 for the loan program remains unused.What Comes NextAs Chair of the Board, as a proud alumnus, as the parent of three sons who attended BSC, and as a former member of the BSC staff, I want you to know that I share your heartbreak, anger, and frustration over the devastating loss of this 168-year-old treasure. I want you to know that Daniel B. Coleman has been a warrior for BSC since the moment he became BSC’s 16th president in December 2018. He envisioned a path forward for the College, worked tirelessly to convince others that BSC could overcome its challenges, and invested his considerable time, remarkable talent, and personal resources in the effort to save it. No one wanted that more than he did. The Board is also deeply grateful to the College’s senior leadership, who have displayed loyalty, resiliency, and integrity in the face of long odds. It takes uncommon strength to show up every day knowing that the deck is stacked against you, and each day you consistently put your best effort into every task that was before you. To the faculty, staff, and students who made the decision to stay and chose to join the fight instead of taking the easy path, I am overwhelmed with pride in the way you have carried yourself throughout these difficult times. While the outcome was not what any of us desired, the way you exemplified an indomitable spirit and expressed yourself with integrity consistently demonstrated the very essence of what we were working to preserve. It is for all of you that my heart breaks, while at the same time it is what you have personified that emboldens my hope for the future of a world with you in it. Throughout this struggle, you have fully lived into this College’s watchword.
30 comments:
Evidently the alumni and friends couldn’t or wouldn’t keep the doors open. Sweet Briar nearly closed in 2015 but was rescued by the alumnae.
this is a great school-sad day for the Birmingham, Alabama and the region.
Well, well. Mississippi isn't the only state in the southeast that puts football above all else.
Some in MS need to close.
Free market decides... should be that way in everything.
Another unknown Alabama college. Like Auburn. Never heard of it.
this is a result of over a decade of financial mismanagement, an existing large debt borrowed against the campus (and they wanted another 30 million from the state where they would be the second debtor paid..). and on and on.
i do feel bad for the faculty and staff who had to put up with administrators who ran it into the financial ground- even to the point of taking endowment money to pay for a welcome center..and the students who will have to find a new home. or not.
i work in higher ed. when the administration takes yearly raises for themselves, and makes decisions that are inside, these things t r to happen
How far behind this is Millsaps.
Top golf coming soon
If you bail out a hopeless private school with public funds what happens within the next 20 years when certain public universities hit the inevitable financial crisis? How can you send them packing? They cannot set a troublesome precedent. After all, like Mississippi Alabama is only really committed to the survival of two universities. Guess which two? Alabama? Mississippi?
this is huge for MILLSAPS if they don't fumble the bag.
If the internet is not lying to me, Millsaps has a little over 600 students and BSC had around 1200.
Millsaps has a large endowment so that buys the school time.
Millsaps, at one time, was where smart kids went to school. Now, smart kids have options that are more generous with scholarship money.
Years ago, I met a guy whose job was to raise money for Millsaps. I am a graduate from there. I gave him my contact information, etc. I flat out told him that I would give some money. I never heard from or received any information.
I had never heard of this school and had to look it up. UMC-affiliated liberal arts school with a total enrollment of around 1300 and a 10:1 student/faculty ratio. Although it does offer a few traditional useful degrees, it's hard to sell a graduate majoring in art, musical theatre, philosophy, gender & women studies, etc. I would have expected it to close 100 years ago.
Hey, 1:50, Aubrun is in West Georgia.
1:58...yep, this was Birmingham's version of Millsaps. The old gray mare just aint what she used to be. Like they say "get woke, go broke".
Millsaps is actually in a good, stable financial position, and did not borrow money for any of its recent capital projects - the renovation of the Christian Center, the new visual arts building, and baseball improvements. It was all done through good fundraising.
Like a lot of small liberal arts school, Millsaps has enrollment issues, which it continues to address. It's liable to attract some good transfer students from Birmingham-Southern, in fact.
Millsaps
Tougaloo
Belhaven
They all need to consolidate management and find a way to provide necessary education/ skills to students.
Plumbers, nurses, electricians, teachers, doctors, etc., there needs to be a direct correlation between the education and employment in theory and in a timely manner.
The days of endless money for college are over.
All this does is provide opportunities for people who wish to solve problems.
1:15 - this is the result of mismanagement by one leader, who 'left' the university some six years ago. As president, he spent not only operating money but also the endowment, for programs designed to make the campus more
appealing. Once he was replaced, the management - both financial and operational - has been above reproach.
But along with the ridiculous expenditures - and some borrowings - followed by the COVID two years that impacted BSC just as it did multiple other similar institutions, the school has suffered. For those that say the alumni should ante up, they did so last year in support of the state support requested with pledges and payments of over $40 million.
Alabama had a program that is designed and has been used to support similar institutions but for two years the Governor chose to spend those dollars on parks and recreational facilities despite its intent to be used for educational institutions. Last year the legislature stepped in and overrode the Governor's actions with this detailed legislation aimed at this institution. Evidently politics continues to play its ugly head with the Treasurer refusing to approve the loan established for BSC.
This is a loss for Alabama; Birmingham Southern has been a great educational institution; albeit located in what used to be the upper echelon of Birmingham where the steel magnates lived and operated. But as steel declined and Birmingham grew in other areas, it has survived despite its surroundings.
Millsaps has lots of empty dorm rooms and parking spaces that can be filled by B-S transfers.
@1:50 - certainly you jest. I have two college degrees from State institutions, am not a snob, and even I have heard of Birmingham Southern. Your ignorance is appalling.
@3:30 Don't lump Belhaven in there with Millsaps. Belhaven acutally actually has a strong liberal arts program but has degrees that people want ie: business, computer science, nursing, education etc. Garbage degres in women's studies won't be found there. Roger Parrot is very forward thinking. When he became president Belhaven was in bad shape now it is flourishing. All of these leaders should look at him for the way forward.
Millsaps is a private college located in Jackson, MS. Other than the reputation of the college, what else is here to draw students in? I know I am stating the obvious.
Some of you seem to think Millsaps offers "garbage degrees" only - you're wrong. Millsaps has robust programs in lab sciences, earth sciences, and mathematics, and a close connection to UMMC for pre-med majors. Also, its graduate business school, the Else School of Management, is nationally ranked, with a strong Executive MBA component.
And some of the finest legal minds to come out of Millsaps were English and philosophy majors, where critical thinking and writing is imperative.
I graduated from Millsaps in 1990. It was flourishing with around 1200 students and the area was safe as we climbed the fence to go to CS’s. Honors colleges at OM and MSU spelled the inevitable beginning of the end. Go to an SEC University and attend a Millsaps within at a fraction of the cost.
These honors colleges purport to provide the same liberal arts experience found at small schools, but don't. A few of the classes are small and the students get the advertised individual attention from full-time faculty, but most of the time you're in a lecture hall with 200 other undergraduates, being taught by graduate teaching assistants.
@3:44, you are correct that BSC alums and friends did make those pledges and contributions, but evidently that effort was insufficient. Maybe $100 million in new money could have saved the day.
12:32, wow, what a great alum you are.
just let these left wing schools die.
I once had a scholarship to Millsaps but had to turn it down because they wanted me to go to Clemson or somewhere to "finish my degree."
In other news, some Mississippi colleges are offering scholarships to BSC students:
https://www.meridianstar.com/region/mississippi-schools-offer-scholarships-to-students-at-soon-to-close-birmingham-southern/article_70527ef6-0b18-5e61-a56d-8e83c3a40955.html
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