More than 100 Meredith College students, faculty, and alumni rallied in front of the schoolโs administrative building on Monday morning wearing shades of the collegeโs signature maroon and carrying cardboard placards bearing messages like โWe can handle the truth,โ โFaculty are afraid to speak,โ and โMeredith is dying.โ
The community came out to protest a series of faculty, staff, and now administrative cuts at the womenโs liberal arts college in Raleighโcuts they say are affecting studentsโ academic experience and point to a communication breakdown between the collegeโs administrators and its faculty. Students also complained of on-campus living conditions, with housing that has mold, leaks, and pests.
Like other small private colleges around the country, Meredithโs enrollment has dropped over the past decade (from a 2017 peak of about 2,000 to about 1,600 today), creating new financial pressures. Publicly available tax filings show that Meredithโs annual expenses recently began to exceed its revenues. A spokesperson told the INDY this week that the college is projecting an approximately $1.8 million budget deficit for the current fiscal year. Over the summer, it tried to close that gap by laying off 6 percent of its workforce (about 25 nonfaculty employees) and eliminating about a third of all adjunct faculty.

Earlier this month, Meredith announced it would also eliminate its four academic deans, who for around 20 years have led the Schools of Business, Education, Arts and Humanities, and Natural and Mathematical Sciences. The college spokesperson, Melyssa Allen, told the INDY that the deans will be offered faculty positions and their staffs will not be laid off. Allen also said the decision โwas not made for budgetary purposesโ but rather to streamline the collegeโs structure in order to โbetter [support] students’ current and future educational needsโ and โincrease facultyโs direct access to Meredithโs [provost, Anita Thomas],” to whom department chairs will now report directly.
But faculty members tell the INDY that removing the academic deans will create extra work for department chairsโsome of whom are already understaffed following this summerโs reductions. Moreover, they say the faculty wasnโt adequately consulted or forewarned about the changes.
โWe’re worried about shared governance here,โ says Monica McKinney, a professor in the education department and the chair of Meredithโs faculty council, an elected body that advises the administration on academic programs, policy, and the budget. She says Meredithโs recent communications with the council have been โeither perfunctory, or not at all. It’s not a genuine conversation with us about how best to move the college forward.โ
โI don’t know how [the provost] is going to have the time or the energy to have that many people report to her,โ McKinney says. โ[Thomas] says it’s not going to be extra work on [department chairs,] but I think it is going to be extra work. Morale is low.โ
Allen reiterated that department chairs will not have to do extra administrative work, since โall department chairs have shared administrative support and access to the deansโ administrative assistants.โ She added that the provost will continue to handle budgeting processes, and the department chairs will continue to be responsible for scheduling and course assignments.
But McKinney, the faculty council chair, isnโt alone in wondering how that will work. Multiple faculty members told the INDY the academic deans previously played an important role as an administrative layer between chairs and the provost, overseeing scheduling, budgeting, course assignments, and faculty evaluations within their schools.
One department chair who wished to remain anonymous says they believe the chairs will be asked to absorb the academic deansโ workload โwith no training or education as to what all that entails, in addition to the fact that there are numerous department heads that are really, really overloaded because theyโve taken on their [former] administrative assistantsโ duties as well.โ
Robert Kelchen, a professor of higher education at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, says itโs common for struggling colleges to merge academic departments in order to reduce the number of administrators and save money. But he says heโs not aware of another college that has eliminated its deans.
โIf enrollment is down substantially, it might make sense to eliminate a layer of administration, as department chairs at larger institutions already handle evaluations, scheduling, and at least some budgeting,โ Kelchen wrote in an email to the INDY. โBut if this increases the workload of department chairs, it may be difficult to find people willing to take on that job.โ
Students who attended Mondayโs protest told the INDY that Meredithโs departments and course offerings shrank noticeably this semester following the summertime cuts. Several social work majors say their program only has two professors right now, down from three, which means thereโs no one to teach the introductory course this semester. A sociology student says her department is also down to two professors. Some students are taking classes at neighboring schools through the Cooperating Raleigh Colleges program, and some departments have waived graduation requirements so that students can finish their degrees.

โWeโre not here [protesting] because we hate Meredith or donโt like change,โ says Marina Ostrowski, a social work and psychology double major. โWe love Meredith, and change can be really good, but the change that we’ve seen has not really been transparent or been in the best interest of our students.โ
โWe all love this place,โ echoes Beth Carter, an adjunct faculty member in the School of Music who was also at the protest. โI don’t like to see courses disappearing, people blindsided by changes โฆ. Budgets have been slashed, and somehow or another, we’re supposed to function.โ
โIf you’re going to reorganize the academic division, the academic deans need to be involved. The faculty needs to be involved,โ says Elizabeth Stewart, a class of 1996 alumna. โAnd they have not been, not at all.โ
Allen, the Meredith spokesperson, told the INDY that โno additional structural or faculty/staff changes are anticipated in the immediate future.โ
Still, many students and faculty said on Monday that theyโre anxious about possible further cuts. The anonymous department chair told the INDY, โWeโre still afraid our departments are going away. There’s major stress around campus in that we donโt know whatโs happening and weโre left out of that conversation.โ
Attendees at Mondayโs rally questioned why Meredith is renovating the college presidentโs residence and adding a fairly new six-foot-tall ring statue on campus when there are more pressing deferred maintenance issues.
The statue, which honors Meredithโs immediate former president, appears to be a donation, and Allen told the INDY the renovation was also donor funded and is taking place โbecause of extensive damage to the roof and foundation.โ But the optics feed into studentsโ and faculty membersโ worries about the administrationโs priorities.
โI would say no one’s necessarily protesting cuts per se,โ a faculty member told the INDY during the protest. โIt’s how they’re being done. The Meredith values that make this such a wonderful community are being violated.โ
The day after the protest, Meredith president Aimee Sapp sent an email to employees acknowledging their concerns. She noted the college has made strides toward closing a projected $7 million budget deficit, lowering it to about $1.8 million, a difference of 75 percent. She said Meredith has seen a 24.5 percent increase in new student enrollment for this yearโs fall semester, crediting the collegeโs new nursing program and investments in its athletics.
โIf you have filled out surveys, participated in budget forums, contacted me individually, or gathered in front of Johnson Hall yesterday, I hear you,โ Sapp wrote in the email, which was forwarded to the INDY. โThis progress has been hard-won and made possible through a lot of creative thinking about operating reductions and making tough decisions affecting people about whom we care.โ
Sapp asked employees to โplease continue to share your budget ideas, stay informed by attending forums โฆ and spread positive news about Meredith.โ
โWe are preserving Meredithโs ability to offer a high-quality educational experience for current and future students,โ she wrote.
Chloe Courtney Bohl is a Report for America corps member. Follow her onย Blueskyย or reach her atย [email protected]. Comment on this story atย [email protected].ย


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