Anonymous wrote:Only 2 Catholic schools Notre Dame and Holy Cross. No surpise both are very well off but where is Bowdoin, Colgate, and the vast majority of NESCAC. Princeton must be an omission.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did a tiny school like Middlebury run up such a large deficit?
A $4.49 million budget deficit against an overall budget of $344 million isn't that significant (1.3% of overall budget). Reasons mentioned are rising healthcare costs, staff and faculty pay increases, and debt servicing.
As far as I can tell, Middlebury had a $14.1 deficit in FY 2025 and has a projected budget deficit of $8.6 million for FY 2026, along with about 15 years of perennial deficits prior to these most recent years.
https://www.middlebury.edu/stories/archive/2025/05/board-trustees-approves-fiscal-year-2026-budget-tenure
You are just a glutton for punishment. Why do you post this stuff when you know that it is wrong?
Why post something a year old when you know that there was a fall update with a lower number and then the Feb update with the current $4.49M number?
Let me remind you:
Middlebury has a larger endowment than Colby.
Middlebury has less debt than Colby.
Middlebury draws from their endowment at a lower rate than Colby draws from theirs and could close their deficit and go to a surplus simply by raising their draw rate to equal Colby's.
Middlebury has raised their fees at below average rates among the NESCAC schools for many years.
Middlebury has fixed the root causes of their deficit while Colby has run a deficit for the last three years running.
Neither school has any significant financial issues but Middlebury is without question in stronger financial shape.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did a tiny school like Middlebury run up such a large deficit?
A $4.49 million budget deficit against an overall budget of $344 million isn't that significant (1.3% of overall budget). Reasons mentioned are rising healthcare costs, staff and faculty pay increases, and debt servicing.
As far as I can tell, Middlebury had a $14.1 deficit in FY 2025 and has a projected budget deficit of $8.6 million for FY 2026, along with about 15 years of perennial deficits prior to these most recent years.
https://www.middlebury.edu/stories/archive/2025/05/board-trustees-approves-fiscal-year-2026-budget-tenure
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did a tiny school like Middlebury run up such a large deficit?
A $4.49 million budget deficit against an overall budget of $344 million isn't that significant (1.3% of overall budget). Reasons mentioned are rising healthcare costs, staff and faculty pay increases, and debt servicing.
As far as I can tell, Middlebury had a $14.1 deficit in FY 2025 and has a projected budget deficit of $8.6 million for FY 2026, along with about 15 years of perennial deficits prior to these most recent years.
https://www.middlebury.edu/stories/archive/2025/05/board-trustees-approves-fiscal-year-2026-budget-tenure
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did a tiny school like Middlebury run up such a large deficit?
A $4.49 million budget deficit against an overall budget of $344 million isn't that significant (1.3% of overall budget). Reasons mentioned are rising healthcare costs, staff and faculty pay increases, and debt servicing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And Columbia, $40 million deficit last Fall:
https://columbiachronicle.com/campus/breaking-columbias-budget-deficit-grows-to-40-million-but-state-of-the-college-offers-few-specifics/
Columbia is fine and isn't going anywhere. This is not some 2,000 student SLAC in the northeast that accepts 90% of its applicants.
Anonymous wrote:Occidental College. $30M loss during covid. More recently, a surprise 15% loss in enrollment, which the school had to accommodate by cutting staff salaries, stopping any new hires, putting a marketing expert in charge of admissions, etc. That latter person decided to give a $15K "scholarship" to anyone who would accept ED or EA, but it's really just desperation. Google Occidental College 15% enrollment failure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And Columbia, $40 million deficit last Fall:
https://columbiachronicle.com/campus/breaking-columbias-budget-deficit-grows-to-40-million-but-state-of-the-college-offers-few-specifics/
Columbia is fine and isn't going anywhere. This is not some 2,000 student SLAC in the northeast that accepts 90% of its applicants.
Anonymous wrote:And Columbia, $40 million deficit last Fall:
https://columbiachronicle.com/campus/breaking-columbias-budget-deficit-grows-to-40-million-but-state-of-the-college-offers-few-specifics/
Anonymous wrote:And Columbia, $40 million deficit last Fall:
https://columbiachronicle.com/campus/breaking-columbias-budget-deficit-grows-to-40-million-but-state-of-the-college-offers-few-specifics/
Anonymous wrote:And Columbia, $40 million deficit last Fall:
https://columbiachronicle.com/campus/breaking-columbias-budget-deficit-grows-to-40-million-but-state-of-the-college-offers-few-specifics/