Anonymous
Post 05/11/2026 07:13     Subject: Which top colleges have a significant budget deficit? Which ones are red flags?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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.

My research was incomplete. I apologize to those reading through. However, your comments, which appear to be reasonable and accurate with respect to Middlebury itself, seem to have conflated my post with those of one or more other people.


Your research wasn’t really incomplete, the latest number wasn’t published anywhere, just stated.

PP is a well-known unwell person who thinks anyone that says anything even slightly negative about Middlebury is the same poster and flies off the handle every time in response (usually gaslighting everyone in the process). But it isn’t the same poster, it’s been multiple people all pointing out the same things the college’s own leadership points out. This has been explained to PP multiple times but to no avail, because for some reason she is incapable of understanding basic and simple information.


Here I fixed it. PP is a well-known unwell person who thinks anyone that says anything even slightly POSITIVE about Middlebury is the same poster and flies off the handle every time in response (usually gaslighting everyone in the process). But it isn’t the same poster, it’s been multiple people all pointing out the same things. This has been explained to PP multiple times but to no avail, because for some reason she is incapable of understanding basic and simple information and is intent on badmouthing Middlebury with false and misleading posts. It's sad and weird.


That was a pretty sad effort and digging this back up after it had gone dead shows your unhealthy obsession with it.

You’ve been around here long enough to know that we’ve had real discussions about this topic. Lots of people weighed in. Even on this thread lots of people have weighed in. They weren’t all hating on Middlebury or saying there was nothing positive about it, but pointing out real financial challenges that—again!—the school itself was also talking about.

What was insane was that you kept gaslighting everyone, claiming things that ran contrary to what even school officials were saying. Your misinformation got corrected. Misleading everyone by being a deeply insecure booster is not helpful to anyone on this forum trying to get info about schools.
Anonymous
Post 05/10/2026 23:41     Subject: Which top colleges have a significant budget deficit? Which ones are red flags?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:USC was very stingy with aid this year, I 100% think it was due to budget deficit.


USC took a bunch of wealthy mediocre kids this year. I know a handful who got in with GPAs under 3.0 but from extremely wealthy families.


That didn't happen.
Anonymous
Post 05/10/2026 23:38     Subject: Which top colleges have a significant budget deficit? Which ones are red flags?

Is the Middlebury hater the same poster as the infamous Emory mom?
Anonymous
Post 05/10/2026 23:30     Subject: Which top colleges have a significant budget deficit? Which ones are red flags?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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.

My research was incomplete. I apologize to those reading through. However, your comments, which appear to be reasonable and accurate with respect to Middlebury itself, seem to have conflated my post with those of one or more other people.


Your research wasn’t really incomplete, the latest number wasn’t published anywhere, just stated.

PP is a well-known unwell person who thinks anyone that says anything even slightly negative about Middlebury is the same poster and flies off the handle every time in response (usually gaslighting everyone in the process). But it isn’t the same poster, it’s been multiple people all pointing out the same things the college’s own leadership points out. This has been explained to PP multiple times but to no avail, because for some reason she is incapable of understanding basic and simple information.


Here I fixed it. PP is a well-known unwell person who thinks anyone that says anything even slightly POSITIVE about Middlebury is the same poster and flies off the handle every time in response (usually gaslighting everyone in the process). But it isn’t the same poster, it’s been multiple people all pointing out the same things. This has been explained to PP multiple times but to no avail, because for some reason she is incapable of understanding basic and simple information and is intent on badmouthing Middlebury with false and misleading posts. It's sad and weird.
Anonymous
Post 05/10/2026 23:22     Subject: Which top colleges have a significant budget deficit? Which ones are red flags?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:USC was very stingy with aid this year, I 100% think it was due to budget deficit.


USC took a bunch of wealthy mediocre kids this year. I know a handful who got in with GPAs under 3.0 but from extremely wealthy families.


Living up to the name of Univ of Spoiled Children?
Anonymous
Post 05/05/2026 22:37     Subject: Which top colleges have a significant budget deficit? Which ones are red flags?

all schools are cutting costs due to post-pandemic issues, Trump cuts, etc.
Anonymous
Post 05/05/2026 18:34     Subject: Which top colleges have a significant budget deficit? Which ones are red flags?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:We're compiling a college list now with our junior. Some colleges we've come across and researched have significant budget deficits. We are trying to figure out which ones to worry about.

We know that a college budget deficit can be a significant red flag, particularly if the uni is a small, private, or regional college with a low endowment. And a structural, long-term deficit often leads to reduced academic quality, fewer student services, etc.

Here are the colleges with budget deficits that we are aware of (see below). Are we missing any others we should know about? Which ones to truly worry about (I'm assuming some big ones will figure it out with its endowment but not sure if that's smart thinking)?

Colleges with Budget Deficits (rough amounts reported from the past year):

USC: $200 million
UChicago: $160 million
Stanford $140 million
Penn State: $140 million
Harvard: $113 million
American U: $80 million
GW: $76 million
NYU: $71 million
Boston U: $30 million
Middlebury: $14 million
WashU (St. Louis): $7 million
Brandeis: $2 million
Pitzer: $1.3 million


It’s reported Chicago is $6 billion in debt


All schools have debt. New buildings are largely built on debt but they can be paid for through revenue streams like patient fees, room and board, etc.
Anonymous
Post 05/04/2026 13:53     Subject: Which top colleges have a significant budget deficit? Which ones are red flags?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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.

My research was incomplete. I apologize to those reading through. However, your comments, which appear to be reasonable and accurate with respect to Middlebury itself, seem to have conflated my post with those of one or more other people.


Your research wasn’t really incomplete, the latest number wasn’t published anywhere, just stated.

PP is a well-known unwell person who thinks anyone that says anything even slightly negative about Middlebury is the same poster and flies off the handle every time in response (usually gaslighting everyone in the process). But it isn’t the same poster, it’s been multiple people all pointing out the same things the college’s own leadership points out. This has been explained to PP multiple times but to no avail, because for some reason she is incapable of understanding basic and simple information.


You are sock puppeting again. Here is your update link.

https://www.middleburycampus.com/article/2026/02/board-of-trustees-talk-tuition-increase-and-improved-budget-deficit




Lol absolutely insane behavior from you as usual. We’ve told you previously that you can easily get Jeff to confirm that this isn’t sock puppeting and it is different people. Get help.


Anonymous
Post 05/04/2026 13:33     Subject: Which top colleges have a significant budget deficit? Which ones are red flags?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Isn't Barnard facing major financial issues too?


I recently read they are being enveloped completely by Columbia.

Wasnt that an April Fools?
Anonymous
Post 05/04/2026 13:18     Subject: Which top colleges have a significant budget deficit? Which ones are red flags?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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.

My research was incomplete. I apologize to those reading through. However, your comments, which appear to be reasonable and accurate with respect to Middlebury itself, seem to have conflated my post with those of one or more other people.


Your research wasn’t really incomplete, the latest number wasn’t published anywhere, just stated.


Actually, it was published here:
https://www.middlebury.edu/stories/archive/2026/02/trustees-accept-major-gift-art-museum-discuss-strategic-plan-and-approve-tuition

and here:
https://www.middleburycampus.com/article/2026/02/board-of-trustees-talk-tuition-increase-and-improved-budget-deficit


Right, they “stated” it but you wouldn’t find it in any document. That’s what I meant.

Seems like it might be prudent to wait for settled information, then.
Anonymous
Post 05/04/2026 13:11     Subject: Which top colleges have a significant budget deficit? Which ones are red flags?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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.

My research was incomplete. I apologize to those reading through. However, your comments, which appear to be reasonable and accurate with respect to Middlebury itself, seem to have conflated my post with those of one or more other people.


Your research wasn’t really incomplete, the latest number wasn’t published anywhere, just stated.

PP is a well-known unwell person who thinks anyone that says anything even slightly negative about Middlebury is the same poster and flies off the handle every time in response (usually gaslighting everyone in the process). But it isn’t the same poster, it’s been multiple people all pointing out the same things the college’s own leadership points out. This has been explained to PP multiple times but to no avail, because for some reason she is incapable of understanding basic and simple information.


You are sock puppeting again. Here is your update link.

https://www.middleburycampus.com/article/2026/02/board-of-trustees-talk-tuition-increase-and-improved-budget-deficit




Lol absolutely insane behavior from you as usual. We’ve told you previously that you can easily get Jeff to confirm that this isn’t sock puppeting and it is different people. Get help.
Anonymous
Post 05/04/2026 13:09     Subject: Which top colleges have a significant budget deficit? Which ones are red flags?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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.

My research was incomplete. I apologize to those reading through. However, your comments, which appear to be reasonable and accurate with respect to Middlebury itself, seem to have conflated my post with those of one or more other people.


Your research wasn’t really incomplete, the latest number wasn’t published anywhere, just stated.


Actually, it was published here:
https://www.middlebury.edu/stories/archive/2026/02/trustees-accept-major-gift-art-museum-discuss-strategic-plan-and-approve-tuition

and here:
https://www.middleburycampus.com/article/2026/02/board-of-trustees-talk-tuition-increase-and-improved-budget-deficit


Right, they “stated” it but you wouldn’t find it in any document. That’s what I meant.
Anonymous
Post 05/04/2026 10:50     Subject: Which top colleges have a significant budget deficit? Which ones are red flags?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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.

My research was incomplete. I apologize to those reading through. However, your comments, which appear to be reasonable and accurate with respect to Middlebury itself, seem to have conflated my post with those of one or more other people.


Your research wasn’t really incomplete, the latest number wasn’t published anywhere, just stated.


Actually, it was published here:
https://www.middlebury.edu/stories/archive/2026/02/trustees-accept-major-gift-art-museum-discuss-strategic-plan-and-approve-tuition

and here:
https://www.middleburycampus.com/article/2026/02/board-of-trustees-talk-tuition-increase-and-improved-budget-deficit
Anonymous
Post 05/04/2026 10:49     Subject: Which top colleges have a significant budget deficit? Which ones are red flags?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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.

My research was incomplete. I apologize to those reading through. However, your comments, which appear to be reasonable and accurate with respect to Middlebury itself, seem to have conflated my post with those of one or more other people.


Your research wasn’t really incomplete, the latest number wasn’t published anywhere, just stated.

PP is a well-known unwell person who thinks anyone that says anything even slightly negative about Middlebury is the same poster and flies off the handle every time in response (usually gaslighting everyone in the process). But it isn’t the same poster, it’s been multiple people all pointing out the same things the college’s own leadership points out. This has been explained to PP multiple times but to no avail, because for some reason she is incapable of understanding basic and simple information.


You are sock puppeting again. Here is your update link.

https://www.middleburycampus.com/article/2026/02/board-of-trustees-talk-tuition-increase-and-improved-budget-deficit


Anonymous
Post 05/04/2026 06:39     Subject: Which top colleges have a significant budget deficit? Which ones are red flags?

Anonymous wrote:
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.

My research was incomplete. I apologize to those reading through. However, your comments, which appear to be reasonable and accurate with respect to Middlebury itself, seem to have conflated my post with those of one or more other people.


Your research wasn’t really incomplete, the latest number wasn’t published anywhere, just stated.

PP is a well-known unwell person who thinks anyone that says anything even slightly negative about Middlebury is the same poster and flies off the handle every time in response (usually gaslighting everyone in the process). But it isn’t the same poster, it’s been multiple people all pointing out the same things the college’s own leadership points out. This has been explained to PP multiple times but to no avail, because for some reason she is incapable of understanding basic and simple information.