Minnesota colleges are facing a pandemic-induced reckoning.
Their campuses are deserted. Their summer and fall enrollments are down. And their budgets are being pounded.
The worst may be yet to come.
Every institution is planning for the daunting possibility that they may not reopen this fall. The financial toll could be devastating. Colleges in Minnesota could collectively lose more than half a billion dollars if the pandemic keeps campuses shuttered through the fall.
"The longer this goes, the deeper the hole," Minnesota Higher Education Commissioner Dennis Olson said. "We may never go back to traditional higher-ed models as we know them today."
The University of Minnesota has frozen tuition for the next academic year in hopes of attracting a large freshman class during the pandemic. As of last week, fall freshman enrollment was trending nearly 10% behind where it was this time last year.
The Minnesota State colleges and universities system took a $17 million hit from room-and-board refunds and could lose up to $13 million more this spring from canceled events, summer camps, travel and trainings.
The University of St. Thomas, Minnesota's largest private college, has already lost $8 million and won't get to replenish with revenue from marquee events such as the Special Olympics.