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Thursday, July 30, 2020

With Colleges Closed, College Towns Can't Pay Their Bills

When students went home in March, some college towns lost half their populations. Tax and utility revenues have dropped and those cities are still wondering what sort of economies they'll have in the fall.

Last summer, the city council in Champaign, Ill., increased the local food and beverage tax for the first time in two decades. It was a substantial hike – jumping from 0.5 percent to 2.5 percent – and was expected to bring in $6 million to pay for more firefighters and school programs for at-risk kids.

The tax increase took effect on March 1. The University of Illinois – far and away Champaign’s largest employer – shut down in-person instruction on March 17. Business at bars and restaurants dried up immediately.

“All of that is gone,” says Champaign Mayor Deborah Frank Feinen. “None of our new programs or anticipated revenue are there.”

All cities are having budget problems, but college towns are confronting a unique set of challenges. In many cases, half or two-thirds of their population abruptly packed up and left, months ahead of their usual summer migration. “When the students went away for spring break, we waved goodbye but expected them to come back,” says Mayor Leeman Kessler of Gambier, Ohio, home of Kenyon College.

With more universities canceling in-person classes for the fall semester every day, there’s great uncertainty about how many students will actually return in the coming weeks, or how long they’ll be able to stay. “As of now, Indiana University is one of the universities that will hold, in part, face-to-face classes,” says Yaël Ksander, communications director for Bloomington Mayor John Hamilton. “But, yes, everyone is apprehensive about what the fall brings – and by fall, I mean three weeks from now with the return of students.”

Even where students are coming back, homecoming, football and other large events are mostly being canceled. On Wednesday, Clemson University announced it was starting the fall semester online, at least for the first month. The school’s athletic conference, the ACC, is still deciding whether to play a limited season.

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9 comments:

Anonymous said...

This is painfully sad

And entirely unnecessary

Anonymous said...

Yep, and wait for the taxes to go up to fix the gap that was made with the virus, Federally... We still have the kirwin plan coming soon!!!

Anonymous said...

That's right people. Stop sending your kids to College. Stop paying for your kids to be taught black is good. White is bad. Or Muslim good. Christianity bad. Or all COMMUNIST countries are good. The United States of America bad. When the money STOP'S. All the bullshit stop's.

Anonymous said...

Cancel colleges

Anonymous said...

Increase funding of police departments, defund colleges.

Anonymous said...

1:27.....you are right on! I wholeheartedly agree!

Anonymous said...

How does it work, in Salisbury I have watched the Collage buy land on South Division St. 6./5 mill Shore Land Now a tennis court, not sure on Dresser I heard 13 mill, its a parking lot, on down the road Buy, build. Hope it can keep up with the times, A man I know told me some time back I would see it turn to a Ghost Town, Time will tell, hope for the best.

Anonymous said...

The bars in Salisbury may have to close? Horrors!!

Anonymous said...

Sure is peaceful without SU students.