DePaul University announced Monday that it’s laid off 114 staff members to address a budget shortfall caused by rising costs and a significant drop in enrollment among international graduate students.
In a letter to staff, school leadership said it eliminated 7% of its full-time and part-time employees on Friday as the Lincoln Park-based school was about to go on winter break.
For those laid off, the school said it’s providing transition assistance. That includes severance packages based on years of service, career counseling, health insurance subsidies and other resources, school said.
“The last several weeks have been some of the most difficult our community has ever experienced,” DePaul President Robert L. Manuel wrote in the letter, also signed by the university’s provost and chief financial officer.
A school spokesperson, in a separate statement, said the school took “swift action” to reduce spending amid growing financial pressures.
“Like many higher education institutions across the country, DePaul is facing financial headwinds due to a significant drop in international graduate student enrollment, an increased demand for financial aid, and the rising costs of benefits,” the spokesperson said in the statement.
“Looking ahead, the university is launching a strategic plan, Designing DePaul, that will invest in essential academic and student success initiatives, create new revenue streams, and build a resilient and mission-aligned future for the university.”
In October, school leadership said it would need to reduce spending by $27.4 million in next year’s budget.
At the time, the school said it planned to save $16 million in the layoffs and another $11.4 million by eliminating merit-based salary increases, implementing a hiring freeze, reducing retirement contributions, and reducing pay for executive officers, vice presidents and deans.
DePaul was hit hard by the Trump administration’s move to cut down on the number of foreign students studying on American campuses.
About 750 fewer international students attended class there over the fall, the Sun-Times has reported. The school also reported a 62% drop in new graduate students from other countries compared to last year.
International students typically pay a higher tuition, and their dropping enrollment has squeezed school budgets.
Other universities have cut their budgets, or say they will, in recent months.
Northwestern University said it cut 425 staff positions in July as it faced a $790 million federal funding freeze. The school also cited restrictions on international students, among other factors.
The university settled with the Trump administration last month, agreeing to pay a $75 million fine to the federal government and agreeing to adhere to federal anti-discrimination laws for its admissions and hiring practices.
The University of Chicago is looking to cut $100 million in expenses in response to changing federal policies.
DePaul’s Loop Library experienced staff cuts but remains open this academic year with reduced hours, a school spokesperson said.