

Faculty are leaving and others are getting cut, but it looks like the The Kings College is still alive. Here is Meagan Saliashvili at Religion News Service:
The last remaining evangelical Christian college in New York City, The Kingâs College, announced Monday (July 17) to staff and faculty that the school, which has faced dire financial challenges, would not renew many teaching contracts when they end on Aug. 1.
A faculty member who attended the meeting said the mood in the room was sober, but that because the layoffs and severance terms were communicated âclearly and concisely,â those affected expressed âdeep appreciation.â
The decision comes after months of public financial woes that caused the Middle States Commission on Higher Education to terminate the Christian collegeâs accreditation in May. Since January, Kingâs has kept students, staff and faculty on edge, asking for prayer as officials sought $2.6 million to keep the school open. A fundraiser brought in only about $200,000.
Kingâs is currently in an appeal process with MSCHE that depends on showing the institution is financially viable with students actively enrolled.
Throughout the spring semester, staff and faculty helped students transfer to a handful of colleges, from St. Johnâs University in Queens to some as far away as Providence Christian College in California. However, many students have said they would remain at Kingâs if it opens in the fall.
Though it has never boasted more than 1,000 students, the 85-year-old Kingâs rose to become a top conservative liberal arts school, often compared to Hillsdale College, another small but influential conservative school, even as many Kingâs students and faculty fought political labels.
Operating on thin margins and depending on big donors like Richard and Helen Devos, the school community has been in turmoil since a partnership with a Canadian education investment company, Primacorp Ventures, failed to change its fortunes. In April 2021, Kingâs agreed to let Primacorp take over fundraising, marketing and admissions in exchange for 95% of the tuition from online students and four of nine board seats. But despite lofty promises, the company never boosted enrollment, and layoffs followed in fall 2022.
Primacorp fully exited the partnership in April, allowing Kingâs to bring on eight new board members, comprising two former board members, Andy Mills and John Beckett, two parents and four alumni.
A flicker of hope came on May 31, when the board said in a statement that it was in âadvanced discussionsâ with an unnamed Christian university for âan educational and operational partnershipâ to remain open in New York City for the 2023-2024 academic year and beyond. But since then, the community has awaited an announcement about whether the college will close or not, receiving only breadcrumbs until the faculty layoff announcement.
Dru Johnson, a professor of Biblical literature, theology and interpretation for 12 years at Kingâs, said he went into the meeting Monday âstraight up 50/50.â
âI would not have been surprised if they said, âhey we found a way weâre going to do it next semester, weâre going to pull it off.â Or, you know, if they said, âweâre shutting down the entire school, this is your last day, you need to get everything out today.ââ
Johnson said since March he has acted as if the school is closing and secured a one-year teaching position at Hope College in Michigan even as his three oldest children, one not yet graduated from high school, stay in the New York area.
Read the rest here.