Pittsburg State University told the Committee on Higher Education Budget that program review, enrollment growth and community partnerships are central to its strategy to be an economic engine for Southeast Kansas.
President Thomas Newsome said the university has eliminated 98 academic pathways since 2009 (42 since 2020) as part of a workforce- and data-driven academic portfolio review. He reported nearly 11% growth in freshman enrollment last fall and preliminary spring enrollment increases of about 3% so far; the university said it will publish final census figures after the twentieth-day count.
Newsome described a partnership with the Community Health Center of Southeast Kansas to operate campus health services. "Prior to that time ... it was costing us a significant amount of money," he said, adding that outsourcing to the community health center has saved the university "over $500,000" and increased student usage of health services by approximately 18%.
Newsome also reviewed downtown redevelopment projects intended to reduce campus footprint while expanding housing and retail that could support more faculty, staff and students living downtown.
Committee members asked about mental-health trends and whether the university is tracking student attrition tied to mental health; Newsome said the university is seeing more students who need mental-health services but does not specifically track attrition reasons because students commonly cite cost when exiting.
Why it matters: Enrollment trends, program consolidations and partnerships that lower operating costs affect both institutional budgets and the communities served. The health-center partnership is a concrete example of cost containment tied to an observable increase in service usage.
The committee did not vote on any measures during the briefing.