Church Divinity School of the Pacific (CDSP) has announced that five full-time staff positions would be eliminated as part of “a response to mounting financial pressures and changes in the educational needs of The Episcopal Church.” The restructuring does not affect the number of faculty positions at the Berkeley, Calif., seminary.
“In the past two days CDSP has said goodbye to five good and faithful staff members,” said Donn Morgan, president and dean, on May 29. “They are leaving not of their own volition, nor because of performance issues, but because of our school’s need to bring its budget into a more realistic place, to try to get closer to matching revenues with expenses.”
Elizabeth Drescher, CDSP’s director of the Center for Anglican Learning and Leadership (CALL), said the seminary does not usually make public its financial statements, but that prior to the staff cuts the budget, which begins July 1, had a six-figure deficit. Enrollment during the past year also declined about 10 percent, she noted.
Ms. Drescher said the staff reductions were part of a restructuring which involves reorganizing faculty and staff into a number of cross-functional teams that will encourage greater sharing of expertise and broader involvement in the full range of work performed by all seminary faculty and staff members.
“On the one hand, this was a difficult and painful process because there was tremendous pressure to balance the budget,” she said. “The good news is that we continue to prepare for the future. We see this as part of an overall repositioning of the seminary to serve the church better.”
CDSP announced two new faculty hires. The Rev. Ruth Meyers will replace the Rev. Louis Weil as professor of liturgics for the fall 2009 term, and the Rev. Flora Keshgegian will become the new professor of pastoral theology and women in ministry beginning with the spring 2010 term.
More here-
http://www.livingchurch.org/news/news-updates/2009/6/2/facing-six-figure-deficit-cdsp-cuts-staff
1 comment:
My alma mater. The reality is that even in the best of times the financial resources of the Episcopal Church in the west are very fragile. There are few large, old, endowed parishes, and the culture of the region marginalizes the institution. The convergence of all these streams--loss in investments, weak current giving, the general fragmentation of the Church itself--puts a place like CDSP at risk. I'm pretty sure they'll survive, but I'm also pretty sure what survives is going to look a lot different from the place I first encountered almost 30 years ago . . . .
BruceR
Post a Comment