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The cuts include severing the college's financial relationship with the
Worship Center in Windsor, Colorado, trimming staff, and keeping next
year's budgeted spending at current levels with no increases. The cuts
were announced in a letter to constituents two weeks ago. CBC, with
three campuses in Canada, Colorado and Ecuador, operates under a unified
budget.
Enrollment had been slowly declining, Lessard says, but 40 fewer
students elected to attend the school this year, resulting in a class
size of 123 and an initial projected deficit of $476,000. "In immediate
response, budget cuts were made wherever possible throughout CBC -
excepting personnel," Lessard says, which resulted in lowering this
year's projected operating deficit to $300,000.
Lessard says school officials hoped that increased recruiting efforts
would turn around the decline, but projections continued to show a drop
for the coming year. That necessitated the latest actions.
"The Worship Center was released and not closed by CBC," Lessard says,
noting that the college is willing to continue offering facilities if
that is what the center desires. Both institutions are pursuing what
they term "a discernment process."
The Windsor campus opened in 1998 and has provided funding, facilities
and financial oversight for the Worship Center, which opened in 1999.
The current relationship will cease June 1.
The two institutions generally have served different student bodies and
have had different missions, says the center's director, Katie Martinez.
"It was a really mission-focused decision."
CBC is a one-year discipleship training program. Most CBC students
complete the one-year program before entering a traditional four-year
undergraduate program, while some transfer to CBC after attending at
least a year at a four-year school.
The Worship Center trains worship leaders for local church staff
ministry. "Most of our students are graduate students," Martinez says.
New opportunities also exist for the Worship Center, say Lessard and
Martinez. Lessard founded the Worship Center and believes the days ahead
are promising. "There's a sense of loss, but it's like a teen leaving
the house." He adds, "I'm really excited about the direction that Katie
is taking (the center)."
Martinez says she hopes the school can work even more closely with
churches and donors to provide financial support.
The college will reduce faculty beginning in the fall. The CBC-Colorado
faculty will move from four full-time equivalents to three. The faculty
at CBC-Canada will be reduced by one full-time position.
Declining enrollment has been due to a number of factors, Lessard says.
The increasing cost of attending a four-year college has been a major
consideration. As that cost rises, families have been more reluctant to
pay for a year of Bible college.
Attending CBC for one year costs about the same as attending a public
university, Lessard says. Unlike state schools, however, students in the
United States are unable to get student loans to cover schools like CBC,
while students in Canada are eligible.
Enrollment at Bible colleges across the country has been either flat or
in decline for several years, Lessard says. "Students are increasingly
focused on degrees that will lead to employment. That's a very
demonstrable trend across the country."
As Bible colleges struggle to attract students, the number of full-time
university students in Canada has risen 23 percent over the last four
years, Lessard says. Universities in the United States have experienced
an enrollment increase of 13 percent over the past five years.
Lessard says he understands the financial pressures on families, but
adds that the discipleship training the students receive will last a
lifetime and help them weather the many life changes they will undergo,
including the choice of colleges and majors. "The major myth is that
students go to one school," Lessard says. Many students, however, attend
more than one. "The average student changes majors five times and goes
to three (four-year) schools," he notes.
Lessard says students who attend CBC tend to stay at the college they
later attend because they have had more time to work through issues
common to the college age group. "We're providing the perfect venue for
students to ask those questions."
CBC Moves to Close $300,000 Budget Gap
STRATHMORE, AB (March 27) - Covenant Bible College (CBC) has initiated
additional expense reductions to address a remaining budget deficit of
approximately $300,000, largely the result of enrollment that dropped 25
percent over the last year, says Paul Lessard, executive vice president.
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