Washington State University Vancouver will feel the brunt of the university system’s budget cuts. In this undated, provided photo a student sits on the grounds of the Southwest Washington campus.
Courtesy Washington State University Vancouver
Faculty and staff at Washington State Universityβs Vancouver campus say they are on pins and needles, as they wait to hear who will be impacted by the university systemβs budget cuts.
In May, WSUβs Board of Regents announced the university would need to trim nearly $12 million from its core operating funds to run a balanced budget next fiscal year. Washingtonβs public universities are required to operate a balanced budget by state law.
The institutionβs Vancouver campus will feel the brunt of the reductions soon. It was given a mandate to slash 15% from its budget. At just over $6 million in cuts, thatβs close to half of the targeted cuts for the entire university system, which includes five campuses across Washington.
Amid Portland State budget cuts, a new plan for growth emerges
University leaders approved cuts to Vancouverβs budget on Wednesday. WSU spokesperson Brenda Alling said the university will not be releasing details of the plan.
βWhat seems really problematic is this exceptional requirement that Vancouver get a significantly higher cut than any other campus in the whole state,β said WSUV Liberal Arts and History professor Sue Peabody.
Peabody is a tenured professor who has been teaching at the satellite campus since 1996. She said WSUV has weathered cuts in the past, including a 10% budget reduction just last year, but it has so far avoided layoffs.
βThis time [WSU] is asking for very, very deep cuts that can only be met with personnel,β Peabody said. βThereβs no other way to meet the 15% than eliminating employees.β
WSU is Washingtonβs land-grant university and itβs the second largest public university system in the state, with more than 25,000 students enrolled in 2025. The Vancouver campus is the institutionβs second largest physical campus, enrolling close to 2,700 students.
Amid warnings of future cuts, University of Oregon trustees approve next yearβs budget
WSU is facing a multitude of financial headwinds, as are colleges and universities in Oregon and across the nation.
Washington Stateβs budget woes are primarily driven by decreasing state funds, anticipated losses in federal research grants, declining student enrollment and increasing personnel costs.
At a packed town hall-style meeting on Monday, university administrators acknowledged that the impending cuts are causing stress among the campus community.
βThis is a time of incredibly high anxiety for us all,β Sandra Haynes, WSU executive vice president for statewide campuses, said at the June 15 meeting. βItβs hard not knowing what our futures will be. Itβs hard not knowing how weβre going to take these cuts.β
In this provided photo Washington State University Vancouver faculty and staff filled a budget town hall hosted by university administrators on Monday, June 15, 2026.
Susan Lavender
Administrators also attempted to clear up why the Vancouver campus is taking a disproportionate cut compared to the universityβs other campuses and colleges.
According to Damien Sinnott, WSU senior vice president for finance and operations, Vancouverβs 15% cut reflects an effort to align per-student state funding across the WSU system.
βWhen you look at the Vancouver, Tri-Cities and Everett campuses, Vancouver receives substantially more state funding per student β about $2,500 more per student,β Sinnott explained to faculty last week. βSo I think the board used that metric as a sign that Vancouver could withstand a larger budget reduction.β
Linfield University considers controversial program cuts to close budget deficit
Both Sinnott and Haynes said the approved budget cuts seek to minimize impacts to students, jobs and research at the campus. They said they would not be adopting a βdo more with lessβ attitude in the coming fiscal year.
But those statements are doing little to calm the frustration and fears that some faculty and staff are feeling over the mandated reductions.
βThose cuts will be felt by the students. Those cuts will diminish the quality of instruction at WSU Vancouver,β said WSU English professor Desiree Hellegers. βWhat weβre really seeing is a divestment from Southwest Washington.β
Hellegers has taught at the Vancouver campus for 33 years. She plans to retire this fall, partly to help shield some of her colleagues from layoffs.
βI know thereβs a lot of young professors who may be on the chopping block,β Hellegers said. βTo me, itβs kind of a question of, βWhat are administrators willing to sacrifice, themselves, in order to avert the worst of the damage?ββ
