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Walla Walla Community College Proposes 43 Layoffs and Clarkston Campus Closure Amid $4.3M Shortfall

WWCC Faces Tough Choices: Layoffs and Branch Reductions

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Financial Pressures Mounting at Walla Walla Community College

Walla Walla Community College (WWCC), a cornerstone of higher education in southeastern Washington state, is grappling with a projected $4.3 million budget shortfall for the 2026-27 academic year. This fiscal challenge has prompted the college's Board of Trustees to explore significant restructuring measures, including the potential reduction or closure of operations at its Clarkston branch campus and the elimination of 43 full-time equivalent (FTE) positions across faculty and staff.

The main campus in Walla Walla serves as the hub for a wide array of programs, while the Clarkston campus, located about 50 miles away in Asotin County, has long been the only true community college option for the Lewiston-Clarkston Valley region. Spanning over 130 acres with facilities like Titus Creek and views of the Blue Mountains, WWCC emphasizes affordable, career-focused education, including strong programs in nursing, allied health, welding, and transfer degrees.

Roots of the Budget Shortfall

The shortfall stems from a combination of rising operational costs—such as salaries, utilities, and maintenance—and shifts in state funding. Washington state's new community and technical college funding model, approved by the State Board for Community and Technical Colleges (SBCTC), ties allocations more closely to enrollment metrics like average annualized full-time equivalents (AAFTEs). WWCC anticipates an 11.5% reduction in state support, the steepest percentage among peers, equating to roughly $521,000 annually.

Enrollment trends play a pivotal role. While overall headcount at WWCC dipped 3.8% from 2021 to 2024, recent quarters show gains—fall 2024 up 11% college-wide, with Clarkston also rising. However, arts and sciences courses at Clarkston have declined steadily, impacted by online alternatives and demographic shifts in the rural Lewiston-Clarkston area. Nursing remains robust, with 82 headcount students generating 60 AAFTEs, but low student-to-faculty ratios in high-demand fields highlight inefficiencies amid funding pressures.

Broader state dynamics exacerbate this: Washington's 2025-27 biennial budget faces shortfalls, with proposed 1.5% cuts to 34 community colleges. Programs like the Bistro (ongoing subsidies) and Continuing Education (deficits up to $130k) add strain, prompting zero-based budgeting reviews.

Details of the Proposed Position Eliminations

The 43 FTE cuts are phased over Year 1 (2026-27) and Years 2-6 (2027-33), distributed across classified staff, exempt/admin, and faculty. Three scenarios balance reductions between campuses:

  • Scenario 1: All 43 at Walla Walla (18 in Year 1, 25 later), sparing Clarkston entirely.
  • Scenario 2: 12 at Clarkston (10 Year 1), 31 at Walla Walla.
  • Scenario 3: 27 at Clarkston (10 Year 1, 17 later), 16 at Walla Walla.

These target non-instructional overhead (high management ratios) and under-enrolled areas, while protecting growth sectors like IT and teaching centers. President Chad Hickox described the college as in a "fight for its existence," urging strategic efficiencies.

WWCC faculty and staff discussing budget challenges

Clarkston Campus Under Scrutiny: Closure Options

The Clarkston campus faces the most direct threat. Full closure could save $3.2 million annually by eliminating operations except prisons (Coyote Ridge, Washington State Penitentiary). Retaining nursing/allied health saves $1.3 million but requires 30 more cuts elsewhere. Partnerships with 5-7 local entities (strained financially themselves) are floated for sustainability.

Despite declines in general ed, Clarkston's nursing draws 437 headcount (98 AAFTEs Spring 2025), supported by endowments ($118k+) and donors ($111k gifts). Athletics (182 AAFTEs) and workforce programs like welding (14 projected) bolster case, but overall AAFTEs lag Walla Walla's 654.Board packet details underscore enrollment disparities driving decisions.

Stakeholder Impacts: Students, Faculty, and Community

Students face disrupted access, especially rural Lewiston-Clarkston residents relying on Clarkston's proximity. Nursing continuity is prioritized, but transfer and workforce tracks could shift online or to Walla Walla, complicating commutes. Faculty and staff—unionized under AHE (faculty) and others—brace for RIFs (reductions in force), with contracts outlining appeals.

Communities rally: March 16 meeting drew pushback, with locals decrying loss of the valley's sole CC. Unions emphasize transparency; Budget Council deferred Clarkston recs to leadership.

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Washington's Funding Model: A Systemic Shift

WA's revamped model emphasizes outcomes and equity, but WWCC's high % cut reflects enrollment volatility. Statewide, $12B shortfall looms; Inslee's budget eyes minor GF-State trims. Peers face similar squeezes, with half gaining/losing via formula. For more on state impacts, see SBCTC updates.

WWCC's dashboards reveal duplicated headcount (Clarkston+online: 360 HC), signaling hybrid potential amid declines.

Community Response and Pushback

March 17 rally at Clarkston highlighted vital role; speakers like instructor Devon Gustafson stressed enrollment ties. Trustees heard pleas for partnerships over closure. Public confusion arises from nursing growth vs. overall shortfalls—admin clarifies structural deficits persist.NWPB coverage.

Timeline and Next Steps

Board input due April 15; first budget reading May 27, approval June. Town halls (March 6/13) informed scenarios. Leadership eyes efficiencies: software cuts, grants, rentals. Long-term: Revenue growth via online, high-demand programs.

WWCC Clarkston campus amid budget deliberations

Broader Implications for U.S. Community Colleges

WWCC mirrors national trends: Post-pandemic enrollment dips (nationally -10% since 2019), inflation, policy shifts. WA's 34 colleges face collective 1.5% trims; similar cuts hit OR's PCC faculty strike. Rural branches like Clarkston vulnerable to consolidation.CC Daily headlines.

Career Transitions for Affected Higher Ed Professionals

For faculty/staff eyeing moves, Washington's community college jobs remain robust in urban hubs. Emphasize transferable skills: Nursing instructors, welders in demand. Update resumes with WWCC's outcomes focus; explore remote/adjunct roles. Actionable: Network via unions, leverage AHE protections for recalls.

a man and woman wearing graduation gowns and caps

Photo by Fotos on Unsplash

Potential Solutions and Optimistic Outlook

WWCC explores partnerships, zero-based budgeting, athletics efficiencies (75% win rate justifies?). State advocacy via WFSE coalition pushes reversals. Success stories: Recent 11% enrollment surge signals rebound potential. With decisive action, WWCC can stabilize, prioritizing equity and access.

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Frequently Asked Questions

💼Why is WWCC proposing 43 layoffs?

The $4.3M shortfall drives phased cuts across campuses, targeting inefficiencies per state funding model.

🏫What are the Clarkston campus closure options?

Full closure saves $3.2M; nursing-only $1.3M; partnerships explored. Nursing enrollment strong at 82 HC.

📉How does state funding affect WWCC?

New model cuts 11.5% ($521K/year); highest % among WA colleges due to enrollment metrics.

📊What enrollment trends led to this?

Overall up 11% recently, but Clarkston arts/sci down; total AAFTEs lag Walla Walla.

When will decisions be made?

Board input by April 15; budget approval June 2026.

👥How has the community responded?

Rallies at March 16 meeting; push for partnerships over closure.

🎓What impacts on students?

Potential service disruptions; nursing protected, but rural access hit.

🤝Union role in layoffs?

AHE contract outlines RIF procedures, appeals; transparency urged.

🌎Broader WA community college trends?

1.5% state cuts; similar shortfalls statewide.

🔄Career advice for affected staff?

Leverage skills in nursing/welding; explore community college jobs.

💡Possible solutions for WWCC?

Partnerships, online expansion, grants; zero-based budgeting.