The Kentucky Senate has passed House Bill 490 (HB 490), a measure that expands the grounds for public universities to terminate faculty members, including those with tenure, during periods of financial strain. Passed on March 27, 2026, by a 30-7 vote, the bill now heads back to the House for concurrence on minor Senate amendments before potentially reaching Governor Andy Beshear's desk.
This legislation comes amid ongoing financial pressures on Kentucky's public higher education institutions, driven by enrollment declines, state funding uncertainties, and a looming 'demographic cliff.' While proponents argue it provides necessary flexibility for fiscal management, critics, including faculty unions and the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), warn it undermines tenure protections and academic freedom.
Financial Challenges Facing Kentucky Public Universities
Kentucky's public postsecondary institutions have grappled with budget shortfalls for years. Northern Kentucky University (NKU), for instance, projects a $1.9 million deficit for fiscal year 2027 due to declining enrollment and potential state funding cuts. The University of Kentucky (UK) anticipates 3-4% funding reductions over the next two years if proposed budgets pass unchanged. Historically Black College and University (HBCU) Kentucky State University (KSU) faces acute distress, prompting separate legislative intervention via Senate Bill 185 (SB 185).
Statewide undergraduate enrollment grew from Fall 2024 to 2025, outpacing national trends, but regional disparities persist. Smaller institutions like KSU struggle with low enrollment (targeting 1,000 in-person students under reforms) and chronic deficits, exacerbated by the national 'enrollment cliff'—a projected drop in traditional college-age students post-2025.

Key Provisions of HB 490
HB 490 amends Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS) 164.360, 164.230, and 164.830, affecting the University of Kentucky (UK), University of Louisville (UofL), Kentucky Community and Technical College System (KCTCS), and regional universities like Morehead State, Murray State, Northern Kentucky University, and Western Kentucky University.
- Expands removal grounds beyond 'for cause' (incompetency, neglect, immoral conduct, performance failure) to 'bona fide financial reasons,' including financial exigency, low enrollment in programs/majors, or revenue-cost misalignment in colleges/departments/programs.
- Requires boards of regents/trustees to establish removal processes by October 1, 2026 (effective July 1, 2026 for evaluations), with 30 days' written notice and opportunity to respond/hear testimony.
- Maintains quadrennial performance evaluations; failure can lead to removal regardless of tenure status.
Tenure itself remains intact, but the bill lowers barriers to position elimination, modeled on handbooks at UofL and Western Kentucky University.Read the full HB 490 text here.
Legislative Path and Sponsorship
Sponsored by Rep. Aaron Thompson (R-Henderson) and Rep. James Tipton, HB 490 passed the House 72-21 on March 13, 2026. Senate amendments retain core provisions but adjust timelines (e.g., process establishment by Oct 1 instead of July 1). The emergency clause could make it effective immediately upon gubernatorial signature.
Supporters like Sen. Steve West (R-Paris) view it as a tool for program realignment amid fiscal pressures. Opponents, including Sen. Reginald Thomas (D-Lexington), decry weakened tenure safeguards.
Stakeholder Reactions: A Divided Debate
Faculty opposition is fierce. UK's Faculty Senate drafted a statement against the bill, citing risks to due process, shared governance, and morale. Provost Robert DiPaola acknowledged sister institutions' challenges but emphasized UK's stability.
The AAUP and AFT-Kentucky issued a joint statement: "HB 490 could be weaponized... to shut down research programs whose findings go against the financial interests of board members, eliminate academic departments that have become easy ideological targets, and silence faculty members whose speech board members dislike."AAUP full statement.
"This bill prioritizes profit over education and partisan interests over academic achievement." – AAUP Kentucky
Proponents argue universities must adapt like businesses, ensuring taxpayer funds support viable programs.
Photo by Katherine Hood on Unsplash
Companion Bill: SB 185 Targets Kentucky State University
Passed unanimously by the Senate, SB 185 declares a five-year financial exigency at KSU, mandating transformation into a polytechnic focused on technical programs. Key changes: limit to 10 academic areas, enrollment targets (1,000 in-person), spending caps, program cuts approved by SACSCOC by July 2026, president authority to terminate any employee (including tenured) with 30 days' notice.

KSU must reapply for Greek life recognition and collect debts aggressively. Aimed at averting closure, but faculty fear mass layoffs.
Implications for Tenure and Academic Freedom
Tenure (permanent employment after probation, protected from arbitrary dismissal) safeguards academic freedom—research/speech without fear of reprisal. HB 490's vague terms ('low enrollment,' 'misalignment') could enable subjective cuts, bypassing peer review.
- Recruitment Risks: Top scholars may avoid KY amid instability.
- Program Viability: Encourages revenue-driven decisions over societal needs (e.g., humanities).
- Freedom Concerns: Potential to target 'unprofitable' controversial research.
Similar to Ohio SB 1 (post-tenure reviews), Texas/FL reforms eroding tenure.
National Context and Enrollment Trends
KY mirrors national woes: 44 midsize universities forecast weak finances; demographic cliff hits 2025+. Strategies include online growth, workforce programs—polytechnic model at KSU aligns.
University and Faculty Responses
UK Faculty Senate actively opposed; no formal admin endorsement. KCTCS may benefit from uniform policy. Faculty urge contacting legislators/House for veto push.
What's Next for HB 490 and Kentucky Higher Ed
House concurrence expected soon; veto recess April 2-13. If signed, boards implement by Oct 2026. Long-term: bolsters adaptability but risks quality. Faculty seek alternatives like efficiency audits, philanthropy.
For tenured faculty: review contracts, unionize, diversify revenue. Job seekers: monitor KY postings amid uncertainty—explore faculty roles nationwide.
Actionable Insights for Stakeholders
- Faculty: Engage senates, prepare for evaluations, consider multi-state opportunities.
- Admins: Develop transparent processes, prioritize enrollment strategies.
- Students/Legislators: Advocate balanced reforms preserving quality.
KY's reforms highlight tensions between fiscal reality and academic mission—watch for national ripple effects.
