UW-Oshkosh to shut down Fox Cities campus amid enrollment plunge

CBS 58

Universities of Wisconsin officials plan to close another two-year school in the face of declining enrollment, this time in the Fox Cities.

UW-Oshkosh Chancellor Andrew Leavitt announced Thursday that in-person learning at the school's two-year branch campus in Menasha will end after the spring 2025 semester.

The Menasha campus serves 1,367 students, according to the campus website. But enrollment has declined by 67% over the last decade, and projections show fewer than 100 students will attend the school by 2032, Leavitt and UW-Oshkosh Provost Ed Martini said during a video conference with reporters. Universities of Wisconsin President Jay Rothman made the decision Monday to close the campus, Leavitt said.

"Unfortunately, the analysis is that the market and enrollment cannot sustain the Fox Cities Campus moving forward," Rothman said in a statement.

The school's 16 faculty members will be transferred to UW-Oshkosh, Leavitt said. The future of its 64 staff members depends on the four-year school's 2026 budget, he said.

UW-Oshkosh is among six UW four-year schools that face a deficit going into the next academic year thanks to declining enrollment and flat state aid. UW-Oshkosh's shortfall is the largest among the six at $8.6 million, according to a Milwaukee Journal Sentinel report on financial data UW officials presented to the Board of Regents this month.

Leavitt said during the video conference that UW schools don't subsidize each other and that declining enrollment, not UW-Oshkosh's deficit, was the sole driver of the decision to close the Menasha campus.

UW system officials have closed or announced plans to close five other two-year branch campuses around the state since 2023, including UW-Oshkosh's campus in Fond du Lac.

Martini said during the video conference that universities across the country face declining enrollment as fewer high school graduates choose to pursue higher education and as more of those who do opt for technical colleges, rather than four-year schools.

High school graduates see opportunities to make money right now, and that trend will continue until the economy cools, Leavitt added.

Outagamie County Executive Tom Nelson blasted Leavitt and Rothman, accusing them in a statement obtained by WLUK-TV of betraying the Menasha campus' students and families' trust.

"Now it will be up to the rest of us to clean up their mess," Nelson said. "Shame on you."

Leavitt said that's not a fair criticism. Students who attend the Menasha campus in the upcoming year will still receive a quality experience, he said, and UW-Oshkosh stands ready to absorb them after the branch campus closes.

Democratic Gov. Tony Evers has said he plans to ask legislators for an $800 million increase for the UW system in the next state budget. The odds of Evers securing that much money are next to zero if Republicans maintain control of the Legislature in the November election, however.

Share this article: