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Oregon Public Colleges Restructuring: Lawmakers Pass HB 4124 for Systemic Review and Reform

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Understanding the Push for Oregon Public Colleges Restructuring

Oregon's higher education landscape is at a crossroads. With public universities and community colleges grappling with persistent financial deficits, declining enrollments in some sectors, and chronically low state funding, lawmakers have taken decisive action. On March 4, 2026, the Oregon Senate passed House Bill 4124 (HB 4124), following House approval on February 27. The bipartisan measure, now awaiting Governor Tina Kotek's signature, mandates a comprehensive review by the Higher Education Coordinating Commission (HECC) of the state's seven public universities and 17 community colleges.

This legislation signals a potential shift toward greater collaboration or even mergers among institutions, aimed at bolstering financial sustainability, eliminating program duplication, and better aligning offerings with workforce needs. Sponsored by Rep. Pam Marsh (D-Ashland) and a diverse group of co-sponsors, HB 4124 responds to years of warnings about the system's fragility. As Rep. Marsh noted, "We do not have time to sit around and twiddle our thumbs. We have to turn this system quickly."

The bill's emergency clause underscores the urgency, positioning it to take effect immediately upon signing. Preliminary recommendations are due to legislative committees by October 1, 2026, with a final report by April 1, 2027.

Financial Strains Plaguing Oregon's Public Higher Education

Oregon's public colleges have faced mounting pressures. State funding per full-time equivalent (FTE) student stands at roughly $6,200, placing the state 46th nationally and 43% below the U.S. average of $10,820. This tuition dependency—69.7% of revenue from net tuition versus the national 49.5%—leaves institutions vulnerable to enrollment fluctuations.

Operating expenses per FTE surged 66% from FY2015 to FY2024 ($28,154 to $46,793), outpacing inflation due to rising benefits costs (now 56% of wages) and staffing growth amid a 7% enrollment drop (85,171 to 79,103 FTE). Institutional support spending doubled per student to $4,600, driven by compliance, IT, and student services.

Personnel costs dominate at 77% of spending, with benefits like pensions rising 7.2% annually. While degree productivity improved (completions per $100,000 up 58%), student-to-staff ratios fell 15% to 5.4, below national averages.

InstitutionFY2015 Cost/FTEFY2024 Cost/FTE% Increase
EOU$18,787$34,72985%
OIT$20,576$34,84069%
OSU$34,594$50,54146%
PSU$21,035$37,86880%
SOU$17,710$31,27177%
UO$33,113$54,57465%
WOU$19,025$33,54576%

Community colleges, while seeing enrollment growth (up overall in fall 2025), face potential 5% state cuts, as at Central Oregon Community College ($1.5M loss).

Spotlight on Struggling Institutions: SOU, EOU, and Beyond

Southern Oregon University (SOU) exemplifies the crisis, projecting a cash shortfall by early 2027 without intervention. Third crisis in four years, SOU enacted spending restrictions and sought $15M emergency aid via HB 5204, approved recently. Enrollment down 1.8% FY2026; chronic underfunding blamed by President Rick Bailey: "The real core issue is a chronic, decades-long underfunding."

Eastern Oregon University (EOU) cut its budget 8.4%; board chair Charles Hofmann warns against one-size-fits-all solutions. University of Oregon (UO) laid off 120 amid $25-30M FY2026 deficit, tied to out-of-state enrollment drop (367 fewer projected fall 2025).

  • Universities: EOU, OIT, OSU, PSU, SOU, UO, WOU.
  • Community Colleges: Blue Mountain CC, Central Oregon CC, Chemeketa CC, Clackamas CC, Clatsop CC, Columbia Gorge CC, etc. (17 total).

While OSU grew enrollment 16% over decade, regional schools like PSU (-29.8% over decade) suffer.

HECC's Preceding Report and Call for Integration

HECC's January 2026 "Spending and Efficiency in Oregon Public Universities" report laid groundwork, noting post-2015 Oregon University System dissolution shifted costs to individual institutions, inflating support spending. It recommends "targeted institutional integration" by January 2027—mergers, shared services (IT, HR), program sharing—plus periodic program reviews and separate salary pools.Read the full HECC report.

Executive Director Ben Cannon assures academic freedom intact, focusing on operations.

Provisions of HB 4124: A Step-by-Step Breakdown

HB 4124 requires HECC to:

  1. Evaluate missions across institution types (e.g., research vs. regional).
  2. Identify collaboration/restructuring opportunities.
  3. Assess program duplication/gaps, workforce alignment.
  4. Develop affordability/financial health metrics.
  5. Engage stakeholders (faculty, students, employers).

Full text details nuanced access for rural/place-bound students. View HB 4124 overview.

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Potential Restructuring Paths: From Collaboration to Mergers

Options range from shared admin (payroll, procurement) to full mergers, inspired by US examples like Georgia's East Georgia State College-Georgia Southern merger or Vermont State University system. Oregon Tech-SOU-WOU-EOU-PSU already assess shared services.

Benefits: Cost savings (e.g., OSU's Workday $10M/year), reduced duplication. Risks: Loss of local focus, governance erosion.

Stakeholder Perspectives: Support, Skepticism, and Pushback

Supporters like Marsh see reform restoring confidence. Critics: Interinstitutional Faculty Senate fears governance breach; Oregon Community College Association urges nuance for place-bound students. EOU's Hofmann: "Assumes inefficiency where discipline already exists."

Community Colleges in the Mix: Local Governance Challenges

Unlike centralized universities, 17 community colleges have local taxing authority. Enrollment up, but funding cuts loom. Bill respects this, focusing system-wide alignment.

National Context: Lessons from US Higher Ed Mergers

521 consolidations 2000-2025; successes in PA, CT systems improved efficiency. Oregon could follow, but tailored to rural needs.

Impacts on Students, Faculty, and Oregon's Economy

Students gain affordability, workforce-aligned programs; risks disruptions. Faculty jobs may shift; economy benefits skilled workforce. For career advice, explore higher ed career advice.

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Photo by Kiril Aglichev on Unsplash

Oregon public universities campus amid restructuring discussions

Looking Ahead: Timeline and What Comes Next

2026: Prelim report Oct 1. 2027: Final April 1, legislative action. $15M SOU aid stabilizes short-term. Monitor via Oregon higher ed jobs.

In conclusion, Oregon public colleges restructuring via HB 4124 offers hope for sustainability. Rate professors at Rate My Professor, search higher ed jobs, or university jobs. Post your job at post a job.

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Frequently Asked Questions

📜What is HB 4124 in Oregon higher education?

HB 4124 directs HECC to study public universities and community colleges, recommending restructuring for financial viability.112

💰Why is Oregon public colleges restructuring needed?

Chronic underfunding (46th nationally), enrollment declines, deficits like UO's $25-30M force reforms.

🏫Which Oregon universities face crises?

SOU risks payroll halt by 2027; EOU cut 8.4%; UO laid off 120. See faculty jobs.

🔍What does HECC study cover?

Missions, collaborations, program duplication, affordability metrics; prelim Oct 2026.

🔗Are mergers likely in Oregon?

Possible, from shared services to full integrations, per HECC report.

📚How are community colleges affected?

17 local-governed CCs included; respect taxing authority.

🗣️Stakeholder reactions to HB 4124?

Support from lawmakers; opposition from faculty on governance.

🇺🇸US merger examples for Oregon?

Georgia, Vermont systems succeeded in efficiencies.

Timeline for Oregon higher ed reform?

Final report April 2027; action in 2027 session.

🎓Impacts on students and jobs?

Better programs, affordability; check higher ed jobs.

📊State funding rank for Oregon colleges?

46th per FTE; tuition-heavy.