SC colleges face pressure to cut costs, review programs

Summary

South Carolina colleges face growing pressure from lawmakers, trustees to slow spending and review low-performing programs.

Why this matters

The debate will shape how South Carolina funds public colleges, whether tuition remains frozen for in-state students, and which academic programs may face cuts or consolidation.

South Carolina lawmakers and university leaders are pressing public colleges to control costs as the state weighs how to fund higher education while keeping tuition affordable for in-state students.

At Clemson University, the Board of Trustees voted unanimously April 23 to require a spending control plan before its next meeting. The move followed warnings from Chief Financial Officer Rick Petillo that expense growth was outpacing revenue growth.

According to Clemson’s latest annual financial report, expenses rose about 9% between the 2023-24 and 2024-25 school years, while revenue increased 5%. In January 2025, Petillo warned that spending appeared to exceed revenue by about 3%, prompting requests to limit hiring, travel, and other nonessential expenses to save $63 million to $73 million. Clemson later balanced its budget as revenues came in higher and expenses lower than expected.

Trustee David Dukes said higher education had changed as colleges prepared for a possible “enrollment cliff” tied to a declining birth rate. Former Gov. Nikki Haley said, “Enrollment is going down across the board across the country. And real reforms have to happen.” Clemson, however, has posted modest enrollment growth, helped by students from other states, according to the state’s higher education agency.

Rep. Nathan Ballentine, who leads the House budget panel for higher education, said lawmakers should look more closely at college spending rather than simply provide money to prevent tuition increases.

The House budget proposal passed in March would require colleges to suspend at least half of programs that lose money for four straight years and would steer money toward science, technology, engineering, and math fields. The Senate removed those requirements, saying cuts based only on profitability could affect high-cost, in-demand programs such as nursing. Instead, senators required colleges to review programs and report those they cut or consolidate.

Since 2019, South Carolina has provided public colleges with state money in exchange for freezing in-state tuition and class-related fees. For the coming fiscal year, both chambers agreed on $26.3 million for “tuition mitigation” across 16 public colleges and universities, plus $6.7 million for the Medical University of South Carolina.

In all, public universities, including University of South Carolina satellite campuses, are slated to receive more than $1.5 billion in state tax dollars in the coming fiscal year. Even so, state funding averaged $10,438 per full-time student, below the national average and ahead of only Mississippi and Louisiana in the Southeast, according to the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association.

  • Samsung tops $1trillion value

    Foreign investors may have helped drive the latest rally. A deal between Interactive Brokers and Samsung Securities gave U.S. investors direct access to Korean stocks.

    Full story +

  • N.C. bill would add strip club fee for victim services

    A bipartisan North Carolina bill would require some strip clubs to charge a $10 entry fee to support sexual assault and rape crisis services.

    Full story +

  • N.C. Medicaid funding law drew praise, criticism

    A new North Carolina Medicaid funding law keeps the program running, but critics said it adds barriers that could reduce access to care.

    Full story +

  • N.C. Democrats seek disclosures from pregnancy centers

    North Carolina has about 100 such centers, many of them religiously affiliated, and they receive millions of dollars in state funding each year.

    Full story +

  • ,

    Virginia joins states opposing USPS gun mail rule

    Virginia joined 21 states, D.C. in opposing a USPS proposal to allow some firearms to be mailed.

    Full story +

  • Honolulu police shoot 18-year-old in stolen-car case

    One responding officer was hospitalized Monday night with injuries.

    Full story +

  • SC colleges face pressure to cut costs, review programs

    Since 2019, South Carolina has provided public colleges with state money in exchange for freezing in-state tuition and class-related fees.

    Full story +

  • U.S. 17 reopens after dropped container checked

    Officials said a radioactive-marked container that fell from a work truck on U.S. 17 was an asphalt-testing tool and posed no public danger.

    Full story +

  • New Bern seeks even-year elections, nonpartisan vote

    If the request is approved, the next municipal election would be held in 2030 instead of 2029. Current board members would serve an additional year.

    Full story +

  • Mali rebel groups film captured drone control station

    No images showed the rebel groups possessing TB2 drones.

    Full story +