How New Jersey City University’s interim president is charting a path to financial viability

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Roughly one year ago, the trustee board at New Jersey City University declared a financial emergency. The same day, the university’s president, Sue Henderson, resigned after 10 years on the job. 

The institution had about 26 days of cash on hand, and the financial situation was dire enough that officials suspended staff credit cards. Meanwhile, Henderson received a severance package worth roughly $350,000.

The crisis caught the public off guard and sent off shockwaves in New Jersey. Tension was acutely felt in Hudson County, home to Jersey City and one of the state’s most urban regions, just across the river from Manhattan. 

NJCU had been a source of pride for the county for boosting student social mobility. The university’s 5,200 undergraduates were more than 40% Hispanic and 20% Black. More than half of them received Pell Grants. 

If NJCU failed, what would happen to them?

Today, NJCU’s new leadership is just beginning to put the crisis in the rearview mirror. At the end of June, the New Jersey Legislature granted the college a $10 million lifeline. That funding covered the remaining $8.1 million deficit the university was facing in its 2024 budget, down from nearly $23 million, The Jersey Journal reported.  

At the helm now is Interim President Andrés Acebo, a former senior official at the college and a Hudson County lawyer. After taking the role in January, around six months following Henderson’s departure, he’s so far had a clean liftoff. 

But the question remains, can he stick the landing?

What happened at NJCU?

Acebo, at 37, is the youngest person to lead a New Jersey public college. A child of Cuban immigrants and a product of county public schools, he said he left his law career and came to work at the college in 2021 because he felt a connection to its mission. And COVID-19, which hospitalized his infant son, had made him reconsider his purpose.

“The pandemic had a way of shaking priorities and life goals,” he said. “I was always proud of my roots and my community and this institution is one that has served that community for nearly a century.”

He said he wasn’t aware of the true extent of NJCU’s financial problems when he took a senior role, as chief of staff and assistant university counsel, to help the university with institutional planning and policies. 

But the crisis was years in the making. 

From 2011 to 2021, enrollment declined nearly 17%. Officials tried to reverse the trend with spectacular investments, according to a state comptroller investigation, like new consultants, real estate, scholarships, programs and student services. 

The university spent an average of $3.5 million per year on real estate expenses from 2016 to 2021. And its spending on student services increased by 46% over a decade. 

But that spending didn’t bring students back. And when the pandemic hit, things got even more dire. 

The university lost nearly 1,300 students in less than two years. Senior officials, the comptroller’s office found, tried to use federal coronavirus relief funds to pay for an existing scholarship, even after they were informed it was an illegal use of the money. Most of those officials are no longer at the university. 

Though the trustee board was initially unaware of the potential misuse of funds, it didn’t properly oversee the president, the investigation found. Trustees neither evaluated her performance nor probed into the causes of the financial crisis, the comptroller said.

NJCU declined to comment on former employees who were referenced in the comptroller’s findings. But Acebo said it’s clear the university didn’t pivot or “right size” itself urgently enough to address long-term enrollment trends. 

“I’m focused on the institution, and I think a lot of that is perhaps what lends itself to some of the credibility that I’ve brought to this campus,” he said. “I was less focused on who’s to blame for things, but more on how to address some of these long-term and long-standing challenges that the institution has contended with.”

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