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Independent colleges in Pa. warn congressmen about impacts of funding cuts

Independent colleges in Pa. warn congressmen about impacts of funding cuts

Yahoo10-03-2025

The U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., is pictured as snow began to fall on Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2025. (Photo by Jennifer Shutt/States Newsroom)
An organization representing Pennsylvania's 85 independent colleges and universities is warning the commonwealth's congressional delegation that cuts to federal research funding could damage the state's economy, reduce the number of students who come here for higher education and set back American science, among other consequences.
On Monday, the president of the Association of Independent Colleges and Universities of Pennsylvania (AICUP) sent a letter to the commonwealth's 19 congressional representatives and senators amid layoffs and threats of large research funding cuts at the National Science Foundation and National Institutes of Health.
Last year, Pennsylvania-based researchers were awarded $1.8 billion in NIH funding, about half of which went to AICUP member schools. In the last fiscal year, the state received $332 million in NSF funding, with $186 million going to AICUP colleges and universities.
'These proposed cuts will do severe damage to Pennsylvania's economy and jeopardize America's role as the world leader in science and research, potentially for generations,' AICUP President Thomas Foley wrote. 'The bottom line is that this national research funding is an investment that pays dividends across Pennsylvania.'
The Trump administration has proposed cutting the NSF budget by as much as 66%. The National Institute of Health has also attempted to institute a policy cutting all funding of research institutions to 15% of indirect costs, far less than many colleges and universities currently receive. A judge has blocked those cuts, for now. Foley estimates, if allowed to stand, the policy could cost Pennsylvania researchers $425 million.
'It is simply inaccurate to characterize indirect costs as 'administrative overhead' or 'bureaucratic bloat,' Foley wrote. 'The kind of research these grants support involves the creation of unique laboratories, the invention/purchase of expensive equipment and the capacity to run experiments in time frames that require 24-hour supervision. These costs are not waste but in fact processes that are essential to the results which produce cancer-defying medications, heart-saving therapies and so much more.'
NIH- and NHS-funded research has led to the development of many pharmaceuticals and disease treatments, as well as nascent technologies that are now central to commonly used products.
'If you have ever used the internet or chatted on an iPhone, then you have benefited from the products born of federal research funding,' Foley's letter said.
Moreover, higher education institutions are a major employer in Pennsylvania, according to data from the Department of Labor and Industry. They help attract many scientists and researchers to the state.
Thirty-five AICUP member schools would be at risk of losing research funds with the proposed cut, according to the association. They include:
Arcadia University
Allegheny College
Bryn Mawr College
Bucknell University
Carlow University
Carnegie Mellon University
Chatham College
Dickinson College
Drexel University
Duquesne University
Elizabethtown College
Franklin & Marshall College
Gettysburg College
Haverford College
Holy Family College
Juniata College
King's College
La Salle University
Lafayette College
Lehigh University
Mercyhurst University
Moravian University
Muhlenberg College
Saint Joseph's University
Saint Vincent College
Salus University (Drexel)
Swarthmore College
Thomas Jefferson University
University of Pennsylvania
University of Scranton
Ursinus College
Villanova University
Widener University
Wilkes University
Wistar Institute

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