Harvard’s school of public health, which relies on federal grants for almost half its budget, has conducted layoffs and reduced graduate-student admissions. It has pinched pennies on everyday spending, cutting coffee in the faculty lounge as well as catering at meetings, and removing some printers and desk phones. A spokeswoman for the T.H. Chan School of Public Health said it has lost nearly every direct federal grant it receives.
Garber said Wednesday the university would contribute an additional $250 million to backfill some of the lost research funds “for a transitional period as we continue to work with our researchers to identify alternative funding sources.”
Institutions will do what they can “to protect the academic core as long as possible,” said Erin Hennessy, an executive vice president at TVP Communications, a higher-education communications firm. That means going after easier cuts first, she said, such as not filling vacant positions, deferring building projects and consolidating departments, before touching the faculty.
So far, the undergraduate experience hasn’t changed at most universities, but cuts in the coming months could have a significant impact by fall. Many universities implemented hiring freezes in March, after the Trump administration announced caps to research costs funded by the National Institutes of Health. Actions such as layoffs haven’t yet become widespread.