Students and Staff Grapple With the Sudden Closure of University of the Arts – The Nation Fund for Independent Journalism

  • About Us
  • What We Do
    • Internship
    • Studentnation
    • 2025 Puffin Student Writing Fellows
    • 2025 Student Journalism Conference
    • Nation Classroom
    • Fellowship for the Future of Journalism
  • Memorial Fund
    • The Victor Navasky Memorial Fund
    • Celebrating Victor Event
    • Donate to the Memorial Fund
    • When Giving Feels Personal
  • News
  • Apply
  • Join us
  • Donate
Skip to content

NEWS

News > Students and Staff Grapple With the Sudden Closure of University of the Arts

June 20, 2024

Students and Staff Grapple With the Sudden Closure of University of the Arts

By Finn Cooley

Administrators announced the closure with little warning on May 31. “It was like a slap in the face or a punch in the gut. It just didn’t feel real.”

LUCY TOBIER

Students rally outside of Hamilton Hall to protest the closing of Pennsylvania’s University of the Arts.
(Lucy Tobier)

On June 7, over 200 students, faculty, and community members rallied outside of Hamilton Hall to protest the closing of Pennsylvania’s University of the Arts. Administrators announced the closure to its faculty, staff, and students with little warning on May 31, e-mailing just hours after The Philadelphia Inquirer broke the news, citing “declining enrollments, declining revenues, and increasing expenses” and “significant, unanticipated expenses.”

“It was like a slap in the face or a punch in the gut. It just didn’t feel real,” said Asher Vagilca, a UArts class of 2025 theater production student. “I don’t think anyone actually thought we would close this soon or at all. I really don’t think anyone knew this was coming, except for the people up top, who decided not to tell us.”

After the closure announcement, UArts President Kerry Walk resigned and three separate lawsuits were filed by faculty and students for insufficient notice of termination—a violation of the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act—and failure to uphold tuition contracts. UArts did not respond to comment requests, but representatives from the Middle States Commission on Higher Education which accredits colleges said they do not know the reasons for and conditions of the closure during a webinar on June 14.

Read the full story here.

Category: Featured StudentNation

Featured

The Gutting of the Department of Education Is Worse Than You Think
Trump Wants Thousands of Migrant Children to Represent Themselves in Court
Why Texas Universities’ Drag Bans Backfired

More Articles

520 8th Avenue, Fl 21
New York, NY 10018

  • Contact Us
  • Apply
  • Support Us
  • Privacy Policy

All content © 2025. All Rights Reserved.

The Nation Fund for Independent Journalism is a 501(c)(3) organization, and donations are tax deductible to the fullest extent provided by law.

Follow Us

The Nation Fund for Independent Journalism is a 501(c)(3) organization, and donations are tax deductible to the fullest extent provided by law.

All content © 2025. All Rights Reserved.