CHARLESTON — As Illinois moves into its eighth month without a budget, Eastern Illinois University plans an estimated 200 layoffs of non-instructional employees — as well as furloughing all administrative and professional staff additionally in March to make it through the spring semester.

These layoffs, along with cash flow reserves and budget cuts and freezes enacted last week, will be used to push Eastern

(Credit: Stephen Vanhorn)
(Credit: Stephen Vanhorn)

through the semester financially considering no appropriations from the state have been allotted for higher education.

In regard to the layoffs, 30-day notices will be sent out to those employees either late this week or earlier next week, President David Glassman told the Faculty Senate on Tuesday. This will start the normal “bumping” process associated with the layoffs such as in the fall, when employees with higher seniority who get a layoff notice can instead “bump” those with less seniority.

While the university will run through spring, uncertainty still lingers in regard to what will happen over the summer and in the fall. Glassman said he along with Paul McCann, interim vice president for business affairs, have started looking into if continuing operations during the summer will be possible, relying on tuition alone as income.

“If I find out from Paul that we would not generate enough tuition dollars to operate the university (in the summer), then I have to figure out what’s our other alternatives,” he said.

Eastern is in a similar boat regarding the fall semester. If funds do not come in from the state by the July, August and September time frame, Eastern will not be able to afford the expenses of the semester at its current capacity without changes. This is also dependent on tuition and federal funding.