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    The McMaster Department of Philosophy has now put together the following notice commemorating Barry: Barry Allen: A Philosophical Life Barry…

Canary in the coal mine: UC San Diego suspends *all* faculty and staff hiring “for the indefinite future”

On the earlier thread about whether those with job offers should accept quickly, Professor Sam Elgin at UC San Diego just posted the following:  "My university – UC San Diego – has just announced a complete freeze on all faculty and staff hiring for the indefinite future. Our Executive Vice Chancellor cited financial uncertainty arising from potential federal funding cuts, which could account for a 10% budget shortfall for the campus."

This is extremely ominous. 

UCSD is a major research center in the medical and life sciences, so is at grave risk if the cut in NIH funding stands.   Admittedly, some colleges and universities will be less dependent on the NIH.  Here is a list of the top 20 recipients of NIH funding compiled in early 2024:

Johns Hopkins University, $842,956,584
  • University of California, San Francisco. $789,196,651
  • University of Pennsylvania $703,217,343
  • Duke University $701,940,461
  • University of Michigan $698,264,076
  • University of Pittsburgh $658,312,303
  • Washington University, St. Louis $633,343,121
  • Columbia University Health Sciences $633,309,114
  • Stanford University $628,835,527
  • Yale University $622,499,969

Rounding out the top 20 were:

  • University of California, Los Angeles $580,267,623
  • University of California, San Diego $572,451,525
  • University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill $559,512,811
  • University of Washington, Seattle $558,170,733
  • Vanderbilt University $546,405,280
  • Mount Sinai Icahn School of Medicine $501,120,829
  • Emory University $485,429,870
  • University of Wisconsin, Madison $446,888,313
  • New York University $424,963,095
  • Northwestern University $413,561,989

Of course, many other colleagues and universities receive substantial sums from NIH, which in the context of their own budgets may make a crucial difference to funding.  So I expect UCSD will not be the last school to freeze faculty and staff hiring.

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3 responses to “Canary in the coal mine: UC San Diego suspends *all* faculty and staff hiring “for the indefinite future””

  1. You are listing total NIH funding, which is not what was cut. Only F&A (facilities and administration) reimbursements were limited to 15% of grants, when some universities charge NIH up to 60%. This is fake news and misreporting totals.

    BL: I know exactly what I'm listing, you should read more carefully: it's the top 20 schools in NIH funding, as I wrote. We don't know what percentage of that is indirect, since that varies by school. But this indicates which schools get the most from the NIH, and thus are most at risk from the possible cuts, whatever the precise amount of the loss.

  2. Effective immediately, Harvard will implement a temporary pause on staff and faculty hiring across the University. In the coming days, we will work closely with the leadership of Harvard’s Schools and administrative units to help determine how to implement this guidance in extraordinary cases, such as positions essential to fulfilling the terms of gift- or grant-funded projects.

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