Middlebury College announced on Thursday it would be closing the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey, the schoolโ€™s satellite campus in California, after its enrolled students complete their degrees in June 2027.

The schoolโ€™s president, Ian Baucom, said in a press release and accompanying video announcement that continuing operations at the campus in its current state was โ€œno longer feasible.โ€ The collegeโ€™s Board of Trustees approved the closure of the satellite, which primarily serves post-graduate students, during a special meeting on Aug. 27.

โ€œI recognize the gravity of this moment,โ€ Baucom said in the press release. โ€œI and my senior leadership team made this recommendation after careful deliberation, and the board did not come to this decision lightly.โ€

The college first purchased the institute and its campus in 2005 from the Western Association of Schools and Colleges. The school focuses on graduate degree and certificate programs in foreign languages and international policy. Baucom called it a โ€œleading global center of international studies.โ€

The closure comes as Middlebury College faces severe financial difficulties. In April, facing a $14.1 million deficit, the school announced a number of cost saving measures, including reductions to staff and faculty retirement benefits, which sparked faculty walkouts and protests.

At the time, college leadership said that $8.7 million of the total deficit was due to low enrollment at the Monterey Institute. One faculty member called the institute an โ€œalbatrossโ€ for Middlebury College that was sinking finances and morale.

The institute experienced steep declines in enrollment following the Covid-19 pandemic, leaving programs at the campus with โ€œunsustainable operating deficits,โ€ Baucom said in his video announcement.

All currently enrolled students will be able to complete their degrees. The school will not consider repurposing, leasing, or selling the property in Monterey until students complete their programs in June 2027, Baucom said in the release.

โ€œIt bears repeating that this was absolutely a financial decision and not a reflection on the quality of our programs or our exceptional faculty and staff,โ€ Baucom said. โ€œIt also should not be left unsaid that (the instituteโ€™s) work to educate students who go on to work in diplomacy, interpretation, arms negotiations, and other forms of service to humanity has mattered.โ€

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