Education

Meet a president guiding the merger of 2 Missouri religious colleges

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As the coronavirus wound its way through the U.S., shutting down college campuses and stressing their finances, eyes turned to the smaller institutions with generally shaky budgets.

Higher education pundits predicted more widespread, permanent closures, many of which did not materialize. However, some colleges couldn’t keep their enrollment up.

One of those was St. Louis Christian College, a metropolitan nonprofit religious institution, with only a few dozen students.

Its operations have almost entirely merged into Central Christian College of the Bible, as the governing boards of the two institutions gave final approval for a merger in April after an initial greenlight in October last year. 

At 170 students last fall, Central Christian College of the Bible is a small institution. We spoke with David Fincher, president of the college, about challenges he encountered during consolidation and the future of smaller, religious institutions. 

This interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.

HIGHER ED DIVE: Tell me more about the history of the two colleges. What prompted this merger?

DAVID FINCHER: Our schools are very similar. We have an overlapping base of support. We recruit from a lot of the same places. In reality, we are a rural version and they were a more metropolitan version of the same institution — same accreditation programs, same constituents for the most part. We’ve known people from there, we’ve hired people from there. They’ve hired people from here. It’s just been a collegial relationship through the years. I’ve had a relationship with the last two presidents on a friendship level. 

David Fincher

David Fincher, president of Central Christian College of the Bible

Courtesy of Anna Janelle Photography

 

Over the last three years, their enrollment took a pretty serious downturn, partly because of some public relations problems regarding Ferguson — they are in the area — and partly because COVID restrictions in their county were stronger than in other places. They had some controversies in the past people weren’t letting go of. 

Last summer, when they didn’t reach a key enrollment goal, their president reached out to me. Their board had already agreed that if they didn’t reach the goal, they had to do something else. The president asked if I would be interested in merging, I said we definitely were and we started a long conversation that day.

Over the past year, we’ve been working out the details of that.

What’s been the big push lately to complete the consolidation?

This has really been a foregone conclusion since October. There are really only a couple of steps left with the state of Missouri. 

For the merger, we used a legal firm in St. Louis that has been very thorough. There’s been some things you don’t think of until you’re in the middle of it. For instance, we had separate types of nonprofit status with the state. There’s an educational nonprofit status, and a religious nonprofit status, and two institutions can’t merge if they’re not of the same status. Ours is educational, theirs was religious, so they had to file to get that changed.

Also many of their endowment documents had unclear language, and some of those documents had to be subject to state of Missouri approval before they can be resolved. Not because there’s anything illegal or inappropriate, but the state won’t allow certain transfers to take place without at least a review. We didn’t know that, so that was a delay.

But we’ve been operating as if we had already enrolled all the students, their students are coming here, they have their schedules. The St. Louis campus closed and the students were told they had to come up with alternatives, but we were the most likely one since everything was the same ⁠— same accreditation, same degree programs, same state.

Do you know how many of the college’s students and employees you took on?

They were a micro college, so they were down to about 60 students when they announced they were closing. By the spring they were down to 53. Some of them had finished in the fall.

So there ends up being 35 students, almost 40, who didn’t graduate — of those, about 20 of them that were residential are moving here, and about 15 of them are going online, through Zoom.

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