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Portland State Directed To Reinstate Several Laid-Off Faculty Members

Portland State Directed To Reinstate Several Laid-Off Faculty Members

In a major ruling, an independent arbitrator found that Portland State University violated its collective bargaining agreement when it laid off ten non-tenure-track faculty members at the end of the 2024–25 academic year.

The university had been trying to close an $18 million budget deficit, but the arbitrator determined it used the wrong contractual clause for the layoffs and failed to provide required justification.

PSU has been ordered to reinstate the ten faculty members and make them “whole.”

Why This Is a Big Deal

Key Details of the Case

ItemDetail
Budget DeficitApproximately $18 million for the 2024-25 academic year
Number of Layoffs17 non-tenure-track faculty laid off
Faculty Reinstated10 faculty members ordered to be reinstated
Savings from CutsOver $12.3 million saved, equivalent to about 88 full-time jobs
Contract ViolationPSU used the “quick layoff” clause instead of the “economic downturn” clause, and did not provide required program justification
University ResponsePSU says the decision is based on a “misguided interpretation” and is considering appeal
Future Cuts PlannedPSU has announced plans to cut another $35 million by 2027

Why the Union Won

What It Means for PSU, the Faculty & Students

The ruling against Portland State University marks a significant win for faculty rights and contractual oversight in higher education.

The university’s attempt to navigate an $18 million budget shortfall by eliminating non-tenure-track positions without following the correct procedure has now been reversed.

Ten laid-off faculty members will be reinstated, and PSU must account for the financial and procedural implications moving forward.

While the institution faces ongoing financial pressures and future budget cuts, this case underscores that financial exigency does not nullify contractual governance.

For students, faculty and administrators alike, the message is clear: even in lean times, process matters.

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