Columbia lays off 180 staff amid ongoing tussle over federal research funding
Brittany Kriegstein / Gothamist
By
Caroline Lewis
Published May 6, 2025 at 2:00 p.m. ET27 comments
===
Columbia University is cutting about 180 staff members whose salaries were tied to federal research grants eliminated by the Trump administration, university officials said in a campuswide email Tuesday.
“In some cases, schools and departments are winding down activity but remain prepared to re-establish capabilities if support is restored,” Columbia's acting President Claire Shipman and other university officials wrote in the email, which was reviewed by Gothamist.
Some researchers will be able to apply for temporary internal funding from Columbia through a newly established Research Stabilization Fund, the letter added.
The staffing cuts are part of the ongoing fallout at the university since it became the first academic institution targeted by the Trump administration in its effort to exert greater influence and control over higher education.
Columbia has sought to negotiate with the administration over demands related to academic offerings and student discipline in order to recoup federal funding that was revoked. But Columbia has faced criticisms from some faculty and students who say it should not bend so easily.
The Trump administration said in early March it was revoking $400 million in funding to Columbia because the university had not done enough to protect Jewish students from antisemitism. The university was the site of intense campus protests since Hamas’ attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, and the war that followed. Much of the funding that was revoked was tied to medical research at the university.
The Trump administration has also separately canceled research grants at Columbia and other institutions across the country that it says no longer align with its priorities. These include grants that prioritize researchers from diverse backgrounds or focus on specific populations such as the LGBTQ+ community.
Overall, more than 300 multiyear research awards at Columbia have been partly or wholly canceled in recent months, according to Shipman’s email. The 180 staff who are either being fired or notified that their contracts won’t be renewed represent about 20% of the people who are funded in some way by the affected grants.
In March, Columbia agreed to comply with most of the Trump administration’s conditions for restoring the funding federal officials revoked, alleging the school allowed antisemitism to fester. In a memo, the university said it would conduct a review of academic offerings in Middle East studies and other departments, hire special officers who can remove people from campus and enforce stricter oversight of student groups, among other measures.
U.S. Education Secretary Linda McMahon later said the university was “on the right track” to have the funding restored.
Columbia’s discussions with the federal government are ongoing, according to Tuesday’s letter, but in the meantime university leaders said they are preparing for “every eventuality” and seeking to reduce spending.
But Columbia has also come under fire from some students and faculty who accuse it of capitulating to the Trump administration too easily. Harvard has taken a different approach and refused to comply with the Trump administration’s demands — but was informed this week that it would no longer qualify for federal research grants.
Last week, faculty from a range of schools and departments at Columbia held a 25-hour demonstration during which people spoke continuously, calling on the university to protect and supplement research funding, but also to stand up for academic freedom and protect students and scholars from federal attacks, among other demands.
Melanie Wall, a professor of biostatistics in the Department of Psychiatry at Columbia University Irving Medical Center, is among the faculty organizing under the banner CUIMC Stands Up.
Wall said she wanted Columbia to try to recoup lost research funding from the Trump administration — but not at the cost of the school’s integrity.
“It’s not meant to be a fight between people who want to protest wars that this country is supporting versus people wanting to be able to continue to do science,” Wall said.
Andrew Little, president of UAW Local 4100, which represents postdoctoral researchers at Columbia and other institutions, said last week that the union was asking the university to commit to providing “bridge funding” to researchers who were paid through terminated grants until they can establish another funding source.
Caroline Lewis
Caroline Lewis is on the health care beat for WNYC and Gothamist. She has covered COVID, a nurses' strike, the overdose crisis and New York’s marijuana legalization effort, and spent a year investigating patients' medical bills. She always wants to hear about how everyday New Yorkers experience the health system. Got a tip? Email clewis@wnyc.org.Read more
Gothamist is funded by sponsors and member donations
===
27 comments
====
Sort by
Best
nibblybits
4 hours ago
Columbia, you will never have your funding restored under this administration. The anti-semitism accusation was a ruse; remember, this is a regime that embraces the Proud Boys and neo-Nazis. Trump just wanted to break you, likely because you rejected him or one of his toxic offspring; the most surp...
See more
Reply
12
1
Share
2 replies
FrancesD
3 hours ago
Oh Columbia with all your real estate holdings and assets you could have found the money to keep these staffers. Come on and do the right thing and shave off some big salaries by a couple percent to keep these employees
Reply
2
Share
1 reply
Tom Foster
4 hours ago
As columbia ranks last in free speech, they shouldn't recieve taxpayer dollars.
Reply
1
4
Share
Korbens Mom
4 hours ago
Cite your sources, Tom. What speech is being infringed? Also these grants were already awarded; rescinding them after the fact is illegal. But we know you don't care about the law.
Reply
1
Share
2 replies
Show 1 more reply
Cato the Youngest.
2 hours ago
All of this would not have happened if the Biden thing did not result in a feeling of disrespect and disorder. The migrants, the inflation, and the gender-sport thing awakened a long sleeping giant. What a counter reaction! The brats with the tents were never as irritating as the three listed above...
See more
Reply
1
2
Share
1 reply
John_Dortmunder
1 hour ago
😆 US colleges taking the lead in science & progress...for 1812!
Reply
Share
Cato the Youngest.
2 hours ago
The Gothamists have really good stories today. Really good pieces. Good research. I hope you guys avoid the purge. This is better than the WSJ. Like an old fashion newspaper.
Reply
Share
Carl Lutz II
1 hour ago
Supporting IDF terrorism has a price.
Reply
Share
Dick
4 hours ago
Entity
Reply
4
Share
KT2K2
3 hours ago
When someone asks how your day was, do you respond, "Pretty good! I trolled the libs online again."
Actually, no one asks you how your day was, do they? Other than your other usernames here.
Reply
3
Share
L.A.Vaught
3 hours ago
It’s funny how a guy like you relies on memes to get your point across. It’s as if you can’t think for yourself. It’s almost as if you don’t possess an imagination.
Reply
1
Share
2 replies
Mongoshlongo
4 hours ago
Entity
Reply
2
1
Share
===
No comments:
Post a Comment