Norms Impact
UC San Diego, bracing for more than $200M in funding cuts, freezes faculty hiring
Political budget cuts are forcing a major public research university to halt faculty hiring, normalizing the use of funding leverage to weaken national research capacity and public institutions.
Feb 21, 2025
Sources
Summary
UC San Diego imposed a campuswide freeze on hiring new faculty as it braces for more than $200 million in potential state and federal funding cuts.
The projected reductions tie the university’s staffing and research capacity directly to upstream political budget decisions that can rapidly destabilize public institutions.
The immediate result is halted faculty recruitment across the university, including the school of medicine, with downstream risks to research output, training pipelines, and regional economic stability.
Reality Check
When federal and state budget actions force a public university to freeze faculty hiring, our rights to stable public institutions and evidence-driven governance become collateral damage in political power plays. Nothing in this record suggests bribery or a discrete criminal scheme; routine appropriations choices are generally lawful, even when they are used to undermine public capacity. The danger is structural: sustained funding shocks to NIH-dependent research campuses weaponize scarcity, distort public priorities, and leave our scientific and medical infrastructure vulnerable to partisan retaliation rather than public need.
Detail
<p>UC San Diego confirmed Thursday that it is freezing the hiring of new faculty across the entire university, including the school of medicine, to manage anticipated reductions in government funding.</p><p>Terry Gaasterland, who chairs the Academic Senate’s Committee on Planning and Budget, said the campus anticipates losing up to $55 million under the new state budget proposal tied to Gov. Gavin Newsom’s plan to reduce funding to the University of California system by nearly $400 million.</p><p>UC San Diego also projects it could lose at least $150 million annually from the National Institutes of Health after the Trump administration directed NIH to reduce its budget by billions of dollars; the university confirmed that estimate in a statement posted on its website Thursday.</p><p>University leaders also sent an email Thursday morning urging faculty, staff, and students to advocate for federal funding by attending a “pop-up” event near Geisel Library and contacting members of Congress.</p>