DeSantis-Seized Florida College to Triple in Size After Controversial Campus Takeover
DeSantis-Seized Florida College to Triple in Size After Takeover

New College of Florida, a liberal arts college seized by Florida’s hard-right governor Ron DeSantis and transformed into a model for conservative higher education, is set to triple in size after state Republicans engineered a hostile takeover of a rival university’s campus. The 900-student New College will acquire the Sarasota-Manatee campus of the University of South Florida (USF) next month, significantly expanding its footprint.

Deal Details and Opposition

The transfer of the 32-acre, 2,000-student facility—which includes a new six-story residential hall and a $44 million student center—has proceeded despite near-universal opposition from USF students, faculty, education leaders, and the local business community. Critics argue that popular, thriving programs such as nursing, tourism, and hospitality will end, harming the local economy and student access.

“It’s such a bad thing because USF Sarasota-Manatee was serving a different group of students than New College and had very different programs,” said Lucie Lapovsky, a higher education consultant and one of dozens of signatories on a letter to state lawmakers condemning the proposal. “Sarasota is a big tourist area right on the water on the Gulf of Mexico. We have lots of hotels and restaurants that employ graduates of that program. We have several hospitals, and graduates of USF health programs work there. It provides opportunities for students who graduated from local high schools, as well as older residents going back to college.”

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Lapovsky added, “It makes no sense whatsoever in terms of access to higher education for students, in terms of what the area was producing and offering, in terms of academic programs.”

University and Student Reactions

USF President Moez Limayem acknowledged the loss of the campus “creates significant uncertainty and anxiety for our dedicated, outstanding faculty, staff and students.” He stated that programs would continue during a four-year “teach-out” period before they close. “USF’s strength is not a collection of buildings and land; our real strength has been, and always will be, our people,” Limayem wrote, promising that enrolled students “will have the opportunity to finish their USF degrees in Sarasota-Manatee without disruption.”

Student leaders were also critical. “All students here on our campus truly would like for USF to stay here in our Sarasota-Manatee community,” Dennis Kukharenko, the student lieutenant governor, told faculty leaders in February. “A lot of us live really far away from campus. We have to drive here. And removal of this campus really removes an opportunity to get a degree affordably.”

Political Maneuvering

Fentrice Driskell, leader of Florida’s House Democratic caucus, accused Republicans of bypassing normal legislative protocols to approve the handover. A proposal passed the House earlier this year but was not taken up by the state senate, leading opponents to believe the measure had died. However, it was resurrected by a conference committee and inserted with little debate into the final state budget currently awaiting DeSantis’s signature.

“My position has not changed,” said Driskell, who during the Florida House discussion said the proposal “reeks of grift.” “When the Sarasota-Manatee campus found out they could be the next victim in DeSantis’s schemes, of course, they were on high alert, then had a moment of feeling safe. Now it’s just all been taken away, and it’s been really hard to watch. This is a governor who has expanded and tested the limits of executive power in ways that I don’t think anybody would have ever foreseen, and he’s been such a bully about all of these things.”

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Financial and Academic Concerns

Critics point to the amount of money thrown at New College by the DeSantis administration. Richard Corcoran, a close ally of the governor and former speaker of the Florida House with no previous experience in higher education administration, was appointed New College president in 2024 with a salary package of $1.2 million—four times higher than his ousted predecessor. A damning efficiency study published in November showed it cost almost half a million dollars to produce a degree at New College, compared to the next highest among Florida’s 13 state universities and colleges: Florida Polytechnic University at just under $155,000 per degree.

“It doesn’t even pass the governor’s own Doge [department of government efficiency] exercise,” Driskell said. “There is so much waste here, and it is incredibly frustrating to watch the governor try to bend the higher education system towards his political will. New College is a vanity project, and he’s been willing to spend whatever it takes to prop it up. Whatever New College needs, they’re going to give it those resources, but you know the truth is that it’s a failure.”

New College’s Transformation

Corcoran has insisted New College is apolitical, while critics say the progressive college with a prominent LGBTQ+ community has been “destroyed” by its sudden hard-right turn. In September, the college announced it was commissioning a statue of Charlie Kirk, the rightwing political activist murdered last year. In 2024, photographs of hundreds of dumped library books went viral after New College purged its diversity, equity, and inclusion programs. Conservative activist Christopher Rufo, appointed by DeSantis as a New College trustee, angered students by saying the college was “throwing out the trash.”

Future Prospects

DeSantis will be termed out of office in January, and Lapovsky said a change in the state’s political direction might provide a pathway for reversing the acquisition. “I hope a new governor or legislature might undo this, but I have no idea,” she said. “They claim that the students currently enrolled will get to finish their programs, which means that the education will continue on the campus at least for two or three more years. If that’s the case, there may be ways that it can be undone. It’s a tremendous loss to Sarasota and Manatee counties, and anyone who voted for it should be totally ashamed of themselves.”

In a statement, Corcoran did not directly address what would happen to USF courses at the end of the “teach-out” period. “New College is prepared to steward this transition with care and intentionality as we continue building a nationally distinctive public liberal arts institution focused on academic excellence, civic discourse, innovation and student opportunity,” he said. “We look forward to working closely with regional leaders, faculty, staff and community partners to ensure a positive long-term decision for the region, for the state university system and for the future of higher education in Florida.”