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West Chester U. looking for new sites to grow

West Chester University is in the early stages of scouting sites to establish campuses and accommodate growing enrollment. "If we're really going to be able to accommodate students who want a West Chester education, we're going to have to do it someplace other than here," said Greg R. Weisenstein, 68, who will retire March 31 after seven years at the helm of the lar

Greg R. Weisenstein is honored on his retirement as West Chester University's president this month by having a street named after him. Retired professor John Baker made the presentation. Weisenstein said the school, the only one in the state system whose enrollment rose last year, was looking to expand off-site. Story, B2. ED HILLE / Staff Photographer
Greg R. Weisenstein is honored on his retirement as West Chester University's president this month by having a street named after him. Retired professor John Baker made the presentation. Weisenstein said the school, the only one in the state system whose enrollment rose last year, was looking to expand off-site. Story, B2. ED HILLE / Staff PhotographerRead more

West Chester University is in the early stages of scouting sites to establish campuses and accommodate growing enrollment.

"If we're really going to be able to accommodate students who want a West Chester education, we're going to have to do it someplace other than here," said Greg R. Weisenstein, 68, who will retire March 31 after seven years at the helm of the largest university in the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education. "We're landlocked, and there's only so many students our community can absorb."

He declined to list locations being considered, but said they were likely to be near Philadelphia and in areas where the university draws many applicants.

West Chester's main campus has 406 acres, and the university has three off-site locations: a graduate center in West Chester, a nursing center in Exton, and programs at the state system's Center City site.

Enrollment at the 16,611-student university increased 3.2 percent last year and has risen nearly 30 percent since 2004. West Chester is one of only three state universities of 14 in the system where enrollment grew last year. The other schools had declines, and the system overall has been losing students for several years.

Much of the enrollment growth has occurred during Weisenstein's tenure. The university feted him on Monday and named a street after him.

Weisenstein said he expected another enrollment jump in fall 2016, possibly bringing enrollment close to 17,000. About 1,500 of the students rarely or never set foot on the main campus, he said, taking classes at the other sites or online.

He emphasized that the university was a long way from making any decisions, and it is unclear what impact his departure will have.

Christopher M. Fiorentino, vice president for external operations, will step in as interim president while the university searches for a new leader.

"We have to work with everybody else to make sure that it's the right place," he said, "that transportation works well, and that we're not butting up against other universities that can provide the same service at the same price."

In June, West Chester announced a collaboration with Cheyney, an historically black university that is also part of the state system and is only six miles away. Cheyney has been bleeding enrollment and struggling financially.

At that time, a West Chester spokeswoman noted Cheyney's 275 acres of rolling farmland in Delaware and Chester Counties. But Weisenstein last week dismissed the possibility of locating a building or satellite campus on Cheyney property.

"There are a lot of politics around that," he said.

Weisenstein said he was proud of West Chester's growth and popularity. The university accepted 59 percent of its applicants for last fall, and of those, nearly a third enrolled. Incoming freshmen had an average GPA of 3.6.

The university a few months ago began advertising at Union Station in Washington and Penn Station in New York City.

"We want to broaden the reputation of the university," he said. "That has some major benefits not only in recruiting students but also in helping our graduates. As you elevate the image . . . you help people get jobs."

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