DOESN’T IT seem that Savannah is full of “We can do it” civic pride right now? We just totally remade City Council — against the forces of the status quo.

Leaders arose, people spoke, supporters hustled, voters did their duty and the new council represents a “popular voice” unlike any council that I’ve seen in my 20 years here, certainly.

Doesn’t it seem right now that this “popular voice” could do anything? Like something big, something seemingly impossible, something everybody wants but no one can figure out how to do?

Well, the signs started going up around town a few weeks ago. “Unmerge My University” is a new group seeking to reverse Georgia Southern University’s much-despised takeover of Armstrong State University.

“The merger was done in haste, against the will of the people and at some point, it will be undone,” says David Breland, an 1989 Armstrong computer science graduate and one of the new group’s leaders.

“The more the people of Savannah get involved, there’s a definite possibility to unmerge the university, if there’s enough pressure,” says Irving Victor, a 1941 (yes, that’s right!) Armstrong graduate, a retired doctor and another leader in the “Unmerge” organization.

The thinking behind this new group is simple. Nobody in Savannah wanted this merger. It was railroaded into being as a fait accompli, handed down to us from that great source of all we hate, Atlanta, specifically, the former Governor, Nathan Deal, assisted by the Board of Regents, whose chairman, Don Waters, might be the only Savannahian who thought this was a good idea. (Actual quote from Waters at the time: “The plan is to grow both campuses.”)

To the contrary, the enrollment numbers for Armstrong are terrible. The latest numbers, released last month, show Armstrong continues losing students, from 6,636 just before the merger was announced in January 2017 to 5,281 this fall, a frightening 20% decline.

By contrast, the Statesboro campus lost only 4% during the same time. So this can’t be explained away by national trends.

Georgia Southern officials, in their responses to me, say that they are “on this” with a five-year strategic plan, including new degree programs, new recruitment efforts and new marketing to reverse declines.

Meanwhile, student apartments sit empty. Sports are in Statesboro. All decisions are made in Statesboro. Less enrollment means fewer classes.

And morale is low. A stark report, released in August, details how bad it is.

Less than 35% of Armstrong undergrads, faculty and staff report feeling “valued” or “belonging” — not good for recruitment at what’s now clearly treated as the “satellite campus.”

This was not the vision of Thomas Gamble, Mills Lane and those great Savannah leaders who made Armstrong a reality. Their legacies have been subsumed by blue and white.

“Stop trying to shove eagle down our throats,” an associate professor is quoted as saying at a recent campus forum addressing the report.

The forum was reported by (and I took the quote from) the Armstrong campus newspaper, the Inkwell, which apparently now is called the George Anne (Georgia Southern’s newspaper) “Inkwell Edition.”

Hello, folks! Did anyone ever tell you: Savannah doesn’t play second very well? We are not someone else’s “edition” or “addition.” We are Savannah. And we can do things. Everything about our history should’ve told you that.

So the thinking of “Unmerge My University” is this: It’s not popular. It’s not working. There’s a new governor. Savannah can rise up. Apply political pressure in the right places and we can undo it.

The group is contacting alumni, identifying supporters (including among Armstrong faculty, which is dangerous for those involved.) They are confident.

“It would be much easier to undo it than when they did the merger,” says Ron Freeman, another group leader, a business major who attended Armstrong in the 60’s. “One stroke of the pen and it could be undone,” Victor adds.

Yes, but that pen, the Governor’s, is largely unresponsive to Savannah’s interests. And unlike City Council, we don’t elect the Board of Regents, gubernatorial appointees who are the most powerful unelected body in Georgia.

These people — not our young and new City Council — control Armstrong’s future. They respond only to our ATL overlords.

And it’s going to take a whole lot of “We can do it” civic pride to overcome that obstacle.

CS

7 replies on “Group promotes uphill battle to ‘unmerge’ Armstrong”

  1. Georgia Southern did not force itself on Armstrong, this was a shotgun wedding conceived in Atlanta. Most Georgia Southern alumni, faculty, and students would also like to un-merge. Forcing two very different schools that serve different populations together has been a disaster.

  2. First, It was not a Georgia Southern takeover. So y’all need to get through your heads.

    Second, it would cost way more to “unmerge” and it’s just not happening.

    Stop bad mouthing Georgia Southern. Its not like we wanted y’all ratty campus anyway.

  3. GSU did not want this consolidation either. You need to look to Board of Regents Chairman and Savannah Businessman DON WATERS for the answers. This was his baby from conception. He was also Chairman of the Chatham County Hospital Authority and Mr. Waters is responsible for the sale of Memorial Hospital to the largest operator of hospitals in the world. There is a connection between this company’s willingness to buy with needed ancillary services, resources brought from Statesboro to Savannah. I believe if enough people from both communities demand that the two universities be restored something might happen. We should start a similar group here in Statesboro.

  4. Sad it was was a done deal before it was ever made public! I graduated in 90 and my youngest son started at Armstrong with a dual degree program with Ga Tech. When the merger went thru his dual degree program went in the trash. Ga Southern has their own program with no need to honor the dual degree program. If he wants to finish he’ll have to do it in Statesboro. Not what we wanted or originally signed up for!!!

  5. Just wrote a long reply that appears to now be lost. Will try again. Thanks Irving. RIP. The “merger “ has been a disaster. Powers that be like Don Waters and Shelly Nichol must have thought they needed a reason to justify their positions. It has not saved a dime. It has been misery all around. For Statesboro Armstrong is a thorn in their side. For Armstrong, it no longer exists. (Don now has a building with his name on it.). Come on Savannah and Statesboro let’s do something about this mess!!! Brett Larson, Professor of Biology (‘91)

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