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SG-039 Catholic college · Kentucky 2016

St. Catharine College — A Dominican College That Sued Washington and Lost Everything

Lifespan
1931–2016 · 85 yrs
Peak Enrollment
~750 (peak); 667 in 2011
Killed By
federal aid sanction + construction debt
Fate
Closed
LocationSt. Catharine, KY
AffiliationRoman Catholic (Dominican Sisters of Peace)
Campus todayCrown Recovery Center, an addiction-treatment campus

Summary

St. Catharine College, a small Catholic institution near Springfield, Kentucky, founded in 1931 by the Dominican Sisters of Peace, announced on June 1, 2016 that it would close at the end of July, ending eighty-five years as a college and a far longer Dominican educational presence on the land. It died of two wounds at once: a crushing construction-debt load it had taken on in the boom years, and a federal financial-aid sanction that — in the college's furious telling — choked off its cash and finished it. St. Catharine sued the U.S. Department of Education to fight the sanction; it closed before the suit could save it.

The college had deep roots. The Dominican Sisters traced their educational work on the site to classes held in a Kentucky "still house" in the early 1800s; the college proper opened in 1931 as a junior college and, after winning federal approval in 2003 to offer four-year degrees, grew into a baccalaureate institution of around 700 to 750 students at its peak. To accommodate that growth it built — new residence halls, a health-sciences building, a library — and it borrowed to do so. When enrollment softened, the debt service that the expansion required became a millstone, and the college was carrying a roughly $5 million deficit.

The federal blow landed in January 2015, when the Department of Education placed St. Catharine on its most restrictive form of "heightened cash monitoring," known as HCM2, after a 2014 audit found inadequate financial controls and aid-documentation that did not match student accounts. Under HCM2, the college had to disburse student aid from its own pocket and then seek reimbursement — a punishing demand for an institution already short of cash. Enrollment, which had been around 600, fell to a projected 475 for fall 2016 as the dispute scared off students. In February 2016 the college sued the Department, seeking some $645,000 in withheld reimbursements; its president accused the agency of trying to "strangle the college." The suit was dismissed; the college was already gone.

St. Catharine occupies a genuinely contested place in this encyclopedia. The for-profit chains elsewhere in these files earned their HCM2 sanctions through fraud; St. Catharine was a nonprofit Catholic college that believed itself regulated to death over compliance failures it was trying to fix. The truth is that both things were true at once: the college had real internal-controls problems and real construction debt, and the federal sanction, whatever its merits, was the shove that toppled an institution already leaning hard.

Timeline

1931
The college opens
St. Catharine opens as a junior college under the Dominican Sisters near Springfield, Kentucky, atop an educational presence the Sisters trace to "still house" classes in the early 1800s.
2003
Four-year status
The college wins U.S. Department of Education approval to begin offering four-year baccalaureate programs.
2011
Enrollment peak
Enrollment reaches about 667 students, near its high-water mark of roughly 750.
2000s–2010s
The building boom and the debt
St. Catharine builds new residence halls, a health-sciences building, and a library, borrowing to fund the expansion.
2014
The damning audit
An independent audit finds inadequate financial management and aid documentation that does not match amounts posted to student accounts.
Jan. 2015
HCM2
The Department of Education places St. Catharine on its most restrictive heightened cash monitoring, forcing it to front student aid and seek reimbursement.
2015
Leadership overhaul
The board replaces 18-year president William Huston, hires a compliance director, and turns over senior leadership and most of the business and aid offices.
Feb. 2016
The lawsuit
St. Catharine sues the U.S. Department of Education, seeking about $645,000 in withheld reimbursements and other relief.
June 1, 2016
The closure announcement
The college announces it will close at the end of July, citing a ~$5 million deficit and "insurmountable" challenges; enrollment had fallen toward a projected 475.
July 2016
The final closure
St. Catharine closes; 118 faculty and staff lose their jobs; teach-out and transfer arrangements are sought for students.
(after closure)
The suit dismissed
The federal lawsuit is dismissed in the Department's favor.
Nov. 2020
The campus reborn
Addiction Recovery Care opens the Crown Recovery Center on the former campus, eventually employing hundreds and treating up to 750 clients.

Eighty-Five Years and a Still House

The college that closed in 2016 was the institutional flower of a Dominican educational presence far older than itself. The Sisters traced their teaching on the Kentucky land back to the early nineteenth century, to classes in a "still house," and St. Catharine College proper opened in 1931 as a junior college — a modest two-year institution offering the daughters and sons of rural Kentucky a Catholic education close to home. For most of its life it stayed small and two-year, a stable role it filled without drama. The ambition came later. In 2003, the college won approval from the Department of Education to offer four-year programs, and it set about becoming a baccalaureate institution.

That transition was the hinge on which everything turned. To be a four-year residential college, St. Catharine needed four-year facilities: dormitories for students who would now live on campus for eight semesters rather than commuting for four, a health-sciences building to house the nursing and allied-health programs that were its growth engine, a library befitting a senior institution. So it built, and it grew, reaching about 667 students by 2011 and roughly 750 at its peak — a real, accredited Catholic college where there had been a junior college. The Sisters' eight-decade investment had produced an institution offering bachelor's degrees in fields, like nursing, that led to good jobs in a region that needed them. The growth was genuine. So was the debt that paid for it.

The Debt and the Sanction

Two pressures converged on St. Catharine, and it is the convergence, not either alone, that explains the closure. The first was the construction debt. The buildings that made the four-year college possible had been financed, and the debt service on the residence halls, the health-sciences building, and the library was a fixed annual cost that did not shrink when enrollment did. By 2016 the college was carrying a deficit of roughly $5 million — a fatal sum for an institution of its size, and one driven substantially by the cost of the expansion it had bet its future on. A small college can carry debt when enrollment is rising; the same debt becomes a vise the moment growth stalls.

The second pressure was the federal sanction, and here the story turns genuinely bitter. A 2014 independent audit found that St. Catharine "lacked adequate financial management" and that documentation for aid disbursements sometimes did not match the amounts posted to student accounts. In January 2015 the Department of Education responded with HCM2 — Heightened Cash Monitoring 2, its most restrictive oversight tier — which requires a college to disburse federal student aid from its own funds first and then apply for reimbursement, often with delay. For a college already short of cash and bleeding on its debt service, being forced to front millions in aid and wait for repayment was, in the administration's view, a death sentence administered in installments. The college did not deny the underlying problems; it replaced its 18-year president, hired a compliance director, and turned over most of its business and financial-aid staff in an attempt to fix what the audit had flagged. But the remediation took time the cash flow did not have, and the very existence of the dispute frightened away students: enrollment slid from around 600 toward a projected 475 for the fall, deepening the hole.

The Lawsuit, the Closure, and a Campus for the Broken

In February 2016, St. Catharine did something most closing colleges do not: it sued the federal government. The college went to court against the Department of Education, seeking roughly $645,000 in reimbursements it said the agency was withholding, along with other relief, and its president, Cindy Gnadinger, framed the sanction in stark terms — that the department's "intention of strangling the college through HCM2 was very clear," that this was an effort to shut the college down rather than help it fix its problems. Whether one reads HCM2 as appropriate oversight of a college with real controls failures or as a bureaucratic chokehold on a struggling nonprofit, the practical effect was the same: the institution could not generate enough cash to operate while the dispute ground on.

It did not last long enough to find out how the suit would end. On June 1, 2016, St. Catharine announced it would close at the end of July, citing the roughly $5 million deficit and "insurmountable" financial challenges. The lawsuit was later dismissed in the Department's favor — a final defeat delivered to an institution that no longer existed to receive it. The college sought teach-out and transfer arrangements so its students could finish elsewhere, and 118 faculty and staff lost their jobs. The campus near Springfield sat empty for years until, in a turn both poignant and fitting for a Dominican foundation, Addiction Recovery Care acquired it and opened the Crown Recovery Center in November 2020 — the state's largest residential addiction campus, treating up to 750 clients and bringing back hundreds of jobs. A place that had healed bodies through its nursing programs became a place that mends lives wrecked by Kentucky's opioid crisis. The college was gone; the work of care on the land went on.

The Five Factors

01
Debt taken on for growth becomes a vise when growth stalls
St. Catharine borrowed to build the dormitories, health-sciences building, and library that its leap to four-year status required. Debt service is a fixed cost; enrollment is not. When the student count softened, the buildings that had been an investment became a roughly $5 million annual wound that the college could not stanch.
02
Heightened cash monitoring can be terminal for the already-fragile
HCM2 forces a college to front federal aid and await reimbursement. For a well-capitalized institution this is a nuisance; for one already short of cash, it is a liquidity crisis manufactured by regulation. The sanction need not be unjustified to be fatal — it simply has to demand cash a dying college does not have.
03
Internal-controls failures invite the regulator who can end you
The 2014 audit's findings — inadequate management, mismatched aid documentation — were the trigger for HCM2. Sloppy financial controls are not merely a back-office problem; they are the opening that gives a federal regulator both the cause and the means to impose a sanction the institution may not survive.
04
The dispute itself drives students away
Enrollment fell from roughly 600 toward 475 as the aid fight became public. Prospective students and their families read a federal sanction and a lawsuit as a flashing warning sign and enroll elsewhere — so the very act of fighting for survival accelerates the enrollment collapse that makes survival impossible.
05
A lawsuit is no substitute for cash on hand
St. Catharine sued the Department of Education and may even have had a point, but litigation moves on a timescale measured in years while payroll comes due every two weeks. An institution cannot sue its way out of a liquidity crisis; the case outlived the college that filed it.

Aftermath

St. Catharine's roughly 475 to 600 students were left to transfer mid-degree, the college scrambling in its final weeks to arrange teach-out agreements so that credits earned — especially in the nursing and health-sciences programs that were its strength — would not be lost. For students weeks or semesters from a credential in a licensed field, the disruption was acute. The 118 faculty and staff who lost their jobs absorbed the closure in a rural county where a college is among the larger employers, and the Dominican Sisters of Peace lost the crowning institution of nearly two centuries of educational work on the land.

The lawsuit's posthumous dismissal closed the legal chapter on the Department's terms, leaving unresolved, in any official sense, the question the college had pressed so bitterly: whether HCM2 was reasonable oversight or a regulatory strangling. The honest answer is that the sanction and the debt were not rival explanations but partners — a college weakened by its own construction borrowing and controls failures, then pushed past the edge by a federal cash-flow demand it could not meet. The campus itself found an unexpectedly redemptive second life: since November 2020, the former St. Catharine grounds have housed the Crown Recovery Center, one of Kentucky's largest addiction-treatment campuses, employing hundreds and serving up to 750 people in recovery. The buildings the Sisters borrowed against to teach now shelter a different kind of healing.

Lessons

  1. Match debt to demand, not to ambition: financing a building boom on the assumption of continued enrollment growth converts a fixed obligation into an existential threat the moment the growth stops.
  2. Treat financial controls as survival infrastructure, because the audit findings that look like back-office housekeeping are precisely what hand a federal regulator the authority to impose a sanction you cannot outlast.
  3. Understand that heightened cash monitoring is a liquidity test disguised as oversight; if an institution cannot front its aid and wait for reimbursement, HCM2 will end it regardless of the underlying dispute's merits.
  4. Do not let a regulatory fight become public theater while you still need to recruit — families read sanctions and lawsuits as warnings, and the publicity accelerates the enrollment loss that dooms the appeal.
  5. Never confuse a strong legal argument with a solvent balance sheet: courts move in years, payroll moves in weeks, and a college can win its case long after it has ceased to exist.

References