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A league of its own
University of Virginia plans to
use new freedoms, $3 billion campaign to blur the line
between public and private universities
by Jack Milligan
for Virginia Business
December
2006
In 1819, Thomas Jefferson realized
a cherished dream with the founding of the University
of Virginia in Charlottesville. Not only did Jefferson
conceive the idea of a great university "based
on the illimitable freedom of the mind," he designed
its buildings - including the iconic Rotunda - and hired
the faculty. When the university finally opened in 1825,
Jefferson invited students to dine with him every Sunday
at his home at Monticello, a practice that continued
until his death in 1826.
Jefferson envisioned U.Va. as
a public institution with a mandate to contribute to
the betterment of life in the new republic. A child
of the Enlightenment, Jefferson saw education as a
way to open the mind through the lever of reason. "[H]ere we are not afraid to follow truth
whenever it may lead, nor to tolerate any error so long
as reason is left free to combat it," he once wrote.
What would Mr. Jefferson think
of his beloved creation today? One hundred and eighty-seven
years later, U.Va. has emerged as one of the most prestigious
universities in the country. It tied the University
of Michigan at Ann Arbor for 24th on U.S. News & World
Report's most recent list of top schools. Among public
institutions, only the 21st-ranked University of California
at Berkley placed higher. And if money is a sign of
success, U.Va. has a larger endowment - at $3.5 billion
and growing - than any other single public university
in the country.
Yet the inheritors of Jefferson's
legacy are ambitious, and they have set their sights
high. Using freedoms granted by the state legislature
last year, and with a $3 billion fund-raising campaign
well under way, the university's leaders want to elevate
it to the top 15 universities in the country, using
the U.S. News ranking as a rough measuring stick. To
get there, the university may take on more of a private
persona in what is a grand experiment of sorts: redefining
the model of a "public" university.
Casteen's legacy
John T. Casteen III, U.Va.'s president for nearly 17
years, has his own dream of what the school can become.
A native of Portsmouth, Casteen received his bachelor's
degree and a doctorate in English literature from U.Va.
and has spent a significant portion of his adult life
there as a teacher or administrator. Soft-spoken and
reserved, he demonstrates an agile mind that skips
effortlessly from one complicated subject to another. "John
is a brilliant man," says Thomas F. Farrell II,
the chairman and CEO of Dominion Resources, who is
rector of U.Va.'s 18-member board of visitors. "You
could talk to him for days and not come even close
to exhausting the list of topics [in which he has extensive
knowledge]."
Casteen took over as president
in 1990 just as the state's worsening finances resulted
in sharp cuts in funding for public colleges. He has
worked to improve the university's standing even as
it was forced to assume more responsibility for its
upkeep. But Casteen isn't finished. He imagines "a
public university with a link at the umbilical cord to
its state, [but] with the academic caliber to compete
with anybody." Casteen also believes that a public
university should have the ability "to define priorities
that are something other than reactions to last year's
state crisis."
If Casteen and the board of visitors
succeed, they will have redefined what it means to
be a public institution in an era when taxpayer dollars
provide only a small part of its funding. U.Va. received
$166.9 million from the state this academic year, 8.5
percent of the university's operating budget. By comparison,
the university got $177.8 million from the state in
the 1989-90 school year, 26.2 percent of the budget.
Ever since the state's fiscal crisis in the early 1990s,
U.Va. has developed along a "public-private" model
- a university that finances its public mandate largely
through private means.
To the extent that "public" has been synonymous
with second best, Casteen and the board want to eliminate
the distinction between public and private by strengthening
many university programs and pushing its academic standards
higher. "The notion that the university has to be
in some way of low quality in order to be public always
seemed crazy," says Casteen.
Landmark law
Such high aspirations would be impossible without the
Restructured Higher Education Financial and Administrative
Operations Act of 2005, a landmark law that gave Virginia's
public universities more flexibility in managing their
affairs. Three schools - U.Va., Virginia Tech and the
College of William & Mary - negotiated a higher
level of autonomy with the state. They now have the
authority to set their tuition, fees, and room and
board charges, and also have considerable freedom in
such areas as financial management, capital projects,
lease agreements and human resources.
The restructuring legislation
placed Virginia at the vanguard of a nationwide trend
where state-supported colleges and universities are
re-examining what it means to be public in an era of
declining public support. "Without
a doubt, college presidents around the country are making
the argument that public support is on the decline and
they feel that they are justified in asking for a new
relationship with their states," says Lara K. Couturier,
an educational consultant who wrote an extensive report
on the Virginia initiative for the National Center for
Public Policy and Higher Education in San Jose, Calif.
Other states are watching the Virginia experiment closely,
adds Couturier.
While this may sound a lot like
privatization, the state still retains a significant
amount of control. University workers remain state
employees, and the state still owns U.Va.'s land and
buildings. The governor appoints members to the board
of visitors, and the state retains the right to revoke
the management agreements with the three schools. "There
has never been a plan to become private," says Leonard
W. Sandridge, U.Va.'s chief operating officer. "That
is simply not something that we seek."
What U.Va. has gained is the ability to manage its affairs
with much of the same latitude that private universities
enjoy. Sandridge is responsible for a vast operation
with nearly 13,500 undergraduates, another 6,400 or so
graduate students, about 13,000 full- and permanent part-time
employees and a real estate empire spread over 1,682
acres. University properties include a teaching hospital,
four major sports stadiums and an 18-hole golf course.
With an operating budget this year of $2 billion, the
university is a large and complex business enterprise.
Sandridge offers several examples of how the new arrangement
with the state will allow U.Va. to operate more efficiently,
beginning with capital projects such as the construction
of a building. Previously the university had to go through
a lengthy approval process that included authorization
by the General Assembly for all construction projects
- even when no state money was involved. Now the university
is able to develop projects on an accelerated time table,
which will save millions of dollars on the construction
of a research facility.
The university is also free to
develop its own human resources system, an arrangement
that allows for personnel policies that better fit
its operations, including a large health-care business
with highly specialized job functions and an around-the-clock
work cycle. And it can raise in-state tuition without
seeking state approval. Or as Sandridge puts it, "We
gain the ability to price our product."
Competing globally for talent
The latter will help provide the means to compete globally
for talent, which is crucial if U.Va. is to rise further
in the ranks of top universities. "With regard
to faculty members, and increasingly to all employees,
it's letting us come closer to meeting market value
in the compensation," says Casteen. "It has
been a special problem with regard to faculty because
the hiring market is national and increasingly global
because of the way in which faculty members in certain
specialties like the sciences, engineering or medicine
move globally."
To make his point, Casteen cites
the case of Dr. Barry Marshall, a research professor
in U.Va.'s School of Medicine who was awarded the 2005
Nobel Prize in medicine for his work on the causes
of peptic ulcers and gastric cancer. Marshall holds
dual appointments at U.Va.. and the University of Western
Australia - but lives in Perth, Australia, and travels
to Charlottesville only once a year. "That
kind of global movement in faculty is the marketplace
that we work in and to be able to meet the market in
terms of how much people are worth is an important step," Casteen
says.
Casteen makes another point about
how the research game is played at major institutions.
Up-and-coming researchers today are younger than they
were 20 years ago, and their research projects often
have a shorter duration, making scientists more mobile.
It is important to be able to attract cutting-edge
researchers even if they don't plan on spending their
career at the university. "What
the [restructuring] legislation does is provide a platform
for developing some competitiveness with regard to hiring
and preparing these people," Casteen says.
In exchange for these new freedoms,
U.Va. has agreed to work closely with Virginia primary
and secondary schools in improving their quality of education,
to help stimulate economic development in some distressed
regions, to take more transfer students from the state's
community colleges and to provide more financial assistance
to Virginia students.
During the next 10 years, the university
intends to expand its enrollment by 1,500 students (including
1,100 undergraduates). While tuition will rise, Farrell
says it will still be significantly lower than the top-ranked
private institutions that U.Va. measures itself against. "I think we
will continue to charge in-state students far below market
tuition," he says. "I think our state is getting
one hell of a bargain."
The university's in-state tuition for Virginia residents
in 2006 is $7,703. That's well below tuition at highly
ranked private schools such as Duke ($33,963), Stanford
($32,994) and Princeton University ($33,000). U.Va.'s
out-of-state tuition is $25,945.
Although the restructuring legislation
was approved by substantial margins in both houses
of the Virginia General Assembly, some politicians
are concerned about where the state's top-tier public
universities are headed. Former Virginia Gov. James
S. Gilmore III worries that in-state tuition at U.Va.,
William & Mary and Virginia
Tech might someday be too expensive for middle-class
families. "There's a sense that public universities
are pricing themselves above the public's ability to
pay," says Gilmore, who earned bachelor's and law
degrees from U.Va. and has two sons enrolled there now. "The
middle class that funded the university with their tax
revenue [but] don't get any financial aid can't afford
it any more."
Former Del. Mitchell Van Yahres,
D-Charlottesville, who retired last year after 24 years
in the legislature, says he voted against the restructuring
plan because he feared that new employees would be
paid less and receive fewer benefits than current employees.
Van Yahres also worried about the effect that tuition
increases would have on Virginia families, although
he saw few alternatives to the restructuring plan in
the face of declining state support. "That's the catch-22 situation we have," he
says. "My reservations are tempered by the fact
that the state isn't meeting its obligations. That is
the only recourse they have."
$3 billion campaign
In September, U.Va. announced its goal of raising $3
billion to strengthen academic programs. Robert D. Sweeney,
senior vice president for development and public affairs,
says U.Va. has not set its sights on competing with the
top private research universities across the board, but
it does want to develop "selective excellence in
science and technology while retaining a strong undergraduate
experience." Scientific areas targeted by the university
include information technology, regenerative medicine,
nanotechnology and the environmental sciences.
This is one of the largest fund-raising
campaigns undertaken at a public university in the
U.S., but U.Va. demonstrated its development bona fides
in the late 1990s when it raised $1.43 billion to offset
the decline in state funding. "That
was largely a campaign to save the concept of the university
here," says Casteen. As soon as that effort had
concluded, according to Sweeney, Casteen directed him
to prepare for another, bigger campaign. "He said,
'I want to look at the next generation of benefactors,' " recalls
Sweeney.
U.Va. hopes to conclude the current
campaign by the end of this decade and has already raised
$1.1 billion. But to hit the $3 billion mark, Sweeney
says, his team will have to secure more than 600 gifts
of $1 million or more, 133 gifts of $5 million or more
and two of at least $100 million. About 45 percent of
the money will come from alumni, 20 percent will come
from people who did not attend the university, and the
remaining 35 percent will come from corporations and
foundations.
Much of Casteen's time during the next
several years will be spent on the road asking for money,
mostly from large donors. "John Casteen is always the centerpiece
of that conversation," says Sweeney. As of mid-October,
Casteen was focusing on 10 very large potential benefactors. "If
he gets the gifts, we will be in very good shape for
the next $1 billion," Sweeney says. Casteen - whose
pay and benefits last year totaled $677,980 according
to the The Chronicle of Higher Education - has some skin
in the game as well: He and his wife, Betsy Foote Casteen,
have given the campaign $500,000 with the stipulation
that it be used to provide scholarships for the children
of U.Va. staff members and faculty.
Ultimately the money from this latest campaign will
be spread around much of the university, including a
projected $554 million for scholarships and fellowships,
$553 million for new and expanded facilities, $402 million
for the university's endowment and $422 million for health-care
research.
Driving force in local economy
There's no question that making such a large investment
will change the university and the community around
it. U.Va. is already the driving force behind the local
economy - and its growth plan is poised to expand this
role even more. Because the university's tax-exempt
status shelters a great deal of its operations from
real estate taxes, much of the impact comes through
other means, such as sales taxes students pay on their
purchases or the relatively high property taxes paid
by faculty members living in Charlottesville and Albemarle
County. When U.Va. expanded its football stadium by
18,500 seats (including luxury skyboxes) a few years
ago, Charlottesville officials told Sandridge that
it boosted the city's sales tax revenue by $4 million
to $5 million a year.
Unquestionably, the most important
economic benefit that U.Va. provides to the local economy
is stability. "We
are always lagging behind a decline in the economy, and
we are the first to come out of it," says Albemarle
County Executive Robert Tucker. Charlottesville City
Manager Gary O'Connell agrees and points to the fact
that the city and county have triple-A credit ratings,
which he attributes to the university's presence. Charlottesville's
rating was recently affirmed by Standard & Poor's
Rating Services and Moody's Investors Services, and O'Connell
says the agencies were not the least bit concerned by
the presence of such a large employer in the community. "If
we had a 13,000-employee private employer, they would
be concerned," he says. "But there are no concerns
about the university."
With U.Va. poised to grow even
more, the university, city and county already have
a well-coordinated process in place to plan for it.
Representatives from all three entities meet quarterly
under a 25-year agreement that essentially acknowledges
that U.Va. is the 800-pound gorilla in the room when
it comes to the local economy. A good example of how
they have been able to work together is U.Va.'s new
John Paul Jones Arena. Although the facility is in
the county (as is the vast majority of the university's
property), all of the necessary utilities come from the
city over city property. "I've been here 25 years
and from my perspective we're probably in as good a place
[when it comes to planning] as we've ever been," O'Connell
says.
Concerns about accessibility
If there's a potential downside to the university's lofty
ambitions, it might be this: The dividing line between
being an elite institution and becoming elitist can
be hard to discern - particularly for those outside
the hothouse enclosure of higher education. Should
an increasing number of Virginia parents find that
higher tuition costs make the university less accessible,
they also may wonder what it means to be a public institution
if their children can't go there.
Sandridge says that U.Va. will
continue to create as diverse a student population
as possible by taking applicants from throughout the
state. (State law mandates that U.Va. take approximately
65 percent of its first-year students from Virginia.)
The university could raise its average standardized
test scores for in-coming students appreciably if it
was willing to take a disproportionately large number
of students from wealthy Fairfax County, "But
that's not what we ought to do," he says. Currently
50 percent of admitted students score in the range of
1220 to 1430 on the combined math and verbal sections
of the SAT test.
According to Farrell, U.Va.'s
board of visitors is still very much influenced by
the history of the place. "Thomas
Jefferson had as his founding vision that this would
be a public university," he says. "We take
that very seriously." For Farrell, being "public" means
maintaining the university's strong commitment to professional
programs such as education and nursing, which most top-ranked
private institutions don't consider to be part of their
mission. "You're not going to find a nursing school
at Princeton," Sandridge says.
The university also will look to expand its AccessU.Va.
financial aid program that is providing $20 million in
financial aid to 3,199 undergraduate students this year,
including 826 students who are at or below 200 percent
of the poverty line and therefore receive a full ride.
And Casteen believes that U.Va. has an obligation to
Virginia to play a leading role in economic development
and to work on important research projects that can ultimately
help lead the state's economy in the 21st century.
But mostly what Casteen feels
these days is a strong desire to see the new fund-raising
campaign through to its conclusion. It could take as
long as five years, although the university has not
placed a time limit on it. Casteen intends to stay
on as president until the goal is met. "I think the work left to be done
is at least as important as what we've already done -
and maybe more," he says. "I'm 62 years old,
so I'm beginning to feel a sense of urgency about getting
it done."
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