That is not been my experience on financial matters such as budgets, tuition and financing (like the stadium debt which is at issue here), For example, Brown basically had the UC CFO neutered by placing a debt limit on the amount UC could borrow, not allowing him to borrow more in a low interest rate environment, which by the way prevented Cal Campus from borrowing at certain times due to the stadium debt. I will let you google all the articles, since it was a big deal in financial circles.socaltownie said:I am not sure about that. Maybe it is because we have been blessed by Governors who saw limited benefit of micromanaging the system. I can, for example, not construct a scenario under which the regents cave like they did with the appointment of Ben Sasse to the U of F Presidency or fire a football coach because the governing board is pissed about W and L. It is very instructive to look at the MUCH closer governing power Governors have in other state systems and how much they meddle in higher ed.wifeisafurd said:socaltownie said:Critical is term legnth. 10 years. That means that most regents are appointed by the PREVIOUS Governor and much less depenedent on politicians than say the University of Florida system.upsetof86 said:
Wikipedia has a great summary of who the Regents are and their duties.. How the majority are appointed by the Gov and ratified by State Senate. In the last 2 decades most appointees are distinguished by having donated large sums of money to the Governor. Seven Regents are ex officio. The vast majority of appointed Regents have historically been businessmen, lawyers and politicians. Fascinating basis for stewarding policy and long term planning of the UC System.
The UC Regents has a history of following the lead of the Governor and high level politicians. They almost all are large donors or celebs and this case they are tied into (and owe their patronage) to the Newson and Brown administrations.
I have no idea what the Regents will do today.