Via my colleague @aaronbeardap
— Ralph D. Russo (@ralphDrussoAP) September 1, 2023
Statement from UNC board chair opposing ACC expansion. pic.twitter.com/Wg0LmjKYz2
This is NOT good news. Unclear whether it's fatal
Via my colleague @aaronbeardap
— Ralph D. Russo (@ralphDrussoAP) September 1, 2023
Statement from UNC board chair opposing ACC expansion. pic.twitter.com/Wg0LmjKYz2
They're taking off early for a 4-day weekend.HateRed said:
Guys, I think we have the votes. Why else would they leak news line this WAAAAAY ahead of time?
HateRed said:
Guys, I think we have the votes. Why else would they leak news line this WAAAAAY ahead of time?
Seems like the most logical conclusion. I find it absurd that they're over here complaining about a money gap and then literally refusing money in their 11th hour statement.BearGreg said:
UNC President supportive of the additions. Clearly their Board of Trustees don't agree. Whether they force him to vote in opposition is unclear but feels likely. NC State now has the whip. Unlike UNC, they don't have realistic options with B10 or SEC if ACC implodes. That aligns with Cal.
Very good question.sycasey said:
My question is: wouldn't the UNC President have spoken with the trustees about this already? It's been a major topic for weeks! What's with this 11th hour nonsense?
More....AUOso said:
So a very minor amount of googling produced this:
UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz appeared before a special meeting of the UNC System Board of Governors Wednesday to explain his plan to fully cover tuition and fees for in-state students whose families earn less than $80,000 a year.
The plan would apply only to students enrolling at UNC-Chapel Hill, not other campuses within the UNC system.
Both the plan and how Guskiewicz announced it have been strongly criticized by some members of the board of governors and the university's own board of trustees, all of whom are political appointees of the state legislature's Republican majority. Members have questioned the timing of the decision and an announcement from Guskiewicz that seemed to link it to the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision on race in college admissions. UNC-Chapel Hill and Harvard University were defendants in that federal lawsuit; the court ruled that both universities' use of affirmative action in its admission programs were unconstitutional. Guskiewicz didn't share his plan with either board before announcing it publicly. Nor did he explain how the plan could affect smaller campuses within the system that can't afford to match the tuition program at Chapel Hill.
While I don't know what power the board of trustees has over the chancellor it seems he may not have a problem going against the political appointees, seems like they enjoy blowing some hot air like all pols do.
Yeah, this smells like the widdle board of trustees doesn't like how the Chancellor is going to vote, or how the rest of the ACC is going to vote. Of course there's still time for minds to change and for this to fall apart.HateRed said:
Guys, I think we have the votes. Why else would they leak news line this WAAAAAY ahead of time?
And...its not even the board of governors who issued the statement...its the board of trustees...read on...AUOso said:More....AUOso said:
So a very minor amount of googling produced this:
UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz appeared before a special meeting of the UNC System Board of Governors Wednesday to explain his plan to fully cover tuition and fees for in-state students whose families earn less than $80,000 a year.
The plan would apply only to students enrolling at UNC-Chapel Hill, not other campuses within the UNC system.
Both the plan and how Guskiewicz announced it have been strongly criticized by some members of the board of governors and the university's own board of trustees, all of whom are political appointees of the state legislature's Republican majority. Members have questioned the timing of the decision and an announcement from Guskiewicz that seemed to link it to the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision on race in college admissions. UNC-Chapel Hill and Harvard University were defendants in that federal lawsuit; the court ruled that both universities' use of affirmative action in its admission programs were unconstitutional. Guskiewicz didn't share his plan with either board before announcing it publicly. Nor did he explain how the plan could affect smaller campuses within the system that can't afford to match the tuition program at Chapel Hill.
While I don't know what power the board of trustees has over the chancellor it seems he may not have a problem going against the political appointees, seems like they enjoy blowing some hot air like all pols do.
Each constituent institution of the UNC system is headed by a chancellor, whose duties are outlined in Section 502 of the Code of the Board of Governors. The Chancellor is vested with complete executive authority, subject to the direction of the President of the UNC System. The Chancellor is responsible for carrying out policies of two governing boards: the UNC System's Board of Governors and the University's Board of Trustees. The Chancellor also makes recommendations to the president regarding academic program development, personnel matters (subject to policies of the Governors and Trustees), and budget development. The Chancellor maintains wide discretion in decision-making with regard to student affairs (subject to policies of the governing boards) and other aspects of the administration of the University, as provided under the General Statutes of North Carolina and the UNC Code.
Red Coyote said:
Despite of all the financial concessions made by the incoming teams, when that money gets divided amongst 15 members I believe it comes out to roughly 6M per year. But that's if it's divided evenly. Then there the other monies that also get distributed to the conference that now get divided 18 ways. And the add travel incresaes..
It really might just be about the money.
IDK, but it's interesting that even though a lot money is in play, when it's distributed over so many parties it doesn't appear to be some giant windfall. Especially when you look at the possible downsides.CNHTH said:Red Coyote said:
Despite of all the financial concessions made by the incoming teams, when that money gets divided amongst 15 members I believe it comes out to roughly 6M per year. But that's if it's divided evenly. Then there the other monies that also get distributed to the conference that now get divided 18 ways. And the add travel incresaes..
It really might just be about the money.
What is the added travel cost of flying your jet to the Bay Area instead of Boston an extra (7-10 times) per year?
10 trips times 2100 extra miles times 23 dollars per mile charter fee = 483k max extra cost
I call bs.
Absolutely about the money but not about the added travel cost
ducky23 said:
So….basically a bunch of republicans are trying to score some cheap culture war points by owning the Libs. Super
What's next?