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Chancellor Christ Highlights Plans Going Forward as AD Hiring Nears

March 29, 2018
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The following is a statement offered by Chancellor Carol Christ:

Now that external consultants have finished their detailed review of our intercollegiate athletics program and submitted a number of valuable findings and recommendations, I am writing to provide an update to the Berkeley campus and alumni communities on my plans and intentions.

Intercollegiate athletics (IA) at Berkeley has been relentlessly studied for more than two decades by a combination of eight committees and task forces and by two consulting firms. Yet, the results have been less clear than one might expect, given the extent of these repeated studies. The reason, I've come to believe, lies in a certain reluctance to confront contradictions among the various goals the campus holds for itself and Cal Athletics. The most recent report by the Task Force on Intercollegiate Athletics, released in June 2017 by the previous administration, said it well: “IA cannot simultaneously satisfy the three following conditions: balance its budget, assume sole responsibility for the debt service on the football stadium project, and maintain the current size and scope of its program.” That task force saw a need for an independent analysis of the athletic program’s finances and operations and proposed that the campus engage a consulting firm that could make recommendations for achieving a sustainable financial model. We subsequently contracted with Collegiate Sports Associates (CSA), one of the most respected firms in the country, to perform that work. (The costs were paid by donors). This happens to be the first time IA has been reviewed by a consultancy with specialized expertise in collegiate athletics programs. From the very beginning, CSA’s experts displayed a sophisticated and nuanced understanding not only of IA, in general, but also of Berkeley’s unique attributes, challenges and opportunities. They conducted more than 122 interviews with the broadest possible range of stakeholders, reviewed all previous reports and studies and carefully compiled and reviewed data from Cal Athletics, the NCAA, the PAC-12 conference and a number of our peer institutions.

We have received CSA's report, and I am releasing it to the Berkeley community.

In this memo, I articulate the principles that will guide my decisions in regard to athletics and describe our path forward. I believe that IA offers great value both to our student-athletes and to the campus community. It gives our students the opportunity to compete in

their sports at the highest level and to develop the qualities of mind and character that highly disciplined, team-based sports build. It offers students, faculty, staff, alumni, parents and friends of the university unique opportunities to come together as a community, one of the ways we feel our institutional spirit and identity. And for many of our alumni, sporting events play an indispensable role in their continuing relationship with, and support for, our university. These are just some of the reasons sports are an important part of the American collegiate experience. I believe Berkeley can and will have an intercollegiate athletics program that reflects and embodies the aspirations and excellence that characterize our university as a whole. The core of our commitment to athletics must be the student-athlete experience — the opportunities afforded students both in their sports and in their academic programs, their success in the classroom and their development as individuals in all aspects of their character and experience. Timely graduation rates are a critical measure of IA's success, as are the fullness and rigor of our athletes' academic programs. Of course, we want our teams to win, but even more we want every student-athlete to thrive at Berkeley, to have the best university education we can offer. Just as we expect IA to operate with the highest level of integrity and care for students’ welfare, the campus must hold itself to equally high standards for their education, as it does for all students. Another core principle of our IA program is gender equity. In terms of student-athlete participation, Title IX provides universities and colleges with three options, or “prongs,” when it comes to compliance with the law. (You can read more about the prongs here.) Because of our commitment to gender equity, I have decided to move from Prong 3 to Prong 1 compliance by 2021 in order to provide equitable participation for our male and female students and to meet our obligations under Title IX. (An institution satisfies Prong 1 by providing substantially proportionate participation opportunities for its male and female student-athletes, consistent with the percentage of men and women in its full-time undergraduate student body population. Prong 3, on the other hand, supports gender equity by requiring schools to add sports for the underrepresented gender whenever there is sufficient student interest, ability and opportunity for intercollegiate competition, according to a set of specified criteria). To me, maintaining an athletics program that is substantially proportionate to our undergraduate population seems more consistent with Title IX's defining goal of gender equity.

Moreover, because Cal Athletics already struggles to support 30 sports, it seems unwise to continue with a compliance prong that requires us to add more sports whenever the aforementioned criteria are met.

Moving to Prong 1 without adding sports will likely require a reduction in roster spots for men's sports. I have asked for an analysis of what the actual impact of this change will be when we make the transition in 2021, and we will share that information when it is ready. In addition, we must make a commitment to gender equity in our facilities for men's and women's sports. Most immediately, this will involve building courts for beach volleyball (our most recently added sport) and improving our facilities for softball. I now turn to the budget and the financial model for IA. I believe that continuing deficits in any campus unit, like those in IA, are corrosive. They erode trust and fiscal responsibility even when they stem not from fiscal or administrative mismanagement, but from structural factors — an imbalance, as in the case with IA, between available revenues and the program’s size and scope. Because of the multiple risks of continuing to carry IA deficits — both for the campus and for the department itself— I am requiring IA to achieve a balanced budget by 2020, when UC Berkeley must balance its budget.

A plan to balance the budget will have the following five elements: First, I have already announced that the campus will take responsibility for the portion of the football stadium debt that is related to the cost of seismic retrofitting and construction. The seismic safety of our facilities, particularly one used as extensively by the campus community as California Memorial Stadium, is a campus responsibility. Beyond that, key decisions regarding the original financial model for the stadium were made by campus and IA leadership together, and thus there should be shared accountability for the results.

Second, as part of a broader campus-wide effort, I will review and seek to simplify how funds flow back and forth between IA and the campus. The opacity of IA’s finances results, in large part, from the complexity of transfers between the department and the campus central ledger. Although IA receives an annual allocation from the campus, it also contributes revenue back to the campus in a variety of different ways. I will review thissystem with the goal of simplifying and rationalizing it. Third, IA will develop a plan to substantially increase its revenues. The key to a sustainable financial model for IA, as for the campus, lies in increasing and diversifying revenues. The CSA report, like earlier consulting reports, sees significant potential for new revenues. We are, quite simply, underperforming on the revenue front. Football and men’s basketball will be critical to any revenue plan and sustainable financial model because they are the only sports that generate significant revenue. It is therefore essential that we work to support the consistent, competitive success of these two athletic programs and provide a high-quality game day experience for fans and supporters. In addition, facilities and advertising agreements offer further significant revenue opportunities. We are also examining alternate uses of real estate in IA’s current control. For example, we are in the early stages of planning and analysis for future uses of Edwards Stadium.

Beyond the need to find new facilities for the teams that currently use that venue, a number of interesting and exciting ideas have been proposed for Edwards Stadium that warrant careful examination. Here, too, I am committed to sharing updates with you as our work proceeds. Fourth, we must increase philanthropic support. We are underperforming in the area of philanthropy. Our upcoming campaign gives us an excellent opportunity to increase support for athletics. I believe that a sustainable, realistic and transparent financial model for IA, along with the implementation of other recommendations offered in the CSA report, will enable us to rebuild and strengthen the relationship between Cal Athletics and the many donors who care deeply about the program, our student-athletes and our university.

The final step in developing a balanced budget and a sustainable financial model for IA is reviewing the program’s size and scope. Cutting sports, or transitioning them to club status, should be a last resort. We should not take this step until we assess the impact of reforming the way in which funds flow between the campus and IA and until we have a better sense of the extent to which improved revenue generation and philanthropic support will address the athletic program’s budgetary challenges. With clarity about what must now be done, I look forward with great anticipation to our selection of a new athletic director — an essential

partner who will ensure that we make good on these principles and the full range of CSA’s findings and recommendations. I am very pleased with the level of interest this opening generated across the country; the candidate pool is deep and impressive. I am certain that in April we will be introducing a person with the necessary skills and experience to help us build an intercollegiate athletics program that is both financially sustainable and capable of serving the needs and interests of our student-athletes. I am confident that, together, we can usher in a new era of excellence for Cal Athletics that is consistent with and supportive of our university’s mission, standards and values.

Discussion from...

Chancellor Christ Highlights Plans Going Forward as AD Hiring Nears

73,730 Views | 44 Replies | Last: 6 yr ago by Blueblood
wifeisafurd
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calumnus said:

UrsaMajor said:

NVBear78 said:




Can someone explain how walk-on's for Football and other Men's Sports and Rugby are counted under Title IX?

I love the new Chancellor but did she say that numbers will have to be reduced in football? Is she talking about walk-ons or actual scholarship players? This would seem at odds with the necessity to make football more successful so as to drive revenues for all sports. Are there any schools which either limit their scholarship players or their walk-ons?


Any clarification would be helpful!
Title IX does NOT count scholarship players. It counts the TOTAL roster, which is defined as players suited up for the first game/match/meet of the season. Right now, football has approximately 40-50 or so walk-ons. Cutting that number by 15-20 wouldn't affect the team in the slightest.


If that is true, why offer scholarships in anything other than football and men's basketball?
Because being competitive in other sports matters to various important donors. Moraga has a good one on one article with the Chancellor explaining this.
Golden One
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Solving the Title IX dilemma is simple. Just have half the players on the football team state that they identify themselves as females.
secondtrybear
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Wrong, Rugby is varsity but they have no scholarships, and they bring in more donations than most and have more impressive graduates that most as well. The only reason they would be taken down to club was for Title IX which is sad.
secondtrybear
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While I think title IX has some negative effects, you sir, or ma'am, are the reason Title IX exists.
MoragaBear
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Staff
secondtrybear said:

Wrong, Rugby is varsity but they have no scholarships, and they bring in more donations than most and have more impressive graduates that most as well. The only reason they would be taken down to club was for Title IX which is sad.
Especially because they pay all their costs plus the costs for two women's sports, as well
rugbycomm
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Cal Rugby does NOT offer athletic scholarships, and never has.
ColoradoBear
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MoragaBear said:

secondtrybear said:

Wrong, Rugby is varsity but they have no scholarships, and they bring in more donations than most and have more impressive graduates that most as well. The only reason they would be taken down to club was for Title IX which is sad.
Especially because they pay all their costs plus the costs for two women's sports, as well
.

Not full costs though. Rugby pays $150k/yr on top of their own operating costs. I believe it was only a 7 year deal, too The agreement PDF used to be available using a Google search, but now I cannot find it. Not worth it IMO considering the impact it had on football practicing on witter and the title ix issues with field hockey (gorcey had a full breakdown on tos, which is important to note because it's instructive on how bad the AD was run).

One major ssue with the AD's finances that is NEVER discussed is who pays the adminstrative overhead... If one looks at the latest 2017 annual report, administration/non-sport specific costs were $22 million. That is double what the actual student athletes get in compensation via tuition scholarships and room/board.

It is my belief that 'break even' sports only pay their directly attributed operating cost, which then still leaves a deficit on the administration side. Part of this is deficit is covered now using the Learfield and Under Armour contracts (totalling $11 million cash per year I believe). But that money is mostly there because Cal has a P5 FB and a major conference BB team. In addition, Learfield is likely the ones collecting $$$ from the in game promotions (aka disruptions of FB and BB in person experience).

If the department is serious about breaking even, they need to do more to pay overhead and collecting more from these 'break even' teams. Aka, one can cut a bunch of endowed men's teams and save money because you lose the overhead and the associated women's team.

(I'm not saying it would be linear per athlete savings... Would guess that, for instance, FB and BB cost more in terms of compliance and maintenance... But again Cal should be careful about diverting resources attributed to football that other schools use on football competitiveness. Whether that's for coaching or academic support.).
BearlyCareAnymore
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rugbycomm said:

Cal Rugby does NOT offer athletic scholarships, and never has.


Thank you for the correction and sorry about the mistake. I thought they had added some scholarships several years ago. But as has been made clear, varsity status is what matters and rugby has varsity status. Personally, I wouldn't change a thing about rugby.
tequila4kapp
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I'm late to the party.

I like what I see here from the Chancellor. The gist of it appears to be she is giving IA a chance / mandate to raise more money, including emphasizing the importance of football and basketball. If it happens no cuts. If it doesn't happen there will be cuts. This is sensible and appropriate.
Blueblood
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"Well, I guess hiring a new AD
at Cal is like a box of chocolates,
you never know what you're going
to get!"
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