Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Magazine pays off UCA debt

Oxford American owed $700,000 to allied university in ’08

- DEBRA HALE-SHELTON

CONWAY — After more than a decade, the Oxford American, a nonprofit literary magazine that explores Southern culture, has finally paid off the entire $700,000 debt it owed the University of Central Arkansas.

Since the debt began accumulati­ng in 2004 and peaked in 2008, UCA has seen four presidents, and the nonprofit magazine has parted ways with its founding editor and has a new top editor and executive director.

The magazine and UCA have maintained a cooperativ­e agreement despite the debt.

“The Oxford American magazine is lauded as one of the best literary publicatio­ns in the nation,” UCA’s current president, Houston Davis, said in an email Monday. “It is a great partnershi­p and a wonderful asset to UCA. We are currently working on an agreement that will extend our relationsh­ip into the future.”

The publicatio­n, which is based in Little Rock but has a small office at UCA, has also accomplish­ed another feat even as magazine circulatio­n levels have generally declined in recent years. It has reduced its debt from $1.2 million to zero, Ryan Harris, the quarterly publicatio­n’s executive director since late 2015, said Monday.

The final payment of $286,000 was made Friday by the Massey Family Charitable Foundation. Richard Massey serves on the magazine’s board of directors and was the one who made the first payment of $69,000 toward the UCA debt in October 2012.

The Oxford American has struggled financiall­y over the years. It has shut down four times, not counting suspension­s.

In an email, Massey described the award-winning magazine as once losing “several hundred thousand [dollars] a year” to now being “on solid financial footing.”

The magazine’s debt, paid back through the nonprofit UCA Foundation, had reached $700,000 in 2008, after the school lent the publicatio­n $150,000 to deal with financial problems created by a theft.

Despite changes in technology and circulatio­n, the magazine has “finished the last two fiscal years in the black on a cash basis,” Harris said.

Harris said advertisin­g and subscriber revenue “are roughly the same they’ve been over the last two to three years.” There are currently about 10,000 subscriber­s.

During that time, he said, “We have made some diffi-

cult decisions. … We had to get financiall­y much more austere than we had been and tighten the belt quite a bit.”

Budget measures, he said, included eliminatin­g some staff positions while some employees agreed to work for less than their jobs might have paid in the past.

The matter “came down to reducing our spending, renegotiat­ing with key vendors,” focusing more on

fundraisin­g and expanding the magazine’s offerings from being solely a literary magazine to one also sponsoring special events such as guest musicians at South on Main in Little Rock and other places.

“We’re starting to get people to thinking about the Oxford American as more than a magazine, but as a concept, a nonprofit arts organizati­on” that’s also about “empowering Southern artists and giving them a voice to be heard,” Harris said.

The magazine’s most recent

annual agreement with UCA provided for $70,000 in both cash for such things as office supplies and in providing for a graduate assistant.

Former editor Marc Smirnoff founded the magazine in Oxford, Miss., in 1992. In July 2012, the publicatio­n’s board of directors fired Smirnoff and the managing editor, Carol Ann Fitzgerald, over allegation­s of wrongdoing, including sexual harassment. The publicatio­n later hired Roger Hodge, a former editor of Harper’s Magazine.

In October 2015, Eliza

Borne became the Oxford American’s editor in chief.

Warwick Sabin, now a state legislator, was the magazine’s publisher from 2008 until 2013, when he resigned to take another position.

Writers represente­d in the magazine’s first issue included Roy Blount Jr.; the late William F. Buckley Jr.; best-selling novelist John Grisham, who also helped the magazine financiall­y for a time; and the late John Updike. Blount, Kevin Brockmeier and John T. Edge are among current contributo­rs.

Harris said he was “extremely grateful for the generosity of the Massey Family Charitable Foundation … and really all of our readers, donors and advertiser­s for sticking with the Oxford American” through “a lot of negative press and some financial challenges.”

“We … are really thrilled that we’re now in a position where we can kind of build on the positive momentum we’ve created in the last few years to make sure the Oxford American is sustainabl­e for the long term,” he said.

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