UC Davis launches $2 billion campaign
Money would go toward student support, health and climate change
UC Davis has launched a $2 billion fundraising campaign, the largest philanthropic endeavor in its history. This goal is meant to propel the university’s work to prepare future leaders, sustain healthier communities, and bring innovative solutions to today’s most urgent challenges.
The campaign, “Expect Greater: From UC Davis, for the world,” will harness the power of philanthropy to address defining issues of our time such as pandemic response, climate change, public safety and more.
“While the COVID-19 pandemic and other current events have significantly impacted our community, they have also brought out the best of our unique UC Davis strengths in innovation and collaboration,” Chancellor Gary May said. “I’m tremendously proud of the remarkable work that happens here every day — work that our philanthropic partners are central to advancing and elevating.”
Gaining momentum
Expect Greater launches at a time of growing philanthropic momentum at UCD: The last four years have been the strongest for fundraising in its history. Since the campaign’s quiet phase began in July 2016, the university’s closest donors have given $1.2 billion toward the goal. Now UC Davis is reaching out to the entire university community to help make a greater effect on the world.
“This campaign is so much more than a number,” said Vice Chancellor Shaun Keister, head of Development and Alumni Relations and president of the
UCD Foundation. “We are securing private support to make tangible change and to impact areas the world needs most by partnering with those who share our vision. One great example is today’s groundbreaking of the Engineering Student Design Center expansion, made possible by an early gift of $5 million from alumnus John Baum and his wife, Mindy.”
As one of the top 10 public universities in the nation, UCD is at the forefront of research, education and discovery, every day fulfilling its land-grant mission to serve California and the world.
Since the start of the campaign, donors have established more than 40 endowed chairs and professorships, demonstrating support for the diverse, world-class faculty who make UC Davis a premier research institution. These positions enable the university to recruit and retain the world’s top minds — faculty who will have the sustained funding to maximize their impact, all while teaching the next generation of change-makers.
Focus on health
In addition, such expertise provides leadership in times of crisis. UC Davis Health made national headlines this year, successfully treating the first case of COVID-19 that was acquired by community spread.
The health system is now conducting more than three dozen COVID-19 related clinical trials, including vaccine trials involving as many as 200 volunteer participants. Other COVID research is happening in 10 areas across the university. In direct response to the ongoing public health crisis, 2,108 donors contributed a total of $322,986 to emergency relief funds from March 1 to June 30.
Focus on disaster
UCD has also been on the front lines of wildfire response, saving lives via research and rescue.
Forestry scientists at UCD collaborate to formulate strategies for forest management and ecological rehabilitation in the face of worsening wildfire seasons. And more than 70 interdisciplinary faculty at the Air Quality Research Center tackle the complex subject of atmospheric pollution, including the health effects of inhaling polluted air.
And like every year, the Veterinary Emergency Response Team has performed animal rescues and rehabilitation, plus wellness exams on animals sheltered in place, while the Medical Center has treated human burn victims. In August alone, the Fire Department contributed nearly 700 person-hours to firefighting efforts on the LNU Lightning Complex Fire and across the West.
Key support
Tomorrow’s leaders are the key to building a better world. Donors have given more than $180 million in this campaign toward student support, enabling full access to a college education for thousands of young scholars. This is just one reason UCD is the second-best public university for social mobility, according to Washington Monthly’s annual assessment of U.S. schools based on what they do for the public good.
Even with this year’s transition to remote learning, students continue to have access to resources and services they need for a successful college experience.
Donors support students’ undergraduate educations via programs that offer academic guidance, experiential learning opportunities and robust career preparation. Programs like Aggie Launch and Aggie EVO help students solidify their goals and land meaningful careers after graduation. “I am so incredibly grateful for all the donors who contribute to scholarships because they have given me countless opportunities to learn and grow,” said English major Victoria Choi ’21. “My scholarship has allowed me to have a worldclass education as well as gain leadership skills in various organizations on campus like Aggies Helping Aggies and the Picnic Day board.”
Finding solutions
Across the university, donor-supported initiatives are offering actionable solutions to today’s most formidable challenges.
The School of Medicine and the Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing are advancing telehealth and care for older adults through the donor-supported Healthy Aging in a Digital World.
And with philanthropic support, the Center for Violence Prevention Research is on the leading edge of public safety, gathering and analyzing data to inform policymakers of the most effective ways to curb violence.
With the world’s No. 1 veterinary medical school and a comprehensive medical center, UC Davis is uniquely positioned to conduct groundbreaking research at the nexus of human and animal medicine — the focus of the university’s donor-supported One Health Institute.
At the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, veterinary and health researchers quickly began collaborating on diagnostic and vaccine testing. And PREDICT — One Health’s pandemic prevention and response program — is part of an international effort to provide emergency support to collaborating countries in response to coronavirus spread.
Expect Greater is UC Davis’ second comprehensive 10-figure fundraising campaign following the 200614 Campaign for UC Davis, which raised $1 billion for student scholarships, graduate fellowships, patient care, teaching and research.