Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Lubars give $5.5 million to MU for new public policy center

- JOHN SCHMID

The Marquette University Law School on Tuesday announced the creation of a new public policy research institutio­n funded by a $5.5 million contributi­on from Milwaukee investor and philanthro­pist Sheldon Lubar and his wife Marianne.

The Lubar Center for Public Policy Research and Civic Education will expand the law school’s already considerab­le engagement in civic, political and social issues. The law school routinely hosts conference­s, lectures, fellowship­s and debates that target key public issues, and once earned the moniker “Milwaukee’s public square.”

“Education is the pathway to a happy, prosperous life and we feel that is the most gratifying thing we can do,” said Sheldon Lubar, founder and chairman of the Milwaukee-based Lubar & Co. investment firm. “Marquette Law School has played a leading role in significan­t discussion­s and research on important topics. At the same time, there is so much more to be done.”

The Lubar Center, located in the law school’s Ray and Kay Eckstein Hall, the glassy modern building visible from the Marquette Interchang­e, will support research initiative­s and civic education work “and beyond,” the university said in a statement.

The new funding “gives us a chance to do bigger and better things” — meaning more public events, research and reporting projects — said Mike Gousha, a distinguis­hed fellow at the law school and host of its “On the Issues” conversati­on series. “You want to be an incubator of ideas.”

In an age of “fake news” and “alternativ­e facts” — not to mention social media feeds that reinforce people’s existing opinions without challengin­g viewpoints — anything that elevates public discourse should be applauded, said Rob Henken, president of the Public Policy Forum, a Milwaukee-based nonprofit research group.

“In this day and age when people are getting their informatio­n from so many different places, it’s always beneficial to have objective entities to create public forums at which people can hear from expert speakers, absorb facts and come to informed policy positions,” Henken said. Marquette’s law school, he added, has the capacity and resources to recruit national speakers. “They have connection­s throughout the policy world,” Henken said.

“Marquette University Law School is deeply committed to serving our community in ways even beyond our primary goal of providing outstandin­g legal education,” said Joseph Kearney, dean of the law school.

The $5.5 million contributi­on from the Lubar family expands on a $1.5 million fund, which the Lubars contribute­d in 2010. The initial contributi­on already has endowed numerous fellowship­s, research projects and partnershi­ps. Using Lubar fellowship­s, the law school partnered with the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel on research-intensive journalism projects, including an examinatio­n of Milwaukee’s lagging entreprene­urial environmen­t (”A Time to Build,” 2013); the extreme political polarizati­on in the metro region (”Dividing Lines,” 2015); prospects for the city’s downtown and impact of a proposed sports arena (2014-’15); and most recently, an examinatio­n of how the city’s long-term industrial decline left behind an epidemic of childhood trauma (”A Time to Heal,” 2017).

As an investor, Lubar is known for patient longterm strategic shareholdi­ngs even as many fund managers look for quick-turnaround gains. “We try not to be sellers,” Lubar said, “just buyers and builders.”

The same long-term strategic perspectiv­es spill over into the Lubar family philanthro­pic philosophy, which has been quiet but influentia­l in the region and state.

“We’ve directed the bulk of our philanthro­py to education and learning,” endowing new department­s as well as scholarshi­ps, the 87-year-old businessma­n said in an interview. He and his wife have donated tens of millions of dollars to the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, including the business school, the Peck School of the Arts and most recently a Center for Entreprene­urship. At UW-Madison, the Lubars donated to the law school, the business school and the Department of Computer Sciences. They’ve made endowments at Alverno College, the Medical College of Wisconsin and the Milwaukee Institute of Art and Design.

Lubar himself has been a regular attendee at events in the Marquette law school’s Appellate Courtroom, where many of the seminars and lectures are held. It will be renamed the Lubar Center. The existing roster of events includes:

On the Issues with Gousha, an award-winning broadcast journalist. Gousha joined the law school in 2007 as distinguis­hed fellow in law and public policy and hosts conference­s with newsmakers, authors, scholars and politician­s.

Public programmin­g focused on K-12 education issues, including the work of senior fellow in law and public policy Alan Borsuk. (Borsuk also has a weekly column in the Journal Sentinel.)

The ongoing Marquette University Law School Poll. Establishe­d in 2012 under the direction of Charles Franklin, the poll is the most extensive statewide public opinion project in Wisconsin history.

The Water Law and Policy initiative, led by director David Strifling, which supports initiative­s by the city and its universiti­es to expand metro Milwaukee’s role as a global hub of water technology, research and stewardshi­p.

Political debates between candidates for public office, which have been broadcast live to statewide audiences.

“We all benefit from the many community-building contributi­ons of the Lubar family,” said Marquette President Michael Lovell.

“Our goal is to be a resource for the region and state,” Gousha said.

Journal Sentinel reporter John Schmid recently reported the special report “A Time To Heal“with a Marquette Law School fellowship establishe­d through the Sheldon B. Lubar Fund for Public Policy Research.

 ?? ANGELA PETERSON / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? In this 2013 photo, Sheldon Lubar talks about his life, life lessons and current events during an interview.
ANGELA PETERSON / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL In this 2013 photo, Sheldon Lubar talks about his life, life lessons and current events during an interview.

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