Albuquerque Journal

Faculty, student leaders object to forgiving debt.

UNM athletics department may not have to repay $4.7M

- BY JESSICA DYER JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Faculty and student leaders at the University of New Mexico are decrying the possibilit­y that the UNM athletics department may not have to repay its $4.7 million deficit to the school, raising concerns about fairness and institutio­nal values.

No decision has been made about how exactly to address athletics’ accumulate­d deficit, officials stressed Tuesday.

But Regent President Rob Doughty’s recent comments that UNM should consider forgiving it to avoid big deficit repayment bills that could hinder the department’s efforts to balance its budget in the long term have sparked some outrage.

“It shows to us that students are not the priority here and academics are not being prioritize­d,” Associated Students of UNM President Noah Brooks said Tuesday during a Board of Regents meeting.

Brooks was referring to both the possible forgivenes­s of athletics’ deficit and a recent decision that affects UNM Press’ $7 million deficit.

Faculty Senate President Pamela Pyle said her constituen­ts are “deeply troubled” by

the idea of athletics not having to repay the university given the sacrifices many academic units have been making.

“The mere suggestion to forgive the athletics debt speaks to a fundamenta­l conflict with what many of us believe should be our primary mission,” she said.

Forgiving athletics’ deficit would send the message “that fiscal irresponsi­bility is acceptable for some (deemed) important, while others are not important,” said Kathryn Watkins, an associate professor in the College of Education.

Doughty told the Journal he wants to have multiple options to consider and that the discussion deserves “campuswide involvemen­t.”

UNM budget staff members have introduced a preliminar­y plan for athletics to make annual payments of $350,000 to tackle the debt but say they would have a more detailed plan next month.

“I think that my previous comments have opened up great debate,” Doughty said, adding the regents are “continuing to look at all options available.”

Doughty noted that UNM administra­tors recently struck an agreement to move the financiall­y beleaguere­d UNM Press — which has accrued a $7 million deficit to the university — under the university’s library system. The libraries will not assume the Press’ debt, though it remains unclear exactly how it will be absorbed.

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