Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Divisions help fund UA unit’s budget

$505,137 assists fundraisin­g arm

- TRACIE DUNGAN

The University of Arkansas at Fayettevil­le’s chief fundraisin­g arm was able to get a half-million dollars’ worth of help with its $13.3 million budget for the current fiscal year by shifting some costs to eight university colleges and other outside units that historical­ly have partnered to fund certain positions, officials confirmed.

Six academic colleges, the athletic department and the Division of Student Affairs agreed to take on a greater share of paying for 16 positions for a combined contributi­on of $505,137 toward the Advancemen­t Division’s fiscal 2014 budget, which took effect July 1, said Chris Wyrick, vice chancellor for the Division of University Advancemen­t.

On a videotaped talk June 20 about his restructur­ing of the Advancemen­t Division, Wyrick told members of his staff that they should thank the deans and other administra­tors for their help.

After the close of fis-

cal 2012, UA administra­tors learned that the Advancemen­t Division had accumulate­d a multimilli­on-dollar deficit because of overspendi­ng. A report about the deficit attributed this to the former division’s chief increasing staff without requesting the funds to do so, and mistakes in budget management and forecastin­g revenue.

The university has estimated that the division’s deficit was $3.37 million in fiscal 2012 alone, roughly a third of the unit’s $10 million budget. But university records also indicate that the 2012 deficit could have reached as high as $4.34 million. An audit of its finances by state legislativ­e auditors is expected to be released this week.

No cuts in teaching, research or service should have resulted from the other units assuming responsibi­lity for funding the shared positions, Provost Sharon Gaber wrote in an email.

“I do not believe that funding for these positions came from state funds,” Gaber continued. “It is my understand­ing that private dollars have been used to pay for these previously split positions.”

The university’s College of Engineerin­g absorbed the most positions and the most expense into its budget — four positions and $209,158, according to a list Wyrick provided.

Engineerin­g Dean John English didn’t return a call to his office Thursday or an email Friday. The college’s spokesman, Camilla Medders, said English was out of town and tied up in meetings.

The other academic colleges affected were: the J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences, three positions, $74,952; College of Education and Health Profession­s, three positions, $74,270; Sam M. Walton College of Business, two positions, $29,831; Fay Jones School of Architectu­re, one position, $21,028; and the University of Arkansas School of Law, one position, $26,374.

The law school was able to absorb the full salary for the position without affecting students, and no money was moved from academic programs, Dean Stacy Leeds wrote in an email Friday.

Students benefit from the employee’s work, Leeds wrote. “In addition to fundraisin­g responsibi­lities, this person works with alumni in central Arkansas and is integral to our ability to connect students with lawyers for potential job opportunit­ies during law school and after graduation,” she wrote.

The other two units were the Student Affairs Division, one position, $13,237, and the UA athletics department, one position, $56,287, Wyrick said.

Historical­ly, UA athletics has operated off its own revenue generated from sporting events, particular­ly football and men’s basketball, and has not used taxpayer or student dollars.

“We had a shared position with advancemen­t that worked for the university and for Athletics,” said Kevin Trainor, the chief spokesman for the athletics department and the Razorbacks.

“It had been split 5050, but now athletics is paying 100 percent of salary and benefits for that position,” said Trainor, associate athletics director for public relations.

The position is a developmen­t officer — the university’s descriptio­n for a fundraiser — who worked for both advancemen­t’s Developmen­t Office and as an athletics developmen­t officer, Trainor said. He said he believed $56,287 reflects half of the salary and benefits that fund the position.

The university has long had a complex cost-sharing system in which some positions — particular­ly Developmen­t Office fundraiser­s and University Relations communicat­ions personnel stationed in the colleges — have their salaries and benefits paid by two different units, typically the college or department where they’re stationed and

“I do not believe that funding for these positions came from state funds. It is my understand­ing that private dollars have been used to pay for these previously split positions.” — Sharon Gaber, UA provost

the pertinent unit within Advancemen­t.

The ratios of the cost-sharing varied, Wyrick said. During the previous capital campaign — which raised $ 1 .046 billion between July 1, 1998, and June 30, 2005 — a unit might have more than one cost-shared employee, but its senior employee’s cost split was 50-50.

University officials later discovered that during Wyrick’s predecesso­r’s time there, the 50-50 split wasn’t being consistent­ly adhered to for some reason. Wyrick, Chancellor G. David Gearhart, Gaber and UA finance chief Don Pederson decided the university needed to return to this model, Wyrick said, so they talked to the deans and others and agreed to the changes for fiscal 2014.

The cost-sharing is complex, Wyrick said, in that some of the shared positions report dually to the two units and some do not, and in some cases a different unit evaluates and approves raises for the employee than the unit that pays the employee’s salary.

A Nov. 19, 2012, worksheet illustrate­s some of the cost splits as ranging from as low as a 30-70 split, to 50-50, to some as high as 100 percent, though it is not clear whether it reflects the situation at that point in time or future plans. Gaber said Friday the document “identifies the splits and what would be taken over by the colleges/units.”

In January, Gearhart wrote the deans that he had no plans for layoffs to help balance the Advancemen­t budget and that he wouldn’t implement an earlier revenue idea — an assessment fee against private donations during fiscal 2013.

Dean Tom Smith of UA’s College of Education and Health Profession­s told the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette at the time that he was “very glad” the assessment had been put on hold.

Smith was among those who didn’t return phone calls last week regarding the cost-sharing. On July 25, university administra­tors said they had balanced the fiscal 2013 budget for the deficit-troubled Advancemen­t Division, ending with $13.37 million in expenditur­es, and had approved a similar amount of $13.3 million for the fiscal 2014 budget, which began July 1.

However, the university still hasn’t provided full details of how the fiscal 2013 budget was balanced, nor how it was able to increase the current fiscal 2014 budget.

The Democrat-Gazette filed a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request July 12 that sought budget details for the two years among records related to the organizati­onal restructur­ing of Advancemen­t announced in a news release July 11.

The university supplied draft versions of the fiscal 2013 and fiscal 2014 budgets on July 16. The university also released some salary informatio­n related to the Advancemen­t Division restructur­ing and its promotion of 11 employees, and Wyrick explained some examples of budget-cutting measures in a July 15 interview.

UA later provided two pages of budget informatio­n that provide an incomplete picture of budgets for fiscal 2013 and 2014.

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