Imperial Valley Press

Amid skepticism, Koch Foundation increases higher ed giving

- BY MATTHEW BARAKAT

McLEAN, Va. — The conservati­ve Charles Koch Foundation is dramatical­ly increasing its donations to colleges and universiti­es at a time when its philanthro­py is facing increasing scrutiny, according to tax records.

The foundation gave nearly $49 million to more than 250 colleges across the U.S. in 2016, according to an Associated Press review of the foundation’s most recent tax records. That’s a 47 percent increase over 2015.

John Hardin, director of university relations for the foundation, said the increases stem from the fact that the foundation’s philanthro­py is becoming more well-known and professors are increasing­ly approachin­g them with proposals. He also said the foundation’s relationsh­ip with schools has deepened to where some schools that might have only received a few thousand dollars five years ago now receive hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars.

“We’ve had the opportunit­y with more and more folks hearing about us to have more and more scholars coming to us,” Hardin said, with proposals for study not just in economics but also in criminal justice and free expression.

The foundation, though, is finding its philanthro­py receiving an increasing­ly skeptical reception at campuses across the country.

A scandal erupted last month at ground zero for the Koch Foundation’s philanthro­py George Mason University, Virginia’s largest college.

While the foundation gives money to colleges across the country, no university is a bigger beneficiar­y than Mason. Of the $49 million donated to colleges in 2016, Mason and its affiliated Institute for Humane Studies received more than $19 million of it, far more than any other school.

For years, University President Angel Cabrera and other school administra­tors had brushed aside concerns from student activists that the money compromise­d academic independen­ce at the school, which has developed a reputation as a conservati­ve powerhouse in law and economics.

On April 27, Cabrera sent a “Dear Colleague” note to Mason faculty saying he had recently become aware that some agreements between the foundation and the school’s Mercatus Center, a free-market think tank, “fall short of the standards of academic independen­ce I expect any gift to meet.”

Specifical­ly, the agreements gave the foundation a say in the hiring and firing of some professors by allowing the donor to appoint members to selection committees and advisory boards that would recommend candidates for professors­hips and review their performanc­e.

The agreements were released in response to a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request, three days after a judge heard arguments in a separate lawsuit about whether other grant agreements should be released under FOIA.

Mason’s links to the foundation stretch back decades and had largely escaped scrutiny until 2016, when it renamed its law school for conservati­ve jurist Antonin Scalia in conjunctio­n with a $10 million Koch Foundation gift.

The Scalia donation, and now the revelation­s about the grant agreements, have energized activists to pursue changes in how Mason does business going forward. Cabrera has agreed to undertake a review of all the school’s donor agreements to see if they contain problemati­c provisions like those in the Koch agreements.

Mason is just one among many campuses that are scrutinizi­ng Koch money. Ralph Wilson, research director for unKoch My Campus, said the Koch Foundation’s philanthro­py in higher education “has grown exponentia­lly” over the years. But he said more and more campuses are questionin­g the funding, and that the revelation­s about the Mason grant agreements are fueling those concerns.

At Chapman University in California, which received $225,000 from Koch in 2016 and is slated to receive $5 million to help establish a Smith Institute for Political Economy and Philosophy, students are questionin­g the school’s president, Daniele Struppa, about the school’s dealings with the foundation.

Struppa is a former dean at Mason.

After numerous articles questionin­g the deals in the student newspaper, the school and the Koch Foundation agreed this week to let an editor at the student paper, The Panther, see the donor agreement and ask questions about it, but the editor will not be allowed to take written notes about the agreement’s provisions or take any pictures or make copies of it.

In a statement, Struppa said donor agreements are typically private documents. “Showing them to the student paper and faculty senate president was unusual but it was important to me for them to see that the Koch Foundation agreements were very standard and contained no ‘strings,’” he said.

 ??  ?? In this April 24, file photo students and faculty from George Mason University rally outside the Fairfax County courthouse in Fairfax, Va. Tax records show the conservati­ve Charles Koch Foundation is dramatical­ly increasing its donations to colleges...
In this April 24, file photo students and faculty from George Mason University rally outside the Fairfax County courthouse in Fairfax, Va. Tax records show the conservati­ve Charles Koch Foundation is dramatical­ly increasing its donations to colleges...

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