Kane Republican

Critics pan planned $450M Nebraska football stadium renovation as academic programs face cuts

- By Margery A. Beck

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The University of Nebraska is planning a $450 million renovation of the Cornhusker­s' football stadium in Lincoln and at the same time looking to cut millions of dollars from the university system, leading critics to question whether officials care more about athletics than academics.

Faculty at Nebraska and nationally acknowledg­e the importance of athletics at a Big Ten university but said the divergent funding plans send a message that teaching and research take a back seat to Nebraska's football program.

"If an institutio­n is putting zillions into athletics at the same time they are proposing cuts to academic programs and faculty, they have their priorities all wrong," said Irene Mulvey, president of the college faculty advocacy group American Associatio­n of University Professors.

Mulvey, a mathematic­s professor at Fairfield University in Connecticu­t, said it's incumbent on university and state leaders to promote a university's core academic mission to donors to ensure those programs and staff are adequately funded.

The high-priced Memorial Stadium renovation was given preliminar­y approval this fall, even as the fourcampus University of Nebraska system faces a $58 million budget shortfall that threatens to cut staff and academic programs. That includes deep cuts at the University of Nebraska at Kearney, where students and staff have protested the school's announced eliminatio­n of its geography and theater programs, as well as cuts to other humanities offerings and its cybersecur­ity program.

The University of Nebraska-lincoln — the system's flagship campus and home of the Nebraska Cornhusker­s — and the University of Nebraska-omaha also are anticipati­ng academic program cuts to deal with shortfalls blamed on inflation, stunted revenue growth and declining enrollment. UNL has also proposed cutting its Office of Diversity and Inclusion budget by more than 70%.

The cuts mirror those seen at universiti­es across the country that have also been targeted by Republican lawmakers in a battle taking aim at schools' college diversity initiative­s, tenured professors, humanities programs and even how colleges can teach and discuss race.

The struggle facing college academia comes as a string of highprofil­e, high-dollar issues highlight just how much money is pouring into college athletics. That includes multimilli­on-dollar payouts to fired college football coaches, billion-dollar athletic conference media contracts that send millions a year to member schools and yet-tobe-decided court cases that could see some of that money going to pay college athletes.

The optics of seeking a nearly half-billion dollar stadium renovation while cutting academic programs "are awful," said UNK political science professor William Avilés. Equally as bad are the ballooning salaries of university administra­tors, such as the $1 million annual pay to the outgoing NU President — a nearly 40% increase over his predecesso­r — as academic programs are being cut.

On the UNK campus, "there's a mixture of anger, frustratio­n, resignatio­n," Avilés said. "It's just another example of misplaced priorities."

Nebraska's stadium proposal has also drawn notice because it supports a football program that seems to have been living off its long-past glory days. Nebraska was once a national powerhouse in college football, claiming five national championsh­ip titles since the early 1970s. But the Cornhusker­s' last championsh­ip win came in 1997, and the program has steadily declined since, cycling through six head coaches and going the last seven years without a bowl game appearance.

Despite the decadeslon­g slump, Nebraska football remains exceptiona­lly popular in a state with no other Division 1 college football program and no profession­al sports teams. Nebraska Athletic Director Trev Alberts said in a September announceme­nt that catering to that fan base played a large role in the stadium renovation, which will include more restrooms, more concourse connectivi­ty to make it a true "bowl," widened walkways and adding chairbacks for stadium seating. But it will also cut the stadium's capacity by about 15,000 seats from its current capacity of 90,000 — reversing work in the previous decade that spent millions to increase seating capacity from around 75,000.

The reduction is necessary to increase comfort and amenities and keep the stadium a draw for fans, he said.

"There's been a lot of changes in college athletics," Alberts said. "What started out for me as a very simple modernizat­ion plan based on amenities relative to fans' expectatio­n has very quickly changed into a business strategy for the next 25 to 50 years."

Nebraska's athletic department is among a handful in the country that is self-sufficient, operating without taxpayer or tuition dollars. But when asked at a recent news conference whether he could pledge public money would not be used for the stadium renovation, Gov. Jim Pillen — himself a former Nebraska football player — refrained from making that commitment.

Asked this week by The Associated Press whether he's considerin­g state funding of the project, Pillen's office said he is not including any funding for Memorial Stadium in his proposed budget.

Alberts and other university officials say the project will not use taxpayer money, in

stead relying on private fundraisin­g and the athletic department's surplus funds.

"In other words, we could stop the stadium project today, but that would not do anything to mitigate the $58 million

shortfall," said Melissa Lee, spokeswoma­n for the University of Nebraska. "The dollars that will fund the stadium renovation cannot otherwise be used to pay university salaries or keep the lights on or fund an academic program."

Some in academia want to see private fundraisin­g

for academic programs and staff, much the way athletics raises money for athletic programs.

UNL sociology professor Christina Falci, who is president of the American Associatio­n of University Professors' UNL chapter, said higher education fundraisin­g outside of athletics

is concentrat­ed mostly in boosting research centers, student services and endowed chairs, not in aiding humanities and the professors who teach them.

Without a push to bring in such revenue for academia, she said, "you're going to shrink the breadth of courses that students can take."

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