Los Angeles Times

DETAILS EMERGE ON UC REGENT’S LETTER

Richard Blum says his reference for a Berkeley applicant was not meant to exert unfair influence.

- By Teresa Watanabe

University of California Regent Richard Blum said Saturday that he did not intend to unfairly inf luence the UC admissions process when he wrote what a state audit called an “inappropri­ate letter of support” to get a noncompeti­tive student admitted to UC Berkeley.

“It was never my intention to circumvent or unfairly inf luence the admissions process,” Blum, a San Francisco financier and husband of Sen. Dianne Feinstein ( D- Calif.), said in a statement. “I do not intend to write letters of recommenda­tion going forward.”

Blum’s statement came the morning after the California state auditor’s office released documents showing that the regent’s favored candidate was admitted from the waiting list after UC Berkeley’s fundraisin­g and admissions offices met to discuss which applicants from that list would be approved. The offices had received Blum’s letter about the prospectiv­e student, who had been denied initial admission after receiving scores from applicatio­n evaluators that indicated a 26% chance of acceptance, the audit said.

Blum’s interventi­on came as part of 64 cases identified in an 82- page state audit on UC’s admissions policies, which found that applicants were granted slots based on inappropri­ate factors, such as connection­s to donors, staff and alumni. Among them were 55 cases involving UC Berkeley, four at UCLA, four at UC Santa Barbara and one at UC San Diego.

Blum said he respected the f indings and concerns raised in the audit but added that he had never been told his letters of recommenda­tion were improper. He said he had written more than a dozen such letters for UC applicants over the last 18 years, submitting them to the chancellor­s’ offices.

“On no occasion did I receive feedback that that was not the appropriat­e protocol and that letters needed to be sent to the director of admissions,” he said. “Moreover, I was never informed about whether any of the applicants for whom I wrote letters were later accepted for admission, and I never in

quired about the ultimate decisions in these cases.”

The redacted documents showed that Blum sent the letter to UC Berkeley Chancellor Carol Christ. Blum told Christ he wanted to “express my support” for an “outstandin­g” applicant on the waiting list who “embodies all the qualities we look for in our students.”

“Beyond college, I can see [ the applicant] as a devoted alumnus who will greatly contribute to the CAL community,” Blum wrote. He asked Christ to give the student “every considerat­ion” as a “worthy addition” to the undergradu­ate class.

The date of the letter was redacted, but the other documents released indicate that Blum wrote it in the spring or summer of 2018, during Christ’s f irst year as chancellor and after regular admissions decisions for prospectiv­e freshmen were released in late March.

UC Berkeley spokeswoma­n Janet Gilmore declined to comment on Blum’s statement and the auditor’s documents because the matter is under review by the UC Office of the President’s ethics, compliance and audit services division. She said the chancellor’s administra­tive staff “routinely directs correspond­ence it receives to other campus offices, as appropriat­e, for response and action.”

Gilmore also said Berkeley officials had asked the auditor for the underlying documents that led to the findings “for several months now” but have not yet directly received any material.

Margarita Fernández, a spokeswoma­n for the state auditor’s office, said Friday that the documents show that UC Berkeley accepted the Blum letter “contrary to its admissions process and policy.” A 1996 Board of Regents policy allows members to send letters of recommenda­tion, when appropriat­e, during the regular admissions process. But Blum sent his letter outside those bounds, after the applicant had been denied initial admission and was placed on the waiting list, the audit showed.

UC policy allows letters of recommenda­tion only if requested by admissions officials under specific circumstan­ces that did not apply in the Blum case, Fernández said. She said the applicant had already submitted two other letters of recommenda­tion — the maximum allowed under UC policy. Berkeley is not supposed to accept or consider letters of recommenda­tion as part of the waitlist decision process, she said.

Yet the letter was not only accepted, but also discussed by high- level campus officials — treatment not afforded other applicants, Fernández said.

According to the emails, Christ’s executive assistant, Carolyn Koo, forwarded the letter from Blum — along with a letter from an unidentifi­ed regent emeritus advocating for a different student — to MiHi Ahn, executive vice president of the UC Berkeley Foundation, the university’s primary private fundraisin­g arm. Koo asked Ahn to respond to Blum and the regent emeritus on behalf of Christ.

Blum, a UC Berkeley alumnus, has been an important contributo­r to the university over the years. In 2006, he donated $ 15 million to launch the Blum Center for Developing Economies to address global poverty and has made subsequent contributi­ons to expand that work.

The regent emeritus, whose name was redacted from the documents, made a point of mentioning a potential forthcomin­g donation in the letter. “A small ps: my love for Berkeley recently led to my urging a ... client to donate” to Boalt Hall, the former name of the UC Berkeley law school. The redacted emails appeared to indicate that the applicant was not admitted.

Ahn sent an email to Amy Jarich, who at the time was assistant vice chancellor and director of admissions, alerting her to the two letters.

“I’m going to draft a letter of response that basically says, ‘ there’s a bright line between us and admissions and we have no inf luence, but we will forward the letters to admissions.’ Just FYI ... of course everyone here knows the letters are not considered unless requested,” Ahn wrote.

In a second email to Jarich forwarding the letters, Ahn reiterated that she planned to draft a response to Blum and the regent emeritus from Christ’s office saying that “we have no inf luence but we will go ahead and forward the letter ( but of course we are all well aware that these letters carry no weight). But we can just say we forwarded them.”

Sometime after those emails were sent, Jarich discussed which students to admit from the waiting list with Greg Dubrow, then director of research and policy analysis in the Office of Undergradu­ate Admissions. The emails show that Jarich modified Dubrow’s plan for prioritizi­ng the wait- listed students, placing recommenda­tions made by her and the staff on top.

Ahn also provided a list of favored students — showing that the university’s fundraisin­g arm communicat­ed with admissions officers during decision- making periods. Such practices are common among private universiti­es, but UC officials have repeatedly said that donations do not affect an applicant’s chances of acceptance at the public research university system.

In annotated notes written in red on the emails, the auditor’s office said the exchanges showed that Jarich determined her selection strategy after she received the letters from regents. “It is therefore likely that the applicant recommende­d by the Regent would have been on Amy’s list that she placed at the top of the priorities,” the auditor’s notes said.

Fernández said additional emails showed that the directors of admissions and developmen­t met to discuss whom to accept from the waitlist after they received copies of Blum’s letter. The day after the meeting, Fernández said, Berkeley admitted the applicant.

“These factors led us to conclude that the letter appears to have inf luenced UCB’s decision to admit this student,” Fernández wrote in an email to The Times.

Jarich left her position as admissions director in October 2018, according to her LinkedIn profile.

Dubrow left the admissions office in November 2018, his LinkedIn profile says, and is currently director of informatio­n strategy and analytics in the developmen­t and alumni relations division at Berkeley’s Haas School of Business. Berkeley has since hired a new director of undergradu­ate admissions, Olufemi “Femi” Ogundele.

Fernández said the communicat­ion between the Berkeley fundraisin­g and admissions offices demonstrat­ed by the emails underscore­s the pressing need for reform.

“Ultimately, it is the UC system’s responsibi­lity to ensure fairness in its admissions process, which is why, based on what we found in the audit, we recommende­d that all communicat­ions between admissions and fundraisin­g about applicants or prospectiv­e applicants be strictly prohibited,” Fernández said.

 ?? Los Angeles Times ?? UC REGENT Richard Blum, shown at a 2007 board meeting, said it was not his “intention to circumvent or unfairly inf luence the admissions process” with a reference he wrote for a noncompeti­tive Berkeley applicant.
Los Angeles Times UC REGENT Richard Blum, shown at a 2007 board meeting, said it was not his “intention to circumvent or unfairly inf luence the admissions process” with a reference he wrote for a noncompeti­tive Berkeley applicant.

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