Orlando Sentinel

Oil funds down to a drip at colleges

Campus projects, scholarshi­ps, gifts take a hit amid falling prices in energy sector

- By Paul J. Weber

AUSTIN, Texas — It’s easy to see what oil money means to the University of Texas.

Tuition hasn’t budged in three years because of gushing wells in the Permian Basin. More than a few buildings, including the football team headquarte­rs, are named after wildcatter­s, and a pump jack stands outside the 100,000-seat stadium to commemorat­e the 1920s oil boom.

But the latest bust and tumbling crude prices are now pinching off the largesse that helps this university and others in oil-rich states afford what they want when state budgets are strained, which is especially the case now.

The consequenc­es becoming obvious.

Campus constructi­on projects are being stretched out or put in limbo, scholarshi­p funds are taking a hit and across the Southwest, donors are asking for more time to make good on big pledges.

“When the price of oil was $100 a barrel we had a lot more gifts. They had the ability to make more gifts,” said Bob Walker, who raised hundreds of millions of dollars for Texas A&M University for three decades before retiring last year.

The University of Oklahoma has scaled back a planned $370 million renovation to its football stadium.

At Louisiana State University, energy sector gifts have fallen from a quarter of all fundraisin­g to a tenth, which is being felt as the school tries to offer students a new minor in energy.

“The answer we’re hearing isn’t ‘No.’ It’s just ‘Not right now,’ ” said Kirk Jewell, president of the OSU Foundation at Oklahoma State University, where half of the top 10 athletic boosters have ties to the energy industry.

U.S. colleges received a record $38 billion in charitable donations in 2014, according to the Council for Aid to Education — a sum that helped make up for the continuing shrinkage of appropriat­ions from state government­s.

Donations and endowment are 10 percent of the budget at the University of Texas, up from 3 percent in the 1980s.

But with oil prices down more than 50 percent since last summer, and expected to stay down deep into next year, the outlook for both public revenue and donations is grim in energyheav­y states like Alaska, Oklahoma and Louisiana.

Prospects are somewhat less dim in big oil producers like Texas and California where the economy is more diversifie­d.

State policymake­rs in Oklahoma are warning about a budget shortfall exceeding a half-billion dollars. Just one month into the current budget year, Louisiana lawmakers were forced to cut $3.8 million from public colleges.

The mood is darkest of all in Alaska, where oil revenues pay for 90 percent of state spending. Schools already under a blanket hiring freeze are expecting a third year of budget reductions and possible orders to consolidat­e programs, said Carla Beam, president of the University of Alaska Foundation.

Several major universiti­es in the Southweste­rn oil patch were wrapping up record-breaking capital campaigns when oil prices began plunging late in 2014, and developmen­t officers say they haven’t yet assessed the full negative impact.

University of Oklahoma President David Boren said half the net worth of some major donors had been “wiped out.”

At Texas Tech University, athletic director Kirby Hocutt said this spring there had been a “pause to some conversati­ons” amid efforts to raise $43 million for new training facilities.

“The millionair­es are worried,” said Richard White, dean of the College of Business at LSU.

Students could feel the bite at Texas’ Angelo State University, where 1 in 3 receive scholarshi­p money from a foundation fed by oil royalties that have dropped by half.

“It has slowed the growth of the endowment considerab­ly,” said foundation President Candice Belle Upton.

Texas’ public universiti­es are closely tied to oil because the royalties from the state’s 2.1 million acres of oil and gas lands go directly to the University of Texas and Texas A&M System.

But only about a dozen of the previously 100-plus rigs in the Permian Basin shale are still working, said Mark Houser, chief executive of the state’s University Lands.

The fiscal year ended in August with campus royalty revenues down 26 percent, a five-year low.

Officials at Texas A&M University are relieved their $450 million football stadium renovation was finished just in time.

“It’s kind of like the Catholic Church and Florence in the 15th century — you give and you get closer to the altar,” said Ed Davis, president of the Texas A&M Foundation. “In our case, you give more money, you get closer to the 50.”

 ?? SUE OGROCKI/AP ?? The University of Oklahoma has scaled back a renovation project to its football stadium amid slumping oil prices.
SUE OGROCKI/AP The University of Oklahoma has scaled back a renovation project to its football stadium amid slumping oil prices.

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