San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Prop 5 would create new state university endowment fund

- By Kate McGee The Texas Tribune is a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n media organizati­on that informs Texans about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues. It partners with Open Campus on higher education coverage.

For years, the University of Texas at Austin and Texas A&M University have represente­d Texas as the top two public research institutio­ns in the state. Those who support schools with colors other than burnt orange or maroon lament that the schools have gained prestige by tapping a $32 billion endowment that helps them attract top faculty, increase research funding and construct new buildings.

This year, Texas lawmakers establishe­d a new path for other public universiti­es interested in joining the Longhorns and Aggies in the upper echelon of nationally ranked schools.

They created the Texas University Fund, a $3.9 billion endowment to help other “emerging” research universiti­es across the state enhance their research capabiliti­es with the goal of joining the top public institutio­ns across the country.

Propositio­n 5, a constituti­onal amendment to authorize the state to create the new endowment, is in front of Texas voters in the Nov. 7 election. It is one of 13 proposed amendments to the Texas Constituti­on.

To back Propositio­n 5, lawmakers put a one-time allotment of $3 billion from the state’s budget surplus toward the fund. An additional $900 million will be rolled into this new endowment from the National Research University Fund, created more than a decade ago to finance research universiti­es. If approved by voters, the state also would contribute $100 million annually from interest accrued on the state’s rainy day fund.

The endowment, to be managed by the Texas Treasury Safekeepin­g Trust Co., does not require any new taxes to pay for it.

State officials say increasing the number of top-ranked universiti­es in the state will drive local and statewide economic growth and keep Texas competitiv­e.

“We’re the eighth-largest economy in the world,” Texas Higher Education Commission­er Harrison Keller said. “We need more research universiti­es that are able to compete with the strongest research and developmen­t institutio­ns in the world.”

Currently, California has nine schools on the list of the top 50 public universiti­es, according to the U.S. News and World Report, where faculty research heavily factors into rankings. Florida has three universiti­es on the list.

“There’s a correlatio­n there,” Texas Tech President Lawrence Scovanec said. “They’re more competitiv­e for those federal investment­s in research because they’re performing at a very high level, and I think the Legislatur­e wanted to see Texas have more schools at a preeminent level.”

Public universiti­es have two main goals: educating students and advancing knowledge through research that betters society.

Large grants require matching funds, and universiti­es need to show that they can provide some financial commitment as well. The TUF funds will allow qualifying schools to become more competitiv­e for grants.

So far, four public universiti­es qualify to receive money from the endowment: Texas State University, Texas Tech University, the University of Houston and the University of North Texas. To qualify, schools must have spent at least $20 million on federal or private research

annually for the preceding three years and awarded an average of at least 45 doctoral degrees annually during the previous three years.

The university that is next closest to qualifying to enter the new fund is Texas A&M University at Corpus Christi, Keller said.

Jason Smith, vice president of government­al affairs at the University of Houston System, said that without a steady stream of funding at the level the TUF fund could provide, the university has had to make difficult decisions on whether to spend money on research or to improve student services, like mental health counseling or tutoring. Investing in research brings in more federal funding, improves national rankings and attracts more competitiv­e students and top faculty, he said.

“We probably can’t invest like we should or like Texas A&M and UT can in academic counselors and mental health services and all the things you need at a university now for your students to be successful,” Smith said. “We needed to do that to build our research capabiliti­es in order to draw down more federal funds and improve our rankings and attract more competitiv­e

students.”

Improving the academic stature and national reputation of these emerging research institutio­ns also makes them more attractive places to enroll, which has a positive economic impact, Smith said.

“There’s not enough space at UT and Texas A&M for all of the students that we need to educate in our state and keep them in our state,” he said, pointing to the tens of thousands of students who leave Texas annually for colleges elsewhere, never to return.

If the research fund is approved, early estimates show, Texas State could get $22 million in the first year; UH would receive $48 million; Texas Tech would receive $44 million; and UNT would receive $21 million, according to state budget figures.

Each year, the comptrolle­r would appropriat­e up to 7% of the investment assets of the fund for distributi­on to the universiti­es. Three-fourths of that money would be distribute­d to the endowment and then sent to the schools. Tech and UH would each receive one-third of that money, while Texas State and UNT would split the remaining third.

The remaining 25% of the distributi­on would be provided to the four schools based on performanc­e. Within that performanc­e funding tier, 85% of the money would be distribute­d to the universiti­es based on the annual money spent on research, and 15% would depend on the number of doctoral degrees awarded.

Lawmakers designed the TUF fund so that if another university meets the benchmark qualificat­ions, or if a university already receiving funding improves its performanc­e and qualifies for more funding, the state is required to add money to the TUF. The goal is to avoid what happened to the previous research fund, known as NRUF, which was created more than a decade ago to improve research at schools other than UT-Austin and Texas A&M. But that fund was designed so that as more universiti­es qualified, the amount of money for each school declined.

When Texas Tech and UH first qualified in 2012, they each received around $16 million per year from the National Research University Fund. Last year, that amount was closer to $7 million.

If a majority of voters approve Propositio­n 5, universiti­es will be required to spend fund money on research activity. Texas State officials said they plan to recruit more faculty whose research focuses on artificial intelligen­ce, life sciences, energy and semiconduc­tors. UH said it plans to renovate an existing research facility and add faculty. Texas Tech said it plans to add 100 to 150 faculty over the next decade. UNT President Neal Smatresk said the money would help the school increase enrollment and meet workforce needs in North Texas.

“It will also allow more Texas students to remain in state for their education and gain highdemand, high-tech skills so that they may play critical roles in filling the workforce demands of major industries moving into Texas,” Shreek Mandayam, vice president for research at Texas State, said in an email.

 ?? Jordan Vonderhaar/Contributo­r ?? Students walk across campus at Texas State University in San Marcos. Propositio­n 5, if approved in the Nov. 7 election, could funnel $22 million to Texas State in the first year.
Jordan Vonderhaar/Contributo­r Students walk across campus at Texas State University in San Marcos. Propositio­n 5, if approved in the Nov. 7 election, could funnel $22 million to Texas State in the first year.

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