Yuma Sun

Feds say US colleges ‘massively’ underrepor­t foreign funding

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A scathing report from the Trump administra­tion on Tuesday concluded that top U.S. universiti­es have “massively underrepor­ted” funding they accept from China, Russia and other nations described as “foreign adversarie­s.”

The Education Department released the report amid its effort to enforce a 1986 law requiring U.S. universiti­es to disclose gifts and contracts of $250,000 or more from foreign sources. After going decades with little federal oversight, the law has become a priority for the Trump administra­tion amid concerns over economic espionage and trade secret theft from abroad.

The department’s findings are primarily based on investigat­ions it has opened at 12 schools, including Harvard, Yale, Stanford and Georgetown universiti­es. Federal officials began investigat­ing the schools amid suspicion that they had failed to report millions of dollars in gifts and contracts from sources in China, Russia, Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

According to early findings in the report, most of the 12 schools have had financial dealings with Huawei, the Chinese tech giant that some U.S. officials say is a threat to national security, and at least one had ties directly to the Chinese Communist Party. Others had deals with the Russian government and institutio­ns in Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

The report did not identify which universiti­es were connected to those entities. Since coming under federal scrutiny, the 12 schools disclosed a combined $6.5 billion in foreign funding that was previously unreported, the department said.

The Associatio­n of American Universiti­es, which represents research universiti­es, said the report is “less a serious security assessment than it is a partisan and politicall­y driven attack on America’s leading research universiti­es.”

“While the Department of Education purports to be concerned about threats, it has consistent­ly failed to respond to repeated requests for clarity, transparen­cy, and guidelines,” the group said in a statement.

Some universiti­es had previously acknowledg­ed errors in reporting and sought to correct them. Yale said it failed to submit foreign funding reports for the years 2014 to 2017 but later corrected the omission.

The department said its review is ongoing and that it is still gathering informatio­n from universiti­es.

In announcing the report, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos said her agency uncovered “pervasive noncomplia­nce” from universiti­es that have “significan­t foreign entangleme­nt.” “For decades enforcemen­t was lax, but not anymore,” she said. “We took action to make sure the public is afforded the transparen­cy the law requires.”

The report echoes warnings from federal authoritie­s who say that competing nations are increasing­ly targeting U.S. colleges to steal research and technology. It cites recent cases of Chinese nationals accused of working or studying at American colleges while also working for the Chinese government.

The department said its review is only meant to promote transparen­cy and not to determine the appropriat­eness of specific financial ties. Still, it says the agency plans to wok with the Justice Department on any “potential enforcemen­t against specific institutio­ns.”

Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., ranking member of the House Education and Labor Committee, applauded the Education Department for pressing for transparen­cy.

“For too long, adversaria­l foreign actors, including China, have utilized whatever means at their disposal to influence American higher education with little to no repercussi­on,” she said. “If we want to protect the integrity of American education, we must require greater transparen­cy and accountabi­lity of foreign money in our colleges and universiti­es.”

It’s not unusual for U.S. colleges to accept foreign funding for research projects or exchange programs, but federal reporting requiremen­ts have long been treated as an honor system. For years, little was done to verify the regular reports colleges submit to the federal government detailing foreign gifts and contracts of $250,000 or more.

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