Response to the Wichita Eagle about "Mayan's Game Plan"

by Fred Marrs 24. June 2006 20:45

 
 TO:  Selected Community Leaders;
    The City Council;
    The County Commission;
    WSU Board of Trustees; WSU Foundation Board;
    WSU Alumni Association Executive Committee


              RE: Response to "Mayan's Game Plan"
                      Eagle, 24 June, 2006

    The following are snippet responses to the Eagle's Brent
Wistrom and Kirk Seminoff article of Saturday, June 24th, 2006:

    "No cost estimates are available": The latest Division 1A NCAA
    statistics are available for all 117 universities of Division
    1A, published by the NCAA.  These statistics provide data
    going back to when the Board of Regents "suspended" our
    football program and emphasized football at K-State, and have
    been provided in Shocker Black & Golds position papers
    provided to the president, the mayor, City Council, County
    Commission, and well over 100 community leaders, as well as
    the Eagle who chooses to contend no cost estimates are
    available, at least for drive by scribblers with no time for
    substantive analysis, and scribbler dead lines to meet.

    "To comply with federal law requiring equivalent scholarship
    opportunities for female athletes": The Title IX law and the
    latest administrative regulations interpreting that law, only
    require that the university show that it is "fully and
    adequately accommodating the needs of female athletes", there
    is no requirement of equal scholarships for men and women, and
    there is no time constraint with regard to when you provide
    scholarships or start a women's sport subsequent to starting
    a men's sport to pay for the women's sport.  And, if the Eagle
    or the university administration contends otherwise, they
    should cite the specific language of the Title IX statute, or
    the specific language of the current administrative regulation
    interpreting the Title IX statute to the contrary.  The horse
    gets to come before the cart even with Title IX.

    "University officials say declining enrollment relates to the
    area's economy, not the lack of football": Nice try
    "university officials", but the truth is you aren't solving
    the root cause of the problem, which is lack of being a
    traditional university with a traditional football program.
    You have been losing students steadily for 20 years, and the
    Wichita economy certainly hasn't been going down hill steadily
    for the last 20 years.  This university statement is precisely
    why the university continues to lose students, and continues
    to have to buy students with our money to cover up the
    university's negligence.  It is axiomatic that if you do not
    admit what the root cause of the problem is, you will never
    solve the problem.  But then if you blame the cause of the
    problem on something for which you have no control, why then
    you can intellectually dishonestly contend you have no
    responsibility for solving the problem.  The university's
    pretended argument is really more suited to child's play, than
    it is to any reasoned discourse of the issue.

    "Just starting a football program ‘likely isn't' going to be
    enough to make a considerable difference in admissions, said
    Chad McEvoy, an "assistant" professor of sports management at
    Illinois State University": The latest 52 page study
    commissioned by the NCAA by Robert Litan, Vice President for
    Research and Policy at the Kauffman Foundation in Kansas City;
    Jonathan Orszag, Managing Director of Sebago Associates, Inc.,
    an economic policy consulting firm; and Dr. Peter Orszag, a
    Joseph A. Pechman Senior Fellow in Economic Studies at the
    Brooking Institution and Senior Director at Sebago Associates,
    who has served as Special Assistant to the President for
    Economic Policy at the White House; reviewed by three
    independent economists, with research assistance and
    programming on the NCAA commissioned project provided by 6
    named NCAA individuals and additional NCAA staff, and using
    the latest NCAA data base for all 117 Division 1A
    universities; which empirical study based upon the latest NCAA
    data nationwide exhibits exactly the opposite of Mr. McEvoy's
    "isn't likely" subjective opinion.  But then why should we be
    bothered with substance and the truth, when erroneous
    subjective opinion will do just fine to plead our case.
    Further, one academic scholarship will add exactly one student
    to the university.  Athletic scholarships are synergistic, and
    one athletic scholarship will attract many additional students
    that want a traditional college experience with their
    education.

    "It may make "more sense" to spend tax dollars on academic
    based scholarships, McEvoy said": Query: Did president Beggs
    give the Eagle the reference to McEvoy?  Once again, McEvoy
    relies solely on "more sense" subjective opinion.  The NCAA
    data and commissioned 52 page report "The Empirical Effects of
    Collegiate Athletics: An Interim Report, August 2003", and the
    cited Brian, Goff report "Effects of University Athletics on
    the University: A Review and Extension of Empirical
    Assessment," Journal of Sport Management, 2000, volume 14,
    pages 85-104", both find nationwide that there are direct
    measurable effects of loss of students associated with the
    loss of football: "dropping football can have measurable,
    negative effects on enrollments, even for second-tier
    schools."

    "But the committee said the program should not begin until
    sufficient funds are raised": That was the convoluted
    irrational opinion of the 3 WSU nursing school no votes on the
    committee, controlled by one KU professor assigned to the WSU
    nursing school, under whom the other two worked.  Obviously,
    the attempt was to be to raise the money to reinstate the
    football program, and the vote was for  president Hughes to
    forthwith proceed with raising the funds, but the then KU
    controlled Board of Regents (without any subject matter
    jurisdiction over athletics funded independently from the
    state), would not allow Hughes to proceed, so Hughes "retired"
    (probably at the request of the KU controlled Board of
    Regents), and then took another presidents position at a
    university in the southeast.

    "Other members of the City Council don't want to "meddle" with
    how WSU "chooses" to spend its share of the mill levy": Please
    note the pejorative word "meddle".  It is the legal obligation
    of the City Council and County Commission, to designate the
    use of the funds, other than the debt service of the capital
    improvement line item on the Mil-levy.  The university has no
    legal right to "choose" how our tax-payer's  Mil-levy money is
    spent.  The budget submitted by WSU, legally is only for the
    consideration of the council and commission, and has no legal
    binding effect whatsoever.  It's the taxpayer's money, and if
    we want to use any part of it, except for debt servicing
    capital improvements, to solve our 20 year old festering loss
    of student problem the university fails to solve, it is the
    legal right of our representatives.  Those councilmen who
    contend they don't want to "meddle" with how WSU "chooses" to
    spend our taxpayer's money we give to the university, are
    simply abdicating their legal representative responsibilities
    to their constituent taxpayers.

    "[i]t could become a council issue if Mayans pushes for a vote
    on whether the city should tell WSU how to spend its
    contingency fund": If we don't allow it, there is no line item
    contingency fund.  As Mayans statistics show, the contingency
    line item was a modest $7,091 in 1998, the year before
    president Beggs' tenure that began January 1st, 1999, and then
    for the fiscal year 1999, immediately jumped dramatically an
    unconscionable 66.9 times, to $474,355 under president Beggs'
    first budget, and has continued under president Beggs to as
    high as $800,000 as late as two years ago, 2004.  This
    dramatically increased honey pot of play money for the
    president, we believe, has never been properly accounted for
    by the university's administration to the City Council or the
    County Commission, and no one on the Council knows or can say,
    how this contingency money was in fact spent by the
    university.  Mayor Mayans in trying to establish a proper use
    for the contingency line item money, should not only push for
    a vote on how this contingency money should be spent, but the
    City Council and County Commission we submit, have a legal
    duty to the taxpayer's to designate how the contingency money
    should be spent, if for no other reason, than to understand
    and constrain precisely what the contingence money is allowed
    to  be spent on by the president.  Perhaps some of this
    "contingency" money is already ear marked by president Beggs
    to go to the faculty (as other moneys on the Mil-levy do, that
    should properly be the function of state funding), or other
    honey pot desires that he doesn't want to disclose as a
    specific line item for specific approval, and therefore forms
    the real basis for president Beggs apparent unmeritorious
    reluctance to use the contingency money to solve our loss of
    students problem, and failure of growth of students problem;
    which costs the university and this community not only
    economic detriment attributable to the loss of students as
    identified by Mayor Mayans; but also cost the university, and
    by extension our county tax payers, their fair share (which
    share is presently zero) of state tuition accountability
    money, that could be used to the great benefit of the
    university and this community.

    "The university "sets aside" out of its $6 million ($6,644,552
    for 2007) share of property taxes for a contingency fund.
    Most of the money in that fund is used for scholarships, Beggs
    said": The university already has other specific scholarships
    designated on the Mil-levy in specific line items.  If some of
    the contingency money went for scholarships, then president
    Beggs should produce the Roger Lowe WSU accounting
    documentation showing where the money went, who received the
    money, and the amounts of such money; as well as accounting
    for all contingency money that has not gone for scholarships
    since the beginning of his tenure, January 1st 1999.  This
    documentation should be required by the City Council and
    County Commission, so that our representatives document and
    confirm the evidence, and demonstrate, exhibit, and establish
    their due diligence satisfaction and fulfillment of their
    legal responsibility and accountability for the contingency
    moneys; not simply serve as a rubber stamp (as presently
    verbally evidenced by some members of the City Council) for
    president Beggs' substantively unaccounted for honey pot of
    play money desires; contra to the desires of the Mayor and the
    community to use "contingency" line item moneys to solve our
    20 year old festering loss of traditional student problem.

                                  Respectfully submitted,
                                  Shocker Black & Golds
                                  By:
                                       Fred Marrs
p.s. Our web site is now on line.  Visit
www.AlumniShockersBlackand
Golds.com and click on position papers for information on the
return of WSU football which should be posted in a day or two.
 
  

 

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