Why, after 173 years, is Boston University mounting its first comprehensive fundraising campaign? And why the daunting target of $1 billion, a figure no school has ever aimed for in a first campaign?
Campaign chair Kenneth Feld (SMG’70) says he hears the answer every time he travels. “BU is now at a stage where it is breaking through,” says BU trustee Feld, whose family business—Feld Entertainment—owns Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey and Disney on Ice, among other properties. “The level of fame that has come to BU internationally is extraordinary. This is the absolute right time.”
President Robert A. Brown offers a similar response: alumni are ready. “The Board of Trustees voted in April 2010 to authorize us to explore the feasibility of a billion-dollar campaign,” says Brown. “It has become clear that our alumni and other friends are prepared to support this ambitious effort, so we are moving forward. Nothing will be more important for the future of the University than our success.”
In fact, the groundwork for the Campaign for Boston University was put in place shortly after Brown took office seven years ago, when he set administrators to work on a strategic plan that would describe their vision for the University. The document that emerged, “Choosing To Be Great,” took stock of the University’s strengths—renowned faculty, an increasingly gifted student body, healthy finances, and its international students and programs. It also identified priorities that would enhance and nurture those strengths, with the understanding that realizing those priorities would necessitate changes in the University’s funding strategy. At the same time, a disciplined budgeting process—long a BU strength—would be critical. “A vision without a budget,” Brown likes to say, “is a hallucination.”
Because BU does not have the hefty endowment that substantially supports the operating budgets of some peer institutions, the University can count on endowment income for only approximately 4 percent of its operating budget, and on fundraising income for another 5 percent. (These figures are half of what many other private universities of comparable quality, scale, and scope depend on.) And while “this distinctive business model has helped build a great university”—according to Scott Nichols, senior vice president for development and alumni relations—“it’s high time for philanthropy to play a larger role.”
For example, Boston University currently gets 53 percent of the money it needs for buildings through borrowing, with just 6 percent of the money coming from gifts and grants. The president and the trustees hope to substantially shift this balance, says Nichols, so that in the future, 50 percent can come from gifts, and just 20 percent from borrowing.
Nichols says that without a major fundraising effort, an even greater burden will have to be placed on tuition, which is something that neither Brown nor the trustees are willing to accept. This commitment to ride herd on tuition increases is among the many reasons why BU trustees and overseers have personally stepped up and pledged $130 million collectively to kick-start a campaign with a $1 billion goal.
Toward that ambitious end, the deans of all the schools and colleges have put together cadres of prominent alumni, known as Deans Advisory Boards, whose members are committed to the long-term success of those schools, and might be willing to back them not only with advice and counsel, but also with substantial philanthropic gifts. Nichols says that what had been a handful of such folks before the campaign has now burgeoned to more than 350, and the goal is to boost that number (including international alumni) to between 500 and 1,000.
Where will the money go? One third of the answer is already visible. While the campaign officially opened this fall, an unofficial “quiet” period began about two years ago, and it has yielded a total of $420 million. That includes $25 million from trustee Rajen Kilachand (GSM’74), the largest gift in BU history, to endow the Arvind and Chandan Nandlal Kilachand Honors College, and $15 million from trustee Bahaa Hariri (SMG’90), for the Rafik B. Hariri Institute for Computing and Computational Science & Engineering.
Campaign gifts have also made possible the new School of Medicine student residence, the expansion and renovation of the School of Law, and the New Balance athletic field. They fund important professorships, such as the Peter Paul Professorships for junior faculty, given by trustee Peter Paul (GSM’71), and a $1 million gift for the Reidy Family Career Development Professorship at the College of Engineering from trustee Richard Reidy (SMG’82). For the past two years and through the 2017 campaign finale, trustee Richard Cohen (CGS’67, SMG’69) has pledged $300,000 a year to the campaign to send 15 undergraduate students to BU.
This is the University’s first comprehensive campaign.
The campaign goal is
$1 billion, more than any school has ever sought in a first campaign.
BU trustees and overseers have pledged $130 million collectively.
The two-year quiet campaign has yielded a total of $420 million.
Gifts will support financial aid, professorships, research, and special programs.
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