I’m a CUA alumni, class of 2016. I just attended an alumni dinner where the school boasted a commitment of $518 million for the “Light the Way campaign”. I’m not an expert on how money is spent on capital expenditures vs endowments vs operating expenses, but surely some of that money could be leveraged for a creative solution to this $80 million problem.
I’m a CUA alumni, class of 2016. I just attended an alumni dinner where the school boasted a commitment of $518 million for the “Light the Way campaign”. I’m not an expert on how money is spent on capital expenditures vs endowments vs operating expenses, but surely some of that money could be leveraged for a creative solution to this $80 million problem.
My thoughts exactly. I thought the LTW campaign was a huge success, and now we are being told they are 30M in the hole? I think a big part of the issue is that CUA is still tuiition based as opposed to endowment-based. In fairness, CUA got into the undergrad business far later than most schools, and it continues to play catch-up with the endowment and in construction of new buildings and dorms.
I’m a CUA alumni, class of 2016. I just attended an alumni dinner where the school boasted a commitment of $518 million for the “Light the Way campaign”. I’m not an expert on how money is spent on capital expenditures vs endowments vs operating expenses, but surely some of that money could be leveraged for a creative solution to this $80 million problem.
My thoughts exactly. I thought the LTW campaign was a huge success, and now we are being told they are 30M in the hole? I think a big part of the issue is that CUA is still tuiition based as opposed to endowment-based. In fairness, CUA got into the undergrad business far later than most schools, and it continues to play catch-up with the endowment and in construction of new buildings and dorms.