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THURSDAY
jan. 15, 2014 high 25°, low 17°
t h e i n de p e n de n t s t u de n t n e w s pa p e r of s y r a c u s e , n e w yor k |
N • What a treat
Members of the Undergraduate Excellence Working Group will attend a two-day retreat Thursday and Friday to focus on ways to improve Syracuse University. Page 3
O • Moving targets
Environmental columnist Azor Cole demands that state legislators pass a bill to end ”bounty” hunting competitions in New York. Page 4
dailyorange.com
S • Just keep shooting
P • Pick a card
SU junior Brianna Butler’s numbers are down from last year. Still, she doesn’t hold back on her trigger, at the orders of Syracuse head coach Quentin Hillsman. Page 16
Michele Norris brings The Race Card Project to Syracuse University and will be the keynote speaker for the Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration on Sunday. Page 9
BANKING ON IT SU Athletics to use part of ACC windfall to help pay Big East exit fee
In April, a University Senate budget report said, “There is likely no more controversial topic on campus than the role of athletics, generally, and its relationship to the university budget.” Now, a windfall of $1.2 million will help the athletics department pay the Big East exit fee.
total expenses by team: Here is a breakdown of the total expenses recorded for each Syracuse University athletics team, as reported to the Department of Education for fiscal year 2014.
total expenses: $72,078,196
MEN’S AND WOMEN’S BASKETBALL: $18,206,429
big east
ACC
$7.5 million — The Big East exit fee, or cost of switching conferences from the Big East to the Atlantic Coast Conference. The cost is being paid over several years by different “responsibility centers” across the university, or different areas of the university that generate revenue.
$60-70 MILLION
FOOTBALL: $23,622,247
The total athletics budget for fiscal year 2015
ALL OTHER MEN’S AND WOMEN’S SPORTS: $24,488,439 NOT ALLOCATED BY GENDER/ SPORT: $5,761,081
gso
Syverud responds to group By Lydia Wilson asst. news editor
Chancellor Kent Syverud has released a response to a Graduate Student Organization resolution, which called for an investigation into administrative actions toward THE General Body during the 18-day Crouse-Hinds Hall sit-in. In their resolution, the GSO called for the chancellor to address alleged administrative actions including locking student protesters in the building, creating a “hostile environment” by prohibiting the entry of a faculty member who was to serve as legal adviser to protesters and delivering notices to THE General Body
see syverud page 6
MEN’S (6): $314,470
total revenue by team:
WOMEN’S (10): $198,547
average annual salaries for
Here is a breakdown of the total revenue recorded for each Syracuse University athletics team, as reported to the Department of Education for fiscal year 2014.
total revenue: $87,647,822
SU head coaches were some of the highest paid SU employees, according to a 2012 IRS form. Here are the average salaries per year for men and women.
MEN (23): $199,121 MEN’S AND WOMEN’S BASKETBALL: $31,551,680 FOOTBALL: $38,532,172 ALL OTHER MEN’S AND WOMEN’S SPORTS: $15,530,317 NOT ALLOCATED BY GENDER/ SPORT: $2,033,653
By Justin Mattingly and Annie Palmer the daily orange
S
HEAD COACHES
yracuse University Athletics still has a chance to dip out of the red this year due to a recent cash injection from the Atlantic Coast Conference. When SU moved from the Big East conference to the Atlantic Coast Conference in 2011, the university assumed a $7.5 million exit fee —a cost that sparked university-wide debate. Last fall, representatives from the University Senate Budget Committee, SU Athletics and the administration reached an agreement that SU Athletics would pay 25 percent of that fee over a 10-year period. The agreement also resolved that any additional revenue
WOMEN (23): $77,754
average annual salaries for
ASSISTANT COACHES
Following in the footsteps of the head coaches, assistant coaches were also well compensated, with an average salary of $138,437.50.
graphic illustration by sydney golden design editor
from the move to the ACC would be used to pay back the fee, possibly in a shorter period of time. This year, Terry Donovan, executive senior associate athletics director and chief financial officer for SU Athletics, projected that the athletics department would be running a deficit, so paying back the fee earlier wouldn’t be possible. Now, thanks to a recent move by the University of Maryland from the ACC to the Big Ten, SU Athletics received a $1.2 million windfall fund — an unexpected sum of money. Part of Maryland’s exit fee was allocated to schools currently in the ACC. About $200,000 from the fund will be channeled to pay off the exit fee’s remaining balance, said Dawit Negussey,
see budget page 6
university senate
Senators discuss SU budget By Annie Palmer staff writer
Moving forward, Syracuse University must examine how the current budget model allocates money within departments and can adapt to meet the needs of a growing student population, according to a recent report from the University Senate Budget Committee. The majority of Wednesday’s senate meeting was spent breaking down the Budget Committee’s report, including updates related to the Big East exit fee, which spurred debate among senators and administrators. Chancellor Kent Syverud charged the Budget Committee
see senate page 6