The state might be advising UNC-system schools to rely more on private donors, but administrators say money from those sources will not come close to covering their costs.
At a discussion on UNC-Wilmington’s campus Nov. 29, Gov. Bev Perdue said universities should focus on getting more private donations, primarily for research initiatives, to offset another year of inevitable cuts in state funding.
Officials say the intended destinations of private funding won’t be the areas that really need it — the ones hit hardest by the budget cuts.
The state traditionally funds employee salaries and other operation costs for universities, while private donors tend to give money to support special programs, such as the new Innovate@Carolina program and merit scholarships, said Bruce Carney, executive vice chancellor and provost at UNC-Chapel Hill.
“There’s a disconnect between where we are cutting basic services and what donors wish to support,” he said.
Innovate@Carolina aims to make UNC-CH a leading university in innovation and entrepreneurship by facilitating ways for students to share ideas and act on them.
“People in organizations and institutions like to give money to buildings and programs,” said UNC-system Board of Governors member John Davis.
“They don’t like to give money so that people can be paid a salary,” he said.
For the 2010 fiscal year, about 45 percent of private funding received went toward research, and about 29 percent went toward strategic initiatives such as the Innovate@Carolina program.