Wednesday August 15, 2001
Fresno State Admin. Must Tell All!
Appellate Court Orders
Disclosure of Secret Donor's
Names!
Howard Hobbs Ph.D. President
Valley Press Media Network
FRESNO
STATE -- The court Order of the 5th District Court of
Appeal issued in July requiring CSU Fresno administration
to turn over the names of SaveMart Center luxury suites
to the McClatchy Co. was affirmed in the court's latest
opinion
. Back on December 10, 1999, the attorneys for McClatchy
wrote to the University requesting it reconsider its refusal
to provide the requested documents. On December 20, 1999, counsel
for the University repeated that, "The University's
position that the records, to the extent they exist in state files,
are protected from disclosure because the public interest in nondisclosure
outweighs the public interest in disclosure."
The Order had been appealed by CSU Fresno
administration officials who attempted to divert or delay disclosure
of the records by claming the CSU Fresno administration"...
had no such records, and that the agreements, were with The
CSU Fresno Association, a nonprofit corporation..." not
subject to the court's Order.
At issue is the identity of big SaveMart
Center donors and possibly some project subcontractors which
CSU Fresno has, for reasons unknown, refused to make public.
The proposed a $103 million multipurpose
SaveMart Center is on the CSU Fresno campus.
The project is to be funded primarily by private donations and
operated by a University-affiliated, nonprofit auxiliary corporation,
The CSUFresno Association.
In exchange for a generous gift to the
California State University, Fresno Foundation , also a
University-affiliated auxiliary corporation, donors may obtain
luxury suites in the arena for five, seven or ten-year terms.
The donors enter into license agreements with the Association
for use of the luxury suites. Some of the donors who obtained
luxury suites requested to remain anonymous.
The McClatchy Company, doing business
as the Fresno Bee , requested the names of the donors documents
from the University, pursuant to the California Public Records
Act . The request seeks the identity of the individuals and
business entities which purchased million dollar luxury suites
in the arena.
The University promptly denied
the request, and McClatchy filed a petition for writ
of mandate. The court promptly ordered both the University
and the Association to disclose the identities of the
undisclosed luxury suite purchasers and to turn over he license
agreement to McClatchy.
Instead of obeying the court's Order, CSU
Fresno president, John Welty Ed.D. and the Association
then filed petitions for writ of mandate challenging
the court's Order and requestin a stay pending resolution
by the Court.
The 5th District Court of Appeals
in Fresno reviewed president Welty's request and promptly denied
the University's petition and the court's Order
for the University to disclose the requested documents
identifying the names was affirmed.
When complete the Save Mart Center
will house the University's sports teams, including basketball,
volleyball and wrestling, and will be a venue for community concerts,
cultural events, educational conferences and graduation ceremonies.
It will seat 16,000 for sporting events and 18,000 for concerts
and stage events.
The plans call for state-of-the-art
classrooms, computer rooms and conference rooms, with an anticipated
date of completion in the fall of 2002. The estimated cost of
the Save Mart Center is approximately $103 million. The
State of California contributed approximately $8 million for pre-planning
and design costs and offsite improvements to the roads and freeways
providing access to the site. The remainder of the funding is
from private donations.
Save Mart Supermarkets and
Pepsi Bottling Group together pledged a $40 million sponsorship
gift, payable over 20 years. The Save Mart Center will
feature 32 luxury suites available for use by purchasing a license.
Each suite will have 18 seats, a private restroom, refrigerator,
wet bar, television monitors and Internet access. Prices for
the suite licenses range from $45,000 to $63,000 per year, and
license terms are five, seven and ten years.
The Save Mart Center will house
the University's sports teams, including basketball, volleyball
and wrestling, and will be a venue for community concerts, cultural
events, educational conferences and graduation ceremonies. It
will seat 16,000 for sporting events and 18,000 for concerts and
stage events.
According topublic information provided
by the University and the Association, plans call
for state-of-the-art classrooms, computer rooms and conference
rooms, with an anticipated date of completion in the fall of 2002.
The estimated cost of the Save Mart Center is approximately
$103 million. The State of California contributed approximately
$8 million for pre-planning and design costs and offsite improvements
to the roads and freeways providing access to the site. The remainder
of the funding is from private donations.
Save Mart Supermarkets and Pepsi
Bottling Group together pledged a $40 million sponsorship
gift, payable over 20 years. The Save Mart Center will
feature 32 luxury suites available for use by purchasing a license.
Each suite will have 18 seats, a private
restroom, refrigerator, wet bar, television monitors and Internet
access. Prices for the suite licenses range from $45,000 to
$63,000 per year, and license terms are five, seven and ten years.
The suite licenses are expected to generate
approximately $1.5 million annually for the construction and operation
of the Save Mart Center. The University considers the license
fees to be charitable donations, the majority of which
are tax deductible. The license agreements are entered
into between the donors, "licensees," and the Association, "licensor."
According to court records, the questioned
agreements provide, "Licensor
does hereby grant the privilege of use to Licensee, and Licensee
accepts that certain space shown known as Preferred Seating Area
(PSA) No. _____ (the 'Premises') located in the structure commonly
known as the Save Mart Center for ________ consecutive terms commencing
on 2002 and expiring on __________, (the 'Term') unless terminated
sooner as provided herein ." And the "Licensee hereby acknowledges
that the privilege of use granted by Licensor in the Agreement
is based upon annual execution of the terms of Licensee's Pledge
Agreement between Licensee and [the Foundation ."
The Association holds a charter
from the State of California as an educational program under California
Education Code section 89900, which addresses auxiliary organizations
of state universities and colleges.
The Association operates all the
University's commercial enterprises, including the University's
bookstore, food services, housing and student union. The Foundation
is also a California nonprofit corporation operatingas an educational
program. The purpose of the Foundation is to provide
assistance to faculty and staff with the administration of grants,
contracts and trust accounts.
The Foundation manages all aspects
of the financial activities for grants, contracts, trust accounts,
investments, endowments, scholarships, loans, gifts and donations.
The land under the Save Mart Center
is to be leased by the University for the Save Mart Center
to the Association, which will operate the facility.
The Association was designated the official recipient of
the funds obtained from suite licenses. However, payments
for suite licenses are made to the Foundation but,
it has been learned, the checks are being mailed to University
offices. However, the Association
maintains the original license agreements in their locked files.
In a dramatic revelation during the Court
hearing on McClatchy's appeal last week, the University
administration finally admitted that it is in possession of the
names of the licensees, and that the University made copies of
the license agreements for their files.
Donations to the University for
the Save Mart Center were promised anonymity by the University,
according to court records, for donors may wished to remain anonymous.
In an attept to state a legal justificationm
for refusal to gravt the Fresno Bee request for the
names of the donors, the University administration presented
the following argument: "...the
information requested, to the extent, if any, that it is contained
in state records, is 'official information,' and the benefit to
the public from non-disclosure outweighs the benefit to the public
in disclosing it."
The University argued: "Donors
expect that the University will keep their donations private.
If the University were to be required to disclose this information,
there is a very real possibility that it would lose the benefit
of many donations. Loss of donations would work a great harm to
the University and to the State, which supports it, and is therefore
against the public interest."
On March 24,
2000, McClatchy filed a petition for writ of mandate pursuant
to the CPRA against the University, the Association, and the Foundation
to compel disclosure of the requested documents. As of August
2000, the University had received approximately $80 million in
pledges.
However, actual gifts received totaled
only $12.6 million. The University contends that if fundraising
efforts fall short of its goal, certain design features of the
Save Mart Center will be eliminated and, if it is unable to make
the down payment on construction costs, the entire project could
be jeopardized. The hearing on the petition was held on September
21, 2000.
[Editor's
Note: On December 19, 2000, the court issued its ruling, granting
McClatchy the information sought because - - The University is
a state agency or state body within the meaning ofGovernment Code
section] 6252(a) and, the writings that contain the names of the
undisclosed licensees of the luxury suites and copies of the license
agreements between the licensees and the Association that are
in the possession of the University are public records within
the meaning of the law, and the University was not able to prove
that the public interest in nondisclosure clearly outweighed the
public interest in disclosure, and the Association must disclose
the identities of the licensees and the license agreements between
the licensees and the Association because, the University is a
state agency and the Association is under the direct control of
the University in all of its activities.]
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