| To: Retort From: BA
[Will Parrish et al. pile into the widening breach opened up by Gray Brechin, Jennifer Washburn, Richard Brenneman and Bob Meister - of course, Upton Sinclair got there long ago, with The Goose Step. Here follows parts 2&3 of a survey of the structurally adjusted University of California. IB]
In advance of the March 4 statewide
student-worker-faculty strike, this detailed study of the political
economy of the military-industrial-academic-media complex examines how
the University
of California is being run as a $19 billion dollar speculative bubble
with ample opportunities for enormous growth through “volatility.” The
UC's alpha Regents specialize in leveraged buyouts and privatization of
publicly traded companies, and they have long practiced this same basic
business philosophy on the university.
This past July, following the California State Legislature's
decision to strip $813 million from the University of California's
Fiscal Year 2009-10 budget, the UC's 26-member Board of Regents voted to
declare “a state of financial emergency.” Such a “state of emergency,”
the university's official by-laws state, should accompany an “imminent
and substantial deficiency in available university financial
resources.”
The Regents also voted to grant special “emergency powers” to UC
President Mark G. Yudof. Yudof promptly marshaled his new and vaguely
defined authority to lay off hundreds of workers, impose pay cuts and
furloughs on remaining university staff, and propose a 32 percent
increase in student fees which the Regents approved in November. At the same meeting, Regents Chairman Russell Gould announced the
formation of a new UC Commission on the Future. Its de facto function
has been to further the privatization of the university. Notably, Gould
is one of California's most prominent financiers, a man who served as
vice chairman of Wachovia Bank during its growth as one of the leading
subprime mortgage lenders in the United States. He and Yudof serve as
the commission's co-chairmen. In Gould's words, the commission's task
is "nothing short of re-imagining" the University of California. In her 2007 book The Shock Doctrine, journalist Naomi Klein
describes the rise of a political and economic system she calls “disaster
capitalism,” under which the preferred method of reshaping the world in
the interest of multinational corporations is to systematically exploit
the state of fear and disorientation that accompanies moments of great
shock and crisis. Among the main prototypes Klein offers for this
insidious form of economic and social engineering are Augusto Pinochet's
Chilean regime, installed by the CIA in 1973, along with the US
invasion and occupation of Iraq and the US government response to the
crisis of Hurricane Katrina. During these disastrous moments, leaders
typically invoke "states of emergency" and heap special powers on
themselves to ram through unpopular and unnecessary measures. The function of a rhetorical emphasis on emergencies and
disasters, Klein notes, is to legitimate actions that would normally be
rejected by the vast majority of the population. “Economic shock
therapy,” a term frequently used by the International Monetary Fund to
describe large-scale privatization of publicly owned assets, is the
inevitable course that results from this strategy. While the
phenomenon Klein describes has far greater longevity and much deeper
roots than her book indicates, she nevertheless provides a useful
framework for examining the unraveling of large institutions across all
sectors of global capitalism. The State of California's political elites and business leaders
have taken to using this language of crisis now whenever discussing the
UC. In the past few decades, state funding of the university has
suffered steady erosion. The UC now receives more funding than ever from
private corporations and the federal government (the latter being in
most instances pretty much the same as the former). Its various revenue
streams range from student fees to several billion dollars in medical
hospital revenue to private grants and donations, to its own hedge
fund-like investments portfolio, to atomic bomb dollars from the
Department of Energy.
Thus, despite the state budget cuts, the UC's overall revenue
reached an all-time high of $19.42 billion in the 2009-10 academic year,
and the Regents' claim that the UC faces an “imminent and substantial”
funding deficit is inaccurate, to say the least. According to both the
university's own financial documents and Moody's bond rating agency, the
university
had access to over $8.3 billion in unrestricted investment funds it was
holding in reserve at the time. The university has undergone a neo-liberal-style “structural
adjustment” at the behest of the UC Regents, and this transformation has
been accelerated during Yudof's tenure as president. Under the
leadership of California's economic elite, the UC has become the leading
prototype for a "disaster capitalist university."
Since the mid-1990s, administrative salaries have
absorbed a dramatically increasing share of the university's overall
budget. According to a study by UC Berkeley Professor Emeritus of
Physics Charles Schwartz, the number of UC administrative positions
increased by an almost unbelievable 118 percent from 1996 to 2006, as
compared with a 34 percent increase in faculty positions and 33 percent
increase in students over the same period. As a result, there are
currently 3,600 UC employees who make more than $200,000 a year, many of
them through administrative positions.
An even more damning
revelation was made public this past October when UC Santa Cruz
Professor Bob Meister published his scathing analysis of the UC
administration's use of student tuition dollars as collateral for
construction bond debts. In addition to his PhD in economics, Meister
serves as Chairman of the Council of University Faculties –
essentially, a faculty union with representatives on all 10 of the
university's campuses. He knows what he's talking about. According to
the Regents' own data and policy documents, the primary use of student
fee revenue since 2004 has been as collateral for bonds to fund campus
construction projects. In this "modified credit swap," students are
forced to take out "subprime" student loans, often charging six percent
interest, so the university can borrow money at a reduced rate to construct
new facilities like – to take one example -- the Blum Center for
Developing Economies at UC Berkeley, which UC Regent Richard C. Blum's
own construction company, URS Corporation, was contracted by the university
to build.
And those subprime student loans? They're often
owned by big banks like Wachovia and other financial outfits that many
of the UC Regents and their business partners are shareholders or
executives of. So the whole cycle begins and ends with massive public
and student debts, both of which increase as the Regents partake in
further undermining the tax base while looting the public sector, again
ratcheting up the crisis rhetoric.
UC Los Angeles instructor
Bob Samuels has observed that “Moody's even slipped into its bond rating
for the UC system the need for the [UC] to restrain labor costs,
increase student fees, diversify revenue streams, feed the money-making
sectors, and resist the further unionization of its employees,” Samuels
concludes that, “like the International Monetary Fund (IMF) or World
Bank, the bond raters tie access to credit to the dismantling of the
public sector and the adoption of neo-liberal ideology.”
To
understand fully why the University of California's internal finances
are being subjected to “economic shock therapy,” much like a Third World
debtor nation under the thumb of the IMF, it's necessary to know a bit
about the history and function of the university's power structure.
Although it is nominally a public institution, the UC is not owned and
governed by the State of California. Rather, it is the UC Regents who
call all the shots. The Board of Regents is a corporate entity formed
in 1879 for the explicit purpose of thwarting a populist social movement
of small farmers who demanded that the the university become more
responsive to their needs.
"During a tumultuous decade in
California history," historian John Aubrey Douglass has written, "many
saw the new University of California as serving the interests of the
upper classes, focusing on classical 'gentlemanly training' and
replicating the Yankee private institutions of the East. The detractors
of the university
demanded that, as an instrument of social and economic development, the
university
primarily serve the training and research needs of agriculture and
industry, the stated 'leading objective' of the institution under
statutory law."
During the California constitutional convention
of that year, a clique of mostly San Francisco-based financiers and
industrialists managed to defeat the democratic demands of farmers and
small business owners. The crowning achievement of this elitist coup
was the establishment of the UC Board of Regents, a corporate entity
that owns and operates the university. To maintain their power against
all opposition the Regents gave themselves twelve year tenures that are
explicitly meant to insulate them from any political pressures. The UC
thus became what Douglass calls "a fourth branch of state government."
Since then, the leading sectors of the California
economy have self-appointed individuals who represent their economic
interests on the Board. The Regents mold UC policies in broad ways that
benefit capital's leading monopoly sectors. The current going price
for an appointment – probably the most prestigious one at the governor's
disposal, it should be noted – seems to be $50,000, bare minimum. Give
the Gov. this sum, and you too could be a Regent.
Until
relatively recently this meant that Regents would promote policies
designed to build cutting edge economic sectors in and around the UC
campuses, but they'd make sure to throw some of the university's gravy
to less sexy and profitable sectors of the economy. In recent years,
the Board of Regents has become dominated by financiers, however. As
with the economy at large, these wizards of hedge funds, credit markets,
venture capital, real estate speculation, and all the other games
played with billion dollar pots of money, have begun to run the university
itself as a $19 billion dollar speculative bubble with ample
opportunities for enormous growth through “volatility.” These new alpha
Regents specialize in leveraged buyouts and privatization of publicly
traded companies, and they have long practiced this same basic business
philosophy on the university.
The most prominent among this cadre
has been Richard Blum. As we detailed in last week's AVA, Blum's
five-decade career as a finance capitalist has been
distinguished by the levels of skill and panache he has applied to the
time-honored task of siphoning off public money into one's own corporate
coffers, as well as those of one's financial and political allies.
Blum, who is married to US Senator Dianne Feinstein, is one of the
leading power-brokers in the Democratic Party within both California and
the United States.
Notably, it was Blum who virtually
hand-picked President Yudof for UC President, having chaired the
selection committee that oversaw Yudof's appointment. At a March 2008
press conference heralding the Yudof hiring, the San Francisco Chronicle
noted that Blum seemed “visibly ecstatic.” In April, the Chronicle
quoted Blum again, saying of Yudof, "we disagree on almost nothing. If I
were giving Mark a grade, I would give him an A-plus.”
Another
prime example of the university's “investors' club” (the title of an
upcoming series by investigative reporter Peter Byrne) is Gerald Parsky,
a San Diego venture capitalist who reportedly commutes daily by jet to Los
Angeles. As a Republican Party powerhouse, Parsky was so influential
during his 1996-2008 tenure on the Regents that the American Federation
of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) dubbed a particularly
influential faction of the Board “The Parsky Clique.” In addition to
being president of Los Angeles-based Aurora Capital, recent additions to
Parsky's resume include acting as senior economic advisor to John
McCain presidential campaign and as chairman of the Schwarzenegger
administration's Commission on the 21st Century Economy. Just as Parsky
helped steer the UC toward ever-greater privatization throughout his
tenure as a Regent, his commission issued a series of recommendations
on reforming the state's tax and revenue system in a manner more
favorable to big business, even prompting some observers to label the
Parsky Commission's proposals “California's Shock Doctrine.”
Current Regents Chairman Russell Gould is another financier and
California Republican Party heavy. In addition to his role at Wachovia
Bank, he served as California Director of Finance in the Pete Wilson
administration in the 1990s. After that, he served a stint as assets
managers of the $5.5 billion J. Paul Getty Trust Fund, a charitable
organization founded with money from the Getty oil fortune. The Gettys
are neighbors of one Richard Blum and Dianne Feinstein in San
Francisco's uber-bourgeoise Pacific Heights neighborhood, where Mr. and
Mrs. DiFi purchased a $16.5 million palatial estate in 2005.
(As an aside, the Getty Trust was run in those years by one Barry
Munitz, former chancellor of the California State University System.
From 1984 to 1991, Munitz was vice president of Maxaam Corporation under
Charles Hurwitz, as the company clear-cut the lands and livelihoods of
California North Coast residents. Munitz has since been a leading force
behind shaping the California Business Roundtable's public education
policy agenda, which strongly favors neo-liberal privatization.)
Another Regent, Paul Wachter, acts as Gov. Schwarzengger's personal
financial adviser. Regent George Marcus is a lead organizer of The Real
Estate Roundtable, the main political voice of real estate capital in
the United States. Regent Judith Hopkinson, whose tenure recently
ended, is a retired executive of Ameriquest Capital Corporation, a big
mortgage company that is partly responsible for precipitating the
current economic crisis: Ameriquest lent billions in sub-prime loans to
families across the US knowing full well they would have trouble making
payments down the line as rates increased. And the list goes on.
One of the primary enterprises Richard Blum has
presided over in recent years is the real estate corporation CB
Richard Ellis. With projects in nearly 100 countries, CBRE is the
largest brokerage firm on the planet. In a notable example of how
Blum's own particular business interests have become increasingly
enmeshed with those of the university, during the course of his
tenure as a Regent, CBRE has contracted with at least eight of the
UC's 10 campuses over the past decade. Most often, the company has consulted with these campuses to produce glossy reports highlighting
the beneficial economic impacts on the immediate regions that host
them, as well as that of California in general. The UC's San
Francisco, Davis, Berkeley, San Diego, and Riverside campuses have
all paid CBRE to produce precisely these kinds of economic
development treatises.
Each of these CBRE reports marshals a
wide range of statistical data to promote a particular vision of
the UC's role in California's larger economy and society. While
paying occasional lip service to the UC's contributions to “the
richness of California culture,” the reports overwhelmingly
emphasize the UC's role in fostering high-tech business enterprise,
premised on a decidedly Reagan-esque view of the inherent superiority of top-down economic spending. The core purpose of UC San Diego, according to one CBRE report, is to fuel “the expansion of the skilled labor pool for high-tech businesses and biotech businesses in
San Diego.” UC Irvine is “an economic engine powering prosperity”
owing to its various big business spin-offs and the high-tech
start-up companies founded by its faculty.
The implicit
conclusion is that the university's complete subordination to monopoly capital is the primary reason for its existence, and that anything the UC could do for biotech, aerospace, real estate, and
finance capital, it should do. In this way, the shift to
privatization of the university's finances, including student fees
that are redirected to pay for campus construction projects, goes
hand-in-hand with the efforts of state and business elites to
render the university a wholesale servant of California's
neo-liberal economic machinery. Under this model, State funding is
seen as akin to "local matching funds," sweetening the overall pot
for the real investors, the main purpose being not to make the university
affordable for students, but rather to expand the university's
physical footprint and build fancy new research centers that will create
all manner of techno-gadgetry to inflate the next bubble.
The UC Regents, in other words, have come to conceive of UC campuses almost entirely as incubators for a constellation of mini-Silicon
Valleys: alliances of venture capitalists, real estate speculators,
and high-tech entrepreneurs writ large upon large and overlapping
swaths of California. It stands to reason that the UC's leadership
would be enamored of the region of the United States that is home
to more millionaires per capita than anywhere else in the country,
but which has also seen one of the sharpest declines in real wages among
its working class. Silicon Valley also leads the way with the most
temporary workers per capita, the highest level of economic inequity
between genders, and the greatest concentration of toxic Superfund sites
in the United States. Neo-liberalism in a nutshell.
Even so,
the Regents and UC's executives have long spoken in excited tones about
spreading the model. The UC's newest campus, UC Merced, was sold
entirely on the premise that it would produce a critical mass of
biotechnologists, nanotechnologists, engineers, and other wizards of the
ruling high-tech religion that mythically creates economic booms that
lift all boats. Currently, though, the Central Valley is experiencing
some of the greatest levels of unemployment and highest home foreclosure
rates in the country. UC Santa Cruz, traditionally the arts and
humanities campus of the UC system, was transformed during this era into
what some administrators happily called the "Silicon Beach." Much like
with the global neo-liberal economy it has done so much to advance, the
great majority who don't already possess ample resources are left under
this model to fend for themselves.
As student fees continue to
skyrocket, it is well to keep in mind that Blum is a part owner of a
pair of for-profit education companies. Blum Capital Partners owns a
large stake in Career Education Corporation, the world's second largest
private “diploma mill” corporation, which runs more than one hundred
for-profit schools across the country, while also making tens of
millions of dollars in sub-prime loans to its students. Blum Capital
also owns a 19 percent stake in ITT Educational Services, Inc., another
for-profit school that makes millions off student loan debt. Blum, the
UC Board of Regents' resident siphoner-in-chief of public funds,
purchased more than 220,000 new shares in the firm soon after the UC
Regents approved the University of California's latest fee increase this past
November.
If the UC is prioritizing various toxic
combinations of science and industry at the expense of most students,
then what are those projects? Examples abound. In June 2006, the UC
announced an agreement with the world's second largest oil company,
British Petroleum, whereby it will receive half a billion dollars per
year over 10 years, principally for research into genetically modified
elephant grass and other transgenic plants that are candidates to
produce alcohol for non-fossil car fuel. The project is housed as a
facility on campus called the Energy Biosciences Institute (EBI). In
keeping with the "public-private partnership" funding model that
currently prevails, the State of California put up "matching funds" in
the form of $73 million in construction bonds to help smooth the way for
the EBI's landing on the Berkeley campus.
This is one of UC
Berkeley's largest current applied research programs, and it naturally
comes straight from the disaster capitalist playbook. The
project is justified under the pretense of helping to solve two major
crises - global climate change and its twin bogeyman, oil depletion. In
reality, biofuel monoculture has become perhaps the leading cause of
dispossession of small farmers in the Global South, as well as the
destruction of important ecosystems such as the Amazon Basin rain
forest. “If the governments promoting biofuels do not reverse their
policies,” journalist George Monbiot has warned, “the humanitarian
impact will be greater than that of the Iraq war. Millions will be
displaced, hundreds of millions more could go hungry.”
Berkeley's biofuels institute will only further enable multi-national
corporations to penetrate, reorganize, poison and despoil the lands,
livelihoods, and psyches of Amazon Basin and other cultures. The net
impact of the EBI on the environment – that is, the actually existing
ecosystems of South America, Indonesia, et al. – will be decidedly
negative. On the day of the contract signing, then-UC President Robert
Dynes heralded it as “a great day for Mother Earth.”
Both Dynes
and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Director Stephen Chu, now
duly installed as the Obama administration's secretary of energy,
referred to this project as a “new manhattan project.” It was a fitting
designation, although the original Manhattan Project never quite ended,
and it has only gained ground under a president who sold the world on
“hope” and “change.” The UC continues to co-manage the Los Alamos and
Lawrence Livermore nuclear weapons compounds, which have designed every
nuclear weapon in the US arsenal dating from the annihilation of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, as part of for-profit partnerships with the
world's largest construction and engineering firm, Bechtel Corporation.
The UC-Bechtel contracts are worth as much as $80 billion in revenue
over the course of their 20 year lifespans, a hefty chunk of change when
you're concerned with your bond ratings.
On February 1, the
Obama administration unveiled a budget in which both of the UC's weapons
labs would receive a massive funding “surge.” The proposed funding
increase of 23 percent at Los Alamos would be the facility's largest
since 1944. Much of that funding is for a new factory to produce
plutonium bomb cores, the explosive triggers of modern thermo-nuclear
warheads, for the expressed purpose of outfitting the first new nukes to
be developed since the end of the Cold War. The investments are sold
as the need to “maintain the US nuclear deterrent” in a time of rapidly
escalating threats, allegedly, from Iran, North Korea, and potentially
even nuclear-armed terrorists.
Again, crisis begets opportunity
if you're properly positioned in the most privileged circles, so it's
fitting that one of the two junior partners in the UC-Bechtel management
team should be Richard Blum's now-former company, URS Corporation. At
the time Blum became a Regent, URS already had a $125 million contract
to perform construction and engineering at Los Alamos. It was a natural
extension of his general business philosophy that Blum would have been
eying wholesale ownership of the weapons lab at the time.
That
in mind, perhaps a little Q & A is in order. Which entities now run
the Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore weapons labs? The University
of California, Bechtel, and URS Corporation, along with a couple of
other junior partners. Which UC Regent had a lucrative financial
partnership with the Bechtel family, via a $3.5 billion medical
technology supplies company named Kinetic Concepts, that precedes the
UC-Bechtel weapons lab partnership by eight years? Richard Blum. Who
was URS Corporation's primary financier and vice president for three
decades? Richard Blum. Which UC Regent was among a select group of
policy wonks who participated in a nuclear weapons policy conference in
Oslo, Norway, in 2007, organized largely by a long-time Bechtel
executive, George Shultz, who has been instrumental to securing the
weapons labs' recent funding increases? We won't even bother answering
that last question – this exercise has become entirely rhetorical.
From its inception, the University of California has been an
institution inherently bound up with the course of American empire. It
was the 18th century British philosopher George Berkeley's poem
“America: A Prophesy” that inspired the university's early trustees to
adopt him as their flagship campus' namesake. The poem's final stanza
perfectly captured their vision of the university's larger social role,
that of intellectual hub for ever-expanding American capitalism, which
was itself to herald an end-of-history liberal utopia. Notably, the
same stanza also helped occasion the idea of “Manifest Destiny,” the
widely held belief in the mid-19th century that a Protestant God had
divinely ordained the United States to expand westward to conquer and
subdue the American Indians and the “wilderness” they inhabited.
“Westward the course of empire takes its way; The first four Acts
already past; A fifth shall close the Drama with the day;
Time's noblest offspring is the last."
The poem's last line
provides a fitting epithet for the university, as for so many
institutions instrumental to the era of US economic dominance now
passing in a financial meltdown. These days, the course of global capitalist
empire is one of precipitous flux and decline. The UC's particular
difficulties are a microcosm of wider economic and ecological
difficulties facing virtually all large-scale organizations during this
time of deepening crisis for capitalism generally, and for California
with its status as primary exemplar of American culture and politics
specifically. California's decline is best symbolized in the personas
of the elite finance capitalists who now control the world's factories,
mines, forests, firms, and universities - men whose cannibalistic search
for ever-expanding profits has led them to destroy the social and
ecological underpinnings of the entire economy. Another obvious cause
for decay is American imperial overreach, which has been hastened by a
pair of exorbitant military occupations.
While the aggressive
and opportunistic plans of the UC Regents and their hatchet man,
President Yudof, are the most immediate cause of the university's rapid
descent, it is this larger context that demands greatest attention from
students, faculty, workers, and the people of California. It is highly
improbable that the UC and institutions like it will ever return to an
idyllic era of reliable state financial support. There will never again
be low fees, an ever-expanding roster of PhDs, or increasing and
diverse student enrollments. The UC is an unsustainable institution
that developed as part of a wildly unsustainable period of American
economic expansion. We are now in an iteration of the world capitalist
economy's unraveling, and as an integral part of this economy, the university
is coming undone right along with it.
But resistance is never
futile. In the third part of this ongoing four-part series for the
Anderson Valley Advertiser, we will weigh in on the spirited movement to
oppose what the UC's leaders have in store for the university ("Occupy
Everything!").
PART 3
Who Runs the University of California? Will Parrish and Darwin Bond-Graham Anderson Valley Advertiser This past July, following the
California State Legislature's decision to strip $813 million from the
University of California's Fiscal Year 2009-10 budget, the UC's
26-member Board of Regents voted to declare “a state of financial
emergency.” Such a “state of emergency,” the university's official
by-laws state, should accompany an “imminent and substantial deficiency
in available university financial resources.” The Regents also voted to grant special “emergency
powers” to UC President Mark G. Yudof. Yudof promptly marshaled his new
and vaguely defined authority to lay off hundreds of workers, impose pay
cuts and furloughs on remaining university staff, and propose a 32
percent increase in student fees which the Regents approved in November.
At the same meeting, Regents Chairman Russell Gould
announced the formation of a new UC Commission on the Future. Its de
facto function has been to further the privatization of the university.
Notably, Gould is one of California's most prominent financiers, a man
who served as vice chairman of Wachovia Bank during its growth as one of
the leading subprime mortgage lenders in the United States. He and
Yudof serve as the commission's co-chairmen. In Gould's words, the
commission's task is "nothing short of re-imagining" the University of
California. The State of California's political elites and
business leaders routinely use the language of crisis now whenever
discussing the UC. In the past few decades, state funding of the
university has suffered steady erosion. The UC now receives more funding
than ever from private corporations and the federal government (the
latter being in most instances pretty much the same as the former). Its
various revenue streams range from student fees to several billion
dollars in medical hospital revenue to private grants and donations, to
its own hedge fund-like investments portfolio, to atomic bomb dollars
from the Department of Energy. Thus, despite the state budget cuts, the UC's
overall revenue reached an all-time high of $19.42 billion in the
2009-10 academic year, and the Regents' claim that the UC faces an
“imminent and substantial” funding deficit is inaccurate, to say the
least. According to both the university's own financial documents and
Moody's bond rating agency, the university had access to over $8.3
billion in unrestricted investment funds it was holding in reserve at
the time. The university has undergone a neo-liberal-style
“structural adjustment” at the behest of the UC Regents, and this
transformation has been accelerated during Yudof's tenure as president.
Under the leadership of California's economic elite, the UC has become
the leading prototype for a "disaster capitalist university." Since the mid-1990s, administrative salaries have
absorbed a dramatically increasing share of the university's overall
budget. According to a study by UC Berkeley Professor Emeritus of
Physics Charles Schwartz, the number of UC administrative positions
increased by an almost unbelievable 118 percent from 1996 to 2006, as
compared with a 34 percent increase in faculty positions and 33 percent
increase in students over the same period. As a result, there are
currently 3,600 UC employees who make more than $200,000 a year, many of
them through administrative positions. An even more damning revelation was made public
this past October when UC Santa Cruz Professor Bob Meister published
his scathing analysis of the UC administration's use of student tuition
dollars as collateral for construction bond debts. In addition to his
PhD in economics, Meister serves as Chairman of the Council of
University Faculties – essentially, a faculty union with representatives
on all 10 of the university's campuses. He knows what he's talking
about. According to the Regents' own data and policy documents, the
primary use of student fee revenue since 2004 has been as collateral for
bonds to fund campus construction projects. In this "modified credit
swap," students are forced to take out "subprime" student loans, often
charging six percent interest, so the university can borrow money at a
reduced rate to construct new facilities like – to take one example --
the Blum Center for Developing Economies at UC Berkeley, which UC Regent
Richard C. Blum's own construction company, URS Corporation, was
contracted by the university to build. And those subprime student loans? They're often
owned by big banks like Wachovia and other financial outfits that many
of the UC Regents and their business partners are shareholders or
executives of. So the whole cycle begins and ends with massive public
and student debts, both of which increase as the Regents partake in
further undermining the tax base while looting the public sector, again
ratcheting up the crisis rhetoric. UC Los Angeles instructor Bob Samuels has observed
that “Moody's even slipped into its bond rating for the UC system the
need for the [UC] to restrain labor costs, increase student fees,
diversify revenue streams, feed the money-making sectors, and resist the
further unionization of its employees,” Samuels concludes that, “like
the International Monetary Fund (IMF) or World Bank, the bond raters tie
access to credit to the dismantling of the public sector and the
adoption of neo-liberal ideology.” To understand fully why the University of
California's internal finances are being subjected to “economic shock
therapy,” much like a Third World debtor nation under the thumb of the
IMF, it's necessary to know a bit about the history and function of the
university's power structure. Although it is nominally a public
institution, the UC is not owned and governed by the State of
California. Rather, it is the UC Regents who call all the shots. The
Board of Regents is a corporate entity formed in 1879 for the explicit
purpose of thwarting a populist social movement of small farmers who
demanded that the the university become more responsive to their needs. "During a tumultuous decade in California history,"
historian John Aubrey Douglass has written, "many saw the new
University of California as serving the interests of the upper classes,
focusing on classical 'gentlemanly training' and replicating the Yankee
private institutions of the East. The detractors of the university
demanded that, as an instrument of social and economic development, the
university primarily serve the training and research needs of
agriculture and industry, the stated 'leading objective' of the
institution under statutory law." During the California constitutional convention of
that year, a clique of mostly San Francisco-based financiers and
industrialists managed to defeat the democratic demands of farmers and
small business owners. The crowning achievement of this elitist coup
was the establishment of the UC Board of Regents, a corporate entity
that owns and operates the university. To maintain their power against
all opposition the Regents gave themselves twelve-year tenures that are
explicitly meant to insulate them from any political pressures. The UC
thus became what Douglass calls "a fourth branch of state government." Since then, the leading sectors of the California
economy have self-appointed individuals who represent their economic
interests on the Board. The Regents mold UC policies in broad ways that
benefit capital's leading monopoly sectors. The current going price
for an appointment – probably the most prestigious one at the governor's
disposal, it should be noted – seems to be $50,000, bare minimum. Give
the Gov. this sum, and you too could be a Regent. Until relatively recently this meant that Regents
would promote policies designed to build cutting edge economic sectors
in and around the UC campuses, but they'd make sure to throw some of
the university's gravy to less sexy and profitable sectors of the
economy. So for much of the Board's history they've acted as Karl
Marx's idea of government: an executive board of the bourgeoisie,
working if not for the interest of every industry, at least most of its
monopoly sectors, and taking care not to destroy too many of the smaller
fry. In recent years, the Board of Regents has become dominated by
financiers, however. As with the economy at large, these wizards of
hedge funds, credit markets, venture capital, real estate speculation,
and all the other games played with billion dollar pots of money, have
begun to run the university itself as a $19 billion dollar speculative
bubble with ample opportunities for enormous growth through
“volatility.” These new alpha Regents specialize in leveraged buyouts
and privatization of publicly traded companies, and they have long
practiced this same basic business philosophy on the university. The most prominent among this cadre has been
Richard Blum. As we detailed in our last CounterPunch article, Blum's
five-decade career as a finance capitalist has been distinguished by the
levels of skill and panache he has applied to the time-honored task of
siphoning off public money into one's own corporate coffers, as well as
those of one's financial and political allies. Blum, who is married to
US Senator Dianne Feinstein, is one of the leading power-brokers in the
Democratic Party within both California and the United States. Notably, it was Blum who virtually hand-picked
President Yudof for UC President, having chaired the selection committee
that oversaw Yudof's appointment. At a March 2008 press conference
heralding the Yudof hiring, the San Francisco Chronicle noted that Blum
seemed “visibly ecstatic.” In April, the Chronicle quoted Blum again,
saying of Yudof, "we disagree on almost nothing. If I were giving Mark a
grade, I would give him an A-plus.” Another prime example of the university's
“investors' club” (the title of an upcoming series by investigative
reporter Peter Byrne) is Gerald Parsky, a San Diego venture capitalist
who reportedly commutes daily by jet to Los Angeles. As a Republican
Party powerhouse, Parsky was so influential during his 1996-2008 tenure
on the Regents that the American Federation of State, County, and
Municipal Employees (AFSCME) dubbed a particularly influential faction
of the Board “The Parsky Clique.” In addition to being president of Los
Angeles-based Aurora Capital, recent additions to Parsky's resume
include acting as senior economic advisor to John McCain presidential
campaign and as chairman of the Schwarzenegger administration's
Commission on the 21st Century Economy. Just as Parsky helped steer the
UC toward ever-greater privatization throughout his tenure as a Regent,
his commission issued a series of recommendations on reforming the
state's tax and revenue system in a manner more favorable to big
business, even prompting some observers to label the Parsky Commission's
proposals “California's Shock Doctrine.” Current Regents Chairman Russell Gould is another
financier and California Republican Party heavy. In addition to his
role at Wachovia Bank, he served as California Director of Finance in
the Pete Wilson administration in the 1990s. After that, he served a
stint as assets managers of the $5.5 billion J. Paul Getty Trust Fund, a
charitable organization founded with money from the Getty oil fortune.
The Gettys are neighbors of one Richard Blum and Dianne Feinstein in
San Francisco's uber-bourgeoise Pacific Heights neighborhood, where Mr.
and Mrs. DiFi purchased a $16.5 million palatial estate in 2005. (As an aside, the Getty Trust was run in those
years by one Barry Munitz, former chancellor of the California State
University System. From 1984 to 1991, Munitz was vice president of
Maxxam Corporation under Charles Hurwitz, as the company clear-cut the
lands and livelihoods of California North Coast residents. Munitz has
since been a leading force behind shaping the California Business
Roundtable's public education policy agenda, which strongly favors
neo-liberal privatization.) Another Regent, Paul Wachter, acts as Gov.
Schwarzengger's personal financial adviser. Regent George Marcus is a
lead organizer of The Real Estate Roundtable, the main political voice
of real estate capital in the United States. Regent Judith Hopkinson,
whose tenure recently ended, is a retired executive of Ameriquest
Capital Corporation, a big mortgage company that is partly responsible
for precipitating the current economic crisis: Ameriquest lent billions
in sub-prime loans to families across the US knowing full well they
would have trouble making payments down the line as rates increased.
And the list goes on. One of the primary enterprises Richard Blum has
presided over in recent years is the real estate corporation CB Richard
Ellis. With projects in nearly 100 countries, CBRE is the largest
brokerage firm on the planet. In a notable example of how Blum's own
particular business interests have become increasingly enmeshed with
those of the university, during the course of his tenure as a Regent,
CBRE has contracted with at least eight of the UC's 10 campuses over the
past decade. Most often, the company has consulted with these campuses
to produce glossy reports highlighting the beneficial economic impacts
on the immediate regions that host them, as well as that of California
in general. The UC's San Francisco, Davis, Berkeley, San Diego, and
Riverside campuses have all paid CBRE to produce precisely these kinds
of economic development treatises. Each of these CBRE reports marshals a wide range of
statistical data to promote a particular vision of the UC's role in
California's larger economy and society. While paying occasional lip
service to the UC's contributions to “the richness of California
culture,” the reports overwhelmingly emphasize the UC's role in
fostering high-tech business enterprise, premised on a decidedly
Reagan-esque view of the inherent superiority of top-down economic
spending. The core purpose of UC San Diego, according to one CBRE
report, is to fuel “the expansion of the skilled labor pool for
high-tech businesses and biotech businesses in San Diego.” UC Irvine is
“an economic engine powering prosperity” owing to its various big
business spin-offs and the high-tech start-up companies founded by its
faculty. The implicit conclusion is that the university's
complete subordination to capital is the primary reason for its
existence, and that anything the UC could do for biotech, aerospace,
real estate, and finance capital, it should do. In this way, the shift
to privatization of the university's finances, including student fees
that are redirected to pay for campus construction projects, goes
hand-in-hand with the efforts of state and business elites to render the
university a wholesale servant of California's neo-liberal economic
machinery. Under this model, State funding is seen as akin to "local
matching funds," sweetening the overall pot for the real investors, the
main purpose being not to make the university affordable for students,
but rather to expand the university's physical footprint and build fancy
new research centers that will create all manner of techno-gadgetry to
inflate the next bubble. The UC Regents, in other words, have come to
conceive of UC campuses almost entirely as incubators for a
constellation of mini-Silicon Valleys: alliances of venture capitalists,
real estate speculators, and high-tech entrepreneurs writ large upon
large and overlapping swaths of California. It stands to reason that
the UC's leadership would be enamored of the region of the United States
that is home to more millionaires per capita than anywhere else in the
country, but which has also seen one of the sharpest declines in real
wages among its working class. Silicon Valley also leads the way with
the most temporary workers per capita, the highest level of economic
inequity between genders, and the greatest concentration of toxic
Superfund sites in the United States. Neo-liberalism in a nutshell. Even so, the Regents and UC's executives have long
spoken in excited tones about spreading the model. The UC's newest
campus, UC Merced, was sold entirely on the premise that it would
produce a critical mass of biotechnologists, nanotechnologists,
engineers, and other wizards of the ruling high-tech religion that
mythically creates economic booms that lift all boats. Currently,
though, the Central Valley is experiencing some of the greatest levels
of unemployment and highest home foreclosure rates in the country. UC
Santa Cruz, traditionally the arts and humanities campus of the UC
system, was transformed during this era into what some administrators
happily called "Silicon Beach." Much like with the global neo-liberal
economy it has done so much to advance, the great majority who don't
already possess ample resources are left under this model to fend for
themselves. Laytonville native Natalie Rose-Engber is one local
resident whose has borne the impact of the ongoing structural
adjustment of the university, as of California's economy in general.
She was also one of the students involved in opposing the Regents in
their treatment of the university like their own private business
enterprise during her time as a student. Rose-Engber grew up at the Black Oak Ranch, better
known as “The Hog Farm”, associated with the name Wavy Gravy and just
north of Laytonville. In 2007 and 2008, she was one among perhaps a few
hundred UC students who often made the trek to the remote corners of
the UC system where the Regents held their "public" meetings. Students
would speak during the notoriously brief public comment periods, hold
rallies, and occasionally disrupt the proceedings when all else failed
-- and all else invariably did. “The Regents would just be sitting there typing on
their computers and not listening to any of the students,” Rose-Engber
recalls. “But, of course, they're almost all multi-millionaires and
directors of multi-national corporations. What do they know about being
a student who's saddled with mountains of debt they'll spend the rest
of their life paying off?” Rose-Engber's debt is roughly $40,000. That same
sum of money, a little more than one generation prior, would have been
enough to buy a first home. Though she says her time at UCSB was an
invaluable part in shaping who she's become, Rose-Engber wonders what
her future has in store, having assumed such a large debt burden during a
period of protracted economic decline and widespread joblessness.
There are tens of thousands of young Californians who are annually being
saddled with similarly crushing debts at UC and the CSU campuses, a
condition that forecloses on their future choices, making virtual
indentured servants of many of them. As with every other region of California, Mendocino
County is now experiencing a surplus of university grads whose futures
are constrained by heavy debt. Extrapolating from the UC's enrollment
and retention data, approximately 275 students hailing from this area
have been enrolled at one or another of the UC's 10 campuses at any
given point in the last decade. During the past four years alone, that
group collectively paid or borrowed more than $7 million in university
fee money. Had they attended the university eight years before, they
would have paid less than $3 million. As student fees continue to skyrocket, it is well
to keep in mind that Blum is a part owner of a pair of for-profit
education companies. Blum Capital Partners owns a large stake in Career
Education Corporation, the world's second largest private “diploma mill”
corporation, which runs more than one hundred for-profit schools across
the country, while also making tens of millions of dollars in sub-prime
loans to its students. Blum Capital also owns a 19 per cent stake in
ITT Educational Services, Inc., another for-profit school that makes
millions off student loan debt. Blum, the UC Board of Regents' resident
siphoner-in-chief of public funds, purchased more than 220,000 new
shares in the firm soon after the UC Regents approved the University of
California's latest fee increase this past November. If the UC is prioritizing various toxic
combinations of science and industry at the expense of most students,
then what are those projects? Examples abound. In June 2006, the UC
announced an agreement with the world's second largest oil company,
British Petroleum, whereby it will receive half a billion dollars per
year over 10 years, principally for research into genetically modified
elephant grass and other transgenic plants that are candidates to
produce alcohol for non-fossil car fuel. The project is housed as a
facility on campus called the Energy Biosciences Institute (EBI). In
keeping with the "public-private partnership" funding model that
currently prevails, the State of California put up "matching funds" in
the form of $73 million in construction bonds to help smooth the way for
the EBI's landing on the Berkeley campus. This is one of UC Berkeley's largest current
applied research programs, and it naturally comes straight from the
“crisis” playbook. The project is justified under the pretense of
helping to solve two major crises - global climate change and its twin
bogeyman, oil depletion. In reality, biofuel monoculture has become
perhaps the leading cause of dispossession of small farmers in the
Global South, as well as the destruction of important ecosystems such as
the Amazon Basin rain forest. Berkeley's biofuels institute will only further
enable multi-national corporations to penetrate, reorganize, poison and
despoil the lands, livelihoods, and psyches of Amazon Basin and other
cultures. The net impact of the EBI on the environment – that is, the
actually existing ecosystems of South America, Indonesia, et al. – will
be decidedly negative. On the day of the contract signing, then-UC
President Robert Dynes heralded it as “a great day for Mother Earth.” Both Dynes and Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory Director Stephen Chu, now duly installed as the Obama
administration's secretary of energy, referred to this project as a “new
manhattan project.” It was a fitting designation, although the original
Manhattan Project never quite ended, and it has only gained ground
under a president who sold the world on “hope” and “change.” The UC
continues to co-manage the Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore nuclear
weapons compounds, which have designed every nuclear weapon in the US
arsenal dating from the annihilation of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, as part
of for-profit partnerships with the world's largest construction and
engineering firm, Bechtel Corporation. The UC-Bechtel contracts are
worth as much as $80 billion in revenue over the course of their 20 year
lifespans, a hefty chunk of change when you're concerned with your bond
ratings. On February 1, the Obama administration unveiled a
budget in which both of the UC's weapons labs would receive a massive
funding “surge.” The proposed funding increase of 23 percent at Los
Alamos would be the facility's largest since 1944. Much of that funding
is for a new factory to produce plutonium bomb cores, the explosive
triggers of modern thermo-nuclear warheads, for the expressed purpose of
outfitting the first new nukes to be developed since the end of the
Cold War. The investments are sold as the need to “maintain the US
nuclear deterrent” in a time of rapidly escalating threats, allegedly,
from Iran, North Korea, and potentially even nuclear-armed terrorists. Again, crisis begets opportunity if you're properly
positioned in the most privileged circles, so it's fitting that one of
the two junior partners in the UC-Bechtel management team should be
Richard Blum's now-former company, URS Corporation. At the time Blum
became a Regent, URS already had a $125 million contract to perform
construction and engineering at Los Alamos. It was a natural extension
of his general business philosophy that Blum would have been eying
wholesale ownership of the weapons lab at the time. That in mind,
perhaps a little Q & A is in order. Which entities now run the Los
Alamos and Lawrence Livermore weapons labs? The University of
California, Bechtel, and URS Corporation, along with a couple of other
junior partners. Which UC Regent had a lucrative financial partnership
with the Bechtel family, via a $3.5 billion medical technology supplies
company named Kinetic Concepts, that precedes the UC-Bechtel weapons lab
partnership by eight years? Richard Blum. Who was URS Corporation's
primary financier and vice president for three decades? Richard Blum.
Which UC Regent was among a select group of policy wonks who
participated in a nuclear weapons policy conference in Oslo, Norway, in
2007, organized largely by a long-time Bechtel executive, George Shultz,
who has been instrumental to securing the weapons labs' recent funding
increases? We won't even bother answering that last question – this
exercise has become entirely rhetorical. From its inception, the University of California
has been an institution inherently bound up with the course of American
empire. It was the 18th century British philosopher George Berkeley's
poem “America: A Prophesy” that inspired the university's early trustees
to adopt him as their flagship campus' namesake. The poem's final
stanza perfectly captured their vision of the university's larger social
role, that of intellectual hub for ever-expanding American capitalism,
which was itself to herald an end of history liberal utopia. Notably,
the same stanza also helped occasion the idea of “Manifest Destiny,” the
widely held belief in the mid-19th century that a Protestant God had
divinely ordained the United States to expand westward to conquer and
subdue the American Indians and the “wilderness” they inhabited.
“Westward the course of empire takes its way;
The first four Acts already past;
A fifth shall close the Drama with the day;
Time's noblest offspring is the last."
The poem's last line provides a fitting epithet for
the university, as for so many institutions instrumental to the era of
US economic dominance now passing in a financial meltdown. While the
aggressive and opportunistic plans of the UC Regents and their hatchet
man, President Yudof, are the most immediate cause of the university's
rapid descent, it is this larger context that demands greatest attention
from students, faculty, workers, and the people of California. It is
highly improbable that the UC and institutions like it will ever return
to an idyllic era of reliable state financial support. There will never
again be low fees, an ever-expanding roster of PhDs, or increasing and
diverse student enrollments. The UC is an unsustainable institution
that developed as part of a wildly unsustainable period of American
economic expansion. We are now amidst the world capitalist economy's
unraveling, and as an integral part of this economy, the university is
coming undone right along with it.
Will Parrish is a writer and
organizer living in Laytonville, CA. Darwin Bond-Graham is a
sociologist who splits his time between New Orleans, Albuquerque, and
Navarro, CA. Will Parrish is at
wparrish(a)riseup.net and Darwin
Bond-Graham at darwin(a)riseup.net. |