Notifications
Clear all

Valpo News

1,135 Posts
35 Users
246 Reactions
218.4 K Views
(@david81)
Posts: 193
Freshman
 

Posted by: @regionrat03

Posted by: @valpopal

Posted by: @regionrat03

@valpopal The amount raised was higher than that. If the school met their goal, then all $470,000 of “bonus funds” would be donated. I’m assuming those funds were some kind of corporate sponsorship because there were numerous companies on the promotional materials. There were also other challenges, donation matches, etc. that included more than just the $470,000. For example, athletics raised at least $100,000 that was separate from the bonus funds.

Yep. I correct my typo, which was a bit unclear because it was missing the word "bonus" and should have read: "As we have seen in other years, the university has announced it reached its 'goal,' and the total bonus amount raised was $470,000."  

 

Ahh gotcha thanks for clarifying! I just got an email from Valpo and they said over $1.2 million. Not too bad imo.

 

Any successful fundraising in the midst of a very anxious economic situation is very good news.

 

 
Posted : 04/19/2025 1:07 AM
👍
1
 SP37
(@sp37)
Posts: 66
Freshman
 

Surprised no one posted this yet...this is not the news we needed...

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-05-01/college-that-sold-georgia-o-keeffe-art-cut-to-junk-by-moody-s?embedded-checkout=true

 
Posted : 05/02/2025 9:16 PM
(@kreitzerstl)
Posts: 59
Freshman
 

Disgraceful to let this institution fall like this. 

There are two ways to grow revenue. We need a competent enrollment leader. We need a competent development leader. And we need a competent president to hire both. I sincerely hope this president’s cabinet are polishing their resumes, because the new prez needs to clean house. 

 
Posted : 05/02/2025 9:29 PM
👍
1
 Rez
(@rezynezy)
Posts: 1214
Varsity
 

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/05/13/valparaiso-university-art-sale/

This one is a freebie it seems. 

As for a TLDR. The School is now looking to use the City (particularly the VEDC) as a conduit for future bonds. The way the article reads, this is likely an attempt to circumnavigate the hit to the junk rating from Moody's or an attempt to access bonds that were otherwise unavailable. Particularly that non-profits are required to go through government entities to secure general obligation bonds. GOBs are seemingly nice as any form of revenue can be used to pay them it seems. I don't know enough about them to give a reasonable answer however The reasoning for using the city seems to be that the survival of the school is ultimately a net positive for the city as it brings people into the city. The school expects to see 55 million of the 117 million. 15 will be used for infrastructure upgrades and the rest will be used to refinance/consolidate debt. 

 

For all you "art buffs". The school was questioned as to why the sold of the artwork and did not seek a conduit for a bond from the city sooner. The claim from the Lawyer seems to be along the lines of that the school had a great asset on their hands, however that asset did nothing from an operational standpoint for the campus to run and a difficult decision was made

This post was modified 17 hours ago by Rez
This post was modified 15 hours ago by Rez
This post was modified 14 hours ago by Rez
 
Posted : 05/13/2025 10:05 PM
(@regionrat03)
Posts: 47
Freshman
 

Posted by: @rezynezy

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/05/13/valparaiso-university-art-sale/

Another trash headline title…. Saying $117 is extremely misleading when it might not even get up to $55. Yeah it’s not great having to refi and everything else…. but if this goes through then almost 30M of renovations will be completed soon

 

 
Posted : 05/14/2025 12:39 AM
👍
1
(@realist77)
Posts: 65
Freshman
 

Yes, newspapers need dramatic headlines and the art museum visual to grab eyes. Sadly,... the art museum gives national news outlets a paint-selling "villain" hook to make our failing finances more famous, prompting, "Oh yeah, the place that sold the paintings".

The board's original logic for selling them was indeed solid. So it's interesting that Moody's as a financial entity looks at the intangibles and made the paintings debacle a key issue in ratings.  They perceive that it is a bright red flag of desperation to the public.

 

 
Posted : 05/14/2025 10:02 AM
(@valpopal)
Posts: 427
Junior Varsity
 

This article again raises concerns about truthfulness in past statements from the university administration. 

The question by the Council reveals their skepticism shared by the faculty about the need to sell the artworks: “'If this was an option, can I ask why it wasn’t used instead of selling the artwork?' asked Councilwoman Emilie Hunt, D-At-large. The artwork was sold, Nie said, because university officials 'felt like we had a very great asset but it wasn’t doing the most from an operational capability for the campus to run. It was just a decision the university made.'" The answer that it was just a decision the university made seems to confirm the sale was not the necessity without any other viable option that Padilla repeatedly projected.

According to a university official, the article also reports: "The dorms, Brandt and Wehrenberg halls, are slated to have a gallery displaying lesser-known works of art from the Sloan Trust, which directly or indirectly provided the three paintings being sold off."

So, we were to believe VU supposedly was very concerned about the security of artworks within the walls of the museum, using that as an excuse for some of its controversial actions, but the university has no qualm about placing some Sloan Trust paintings on walls away from the museum's safety or direct oversight and in the highly vulnerable atmosphere of a student dorm! 

 
Posted : 05/14/2025 10:47 AM
 Rez
(@rezynezy)
Posts: 1214
Varsity
 

Posted by: @valpopal

This article again raises concerns about truthfulness in past statements from the university administration. 

The question by the Council reveals their skepticism shared by the faculty about the need to sell the artworks: “'If this was an option, can I ask why it wasn’t used instead of selling the artwork?' asked Councilwoman Emilie Hunt, D-At-large. The artwork was sold, Nie said, because university officials 'felt like we had a very great asset but it wasn’t doing the most from an operational capability for the campus to run. It was just a decision the university made.'" The answer that it was just a decision the university made seems to confirm the sale was not the necessity without any other viable option that Padilla repeatedly projected.

According to a university official, the article also reports: "The dorms, Brandt and Wehrenberg halls, are slated to have a gallery displaying lesser-known works of art from the Sloan Trust, which directly or indirectly provided the three paintings being sold off."

So, we were to believe VU supposedly was very concerned about the security of artworks within the walls of the museum, using that as an excuse for some of its controversial actions, but the university has no qualm about placing some Sloan Trust paintings on walls away from the museum's safety or direct oversight and in the highly vulnerable atmosphere of a student dorm! 

 

A dormitory is hardly a "vulnerable environment". The art museum was open to the public with a building that was open during business hours. A dorm room requires 1 or multiple forms of key card access in order to gain entrance into the building. Dormitories around the country display works of art as decor. Heck, most hotels do this as well. Surely if there was such a "safety concern" you wouldn't see this happen.

 

The school did have other options and Padilla outlined this during his tenure. The problem with those other options was that most of not all of them required the accumulation of more debt. 

This post was modified 4 hours ago 2 times by Rez
 
Posted : 05/14/2025 11:03 AM
 MJ08
(@mj08)
Posts: 128
Freshman
 

“People will say the No. 1 reason people don’t come to Valparaiso University is because of the housing,” Volpatti said. “All the other stuff is really good for us.”

 
I’m worried that the administration doesn’t understand the problems facing Valpo. And now they’re going to saddle Valpo with an additional $15 million in debt that the next President will have to deal with. 

Also, why did we sell the paintings and incur the negative PR if we could have issued more bonds? Was was the value of the goodwill that we lost in that transaction? 

This post was modified 4 hours ago 2 times by MJ08
 
Posted : 05/14/2025 11:18 AM
 vu72
(@vu72)
Posts: 372
Junior Varsity
 

Posted by: @valpopal

So, we were to believe VU supposedly was very concerned about the security of artworks within the walls of the museum, using that as an excuse for some of its controversial actions, but the university has no qualm about placing some Sloan Trust paintings on walls away from the museum's safety or direct oversight and in the highly vulnerable atmosphere of a student dorm! 

 

Come on pal. The concern was over 3 painting which apparently brought in $12 million dollars.  There are plenty of pieces in the Art Gallery that are very attractive but maybe a value of $1000 or 2?  Just a guess, but to compare to three sold to others to be used in dorm displays is pretty silly don't you think?

 

 
Posted : 05/14/2025 12:18 PM
Page 76 / 76

Share: