Wall Street Journal Details Lavish Gordon Gee Spending
PAGE
ONE
Golden Touch
Vanderbilt Reins In
Lavish
Spending
By Star Chancellor
As Schools Tighten Oversight,
A $6
Million Renovation
Draws Trustees' Scrutiny
Marijuana at the
Mansion
By JOANN S. LUBLIN and DANIEL GOLDEN
September 26,
2006; Page A1
NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- At Vanderbilt University, the board is trying
to rein in star chancellor E. Gordon Gee, without running him off.
Since
arriving here in 2000, the 62-year-old Mr. Gee has dramatically boosted the
133-year-old school's academic standing and overseen fund raising of more than
$1 billion. Mr. Gee's $1.4 million annual compensation is among the highest for
U.S. university leaders.
But supervision of Mr. Gee by the university's 44-member Board of
Trust has "probably been a little loosey-goosey," says trustee Edward Malloy, a
former president of the University of Notre Dame. Vanderbilt paid more than $6
million, never approved by the full board, to renovate and enlarge Braeburn, the
Greek-revival university-owned mansion where Mr. Gee and his wife, Constance,
live. The university pays for the Gees' frequent parties and personal chef
there. The annual tab exceeds $700,000. Some trustees' concern was aroused when
they learned that Mrs. Gee was using marijuana at the mansion. The chancellor
told some trustees she was using it for an inner-ear ailment.
Now change
is afoot. Trustees recently created a subcommittee to monitor Mr. Gee's
spending. For the first time, the full board will get reports about his
expenditures and pay package. A second new board committee is scrutinizing
potential conflicts of interest and likely will look at the university's
longtime contract with a parking company in which a trustee holds a big
stake.
"We should not be issuing blank checks to university leaders,"
says Judson Randolph, a retired Vanderbilt trustee who still attends board
meetings.
Yet no one wants Mr. Gee to leave. Despite the board's actions,
chairman Martha Ingram says: "I have never had qualms about whether Gordon
should stay on as chancellor."
The delicate dance by Vanderbilt trustees
reflects a new era of campus governance and the changing role of college heads.
Historically, these campus leaders earned modest salaries and enjoyed long
tenures. Now, like Mr. Gee, they make more money and move more often. Their
higher compensation invites scrutiny from trustees, faculty and
students.
Vanderbilt's $2.2 billion annual budget is bigger than the
revenues of all but the largest 800 U.S. public companies. But management
oversight on campus often hasn't kept pace with changes in the business world.
At Vanderbilt, the full Board of Trust didn't approve the university's
annual budget, most big-ticket spending projects or debt financing between 2000
and 2005.
The scrutiny at Vanderbilt comes as the national outcry over
executive pay has reached into academia. Recent disclosures about the pay and
perquisites of campus leaders have led to resignations and an
indictment.
American University last fall forced out President Benjamin
Ladner after auditors questioned more than $500,000 in expenditures by him and
his wife. The Washington, D.C., university paid for the couple's birthday
parties and European vacations in first-class hotels, according to the audit.
Investigators found the Ladners once stopped in Rome on a business trip to Dubai
so she could have her hair cut by a favorite stylist. Mr. Ladner says the
university didn't pay for any European vacations and the Rome stop "had nothing
to do with" his wife getting a haircut.
In California, a state audit in
May uncovered $334 million in largely unreported pay and perks for University of
California staffers during the year ended June 30, 2005. The spending included a
$30,000 dog run built for Denice Denton, chancellor of the university's Santa
Cruz campus. She committed suicide in June following extensive media coverage
and criticism by lawmakers.
In August, a Houston grand jury indicted
former Texas Southern University President Priscilla Slade on two charges of
criminally misusing university money for her private benefit. The indictment
alleges Ms. Slade improperly spent $1.9 million during her nearly seven-year
tenure, including more than $260,000 to furnish and landscape her home. Ms.
Slade, whom university regents fired in April, has denied wrongdoing and sued
them for allegedly breaking her contract. "She believed every expenditure she
participated in was for the benefit of TSU and was or would be approved by the
board," says Mike DeGeurin, Ms. Slade's lawyer.
In the wake of such
disclosures, Congress is considering more scrutiny of management compensation at
nonprofits. Sen. Charles Grassley, a Republican from Iowa, intends to introduce
a bill next year to strengthen a federal prohibition on "excessive" compensation
for leaders of universities and other charitable groups. Good governance "can
make the difference between universities where presidents live high on the hog
and where students come first," says Mr. Grassley, chairman of the Senate
Finance Committee.
Recurring Pattern
Mr. Gee's 25-year
career as a university leader follows a recurring pattern: disrupt the status
quo, lift the university's image, raise a lot of money, and leave for another
job. He has run five universities -- more than any other American, he says. At
each stop, Mr. Gee has been well-paid, and well-housed.
A Mormon teetotaler
trained as a lawyer and educator, Mr. Gee is known for wearing bowties and
horn-rimmed glasses. He first became a university president at West Virginia
University in 1981, when he was 37.
In 1985, Mr. Gee left to assume the
presidency of the University of Colorado, where he charmed students and
lawmakers, who boosted state support by 37% during his tenure. The university
also built him a $780,969 house. After he resigned in 1990 to take the helm at
Ohio State University, Colorado regents found Mr. Gee had awarded
deferred-compensation bonuses to top aides without board authorization. Mr. Gee
says he reviewed the bonuses with the board's chairman, who has since
died.
At Ohio State, Mr. Gee confronted state budget cuts. He restricted
enrollment, merged departments, cut jobs through attrition, and initiated a $1
billion fund-raising campaign. During his seven-year tenure, the university
twice paid to renovate its president's home and added a small conservatory to
it. The total cost was between $500,000 and $750,000, according to Mr. Gee. When
he announced plans to leave for the Ivy League's Brown University, Ohio State
students donned bowties and begged him to stay.
Brown spent $3 million
renovating the president's home for Mr. Gee, says Donald Reaves, Brown's former
finance chief. The total included a $400,000 conservatory that was built in
England, then broken down, shipped, reassembled and attached to the president's
home on Brown's Providence, R.I., campus.
Mr. Gee believes a home with
generous entertaining space is an essential fund-raising tool for a university
leader. At Brown, he says, "I stayed out of the budget side" of the
renovation.
In late 1999, less than two years after arriving at Brown, Mr.
Gee took a call from John Hall, a retired chief executive of Ashland Inc. and longtime
Vanderbilt trustee. The two men had been friends since the early 1980s, when Mr.
Gee sought a corporate contribution from Mr. Hall for West Virginia's
engineering school. Now, Mr. Hall wanted Mr. Gee to consider moving to
Vanderbilt.
Mr. Gee said he initially resisted, but eventually succumbed
after an intense courtship by Vanderbilt trustees. He said he never felt like he
fully belonged at Brown, where he had some run-ins with the faculty. The day
Vanderbilt announced his selection in February 2000, the Gees toured Braeburn,
situated on a hilltop in a tony Nashville neighborhood. "They said, 'It would be
nice to fix it up as nice as the house at Brown,' " Mr. Hall recalls. He says
the university promised to renovate the home and install a conservatory, guest
quarters and commercial kitchen. "He got what he wanted," Mr. Hall says.
The
university's offer letter, reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, didn't mention
the remodeling project. It promised Mr. Gee a $504,000 annual salary, annual
bonus and two supplemental-retirement plans. Only a few of the nine members of
the board's search committee knew the details of the offer letter at the time,
according to people familiar with the matter.
After arriving at Vanderbilt,
Mr. Gee set out to recruit top-flight faculty, break down barriers between
academic departments and boost enrollment among racial and ethnic minorities. He
created a $100 million fund to support interdisciplinary research. And he
attacked a sacred cow of higher education by folding the athletic department
into other departments to better integrate athletics with the rest of the
university.
Meanwhile, the university began renovating Braeburn, which was
built in 1915. The project, which included new plumbing, heating and electrical
systems, expanded the mansion by 3,700 square feet, to a total of 19,700.
Construction permits estimated the cost at $2.1 million. But the final tab
exceeded $6 million, according to a person close to the situation.
Mr. Hall
says he knew the building was in poor repair but the extent of the work was a
"surprise." Mr. Gee says, "We indicated some of the things that we thought would
be important, including creating a space for all the entertaining we were going
to do." However, he says he didn't keep tabs on the project's cost because he
didn't want to be perceived as trying to shape the project for his personal
gain. "I was told it was done right, it was done well and it was done on
budget," he recollects. In hindsight, he agrees he should have learned the
amount and kept the full board apprised.
Still, Mr. Gee says, "we paid for
that house over and over and over again." He notes that the university has
raised more than $1.2 billion since he arrived and says, "A lot of that was
raised in that house." Some of the money went to build the endowment, which has
grown to about $3 billion from $2 billion in 2000.
Mr. Gee estimates that
Braeburn is home to several hundred events a year. The events range from
five-guest dinners served by a waiter to large fund raisers for Nashville-area
nonprofits where Vanderbilt pays the bill. Improving community ties "is a very
good use of university resources," Mr. Gee says. "We don't live here to have
parties for ourselves."
In some cases, the connections to Vanderbilt are more
tenuous. Three years ago, Mr. Gee and his wife hosted a party to celebrate a
memoir written by their friend Marshall Chapman, a rock singer, songwriter and
Vanderbilt alumna. Ms. Chapman says 300-plus guests dined at tables covered with
tie-dyed cloths while she sold about 65 copies of her book. The party cost
Vanderbilt more than $15,000, according to the person familiar with the
situation.
Michael J. Schoenfeld, a university spokesman, declines to discuss
the party's cost. He says the party strengthened Vanderbilt's ties to the music
industry and notes that Ms. Chapman had endowed a women's basketball
scholarship.
The renovations, the entertaining and Mr. Gee's pay package
stirred little dissent on campus for five years. Mr. Gee was viewed as a campus
hero and the university became significantly more selective. Vanderbilt admitted
34% of its applicants this year, compared with 55% in 2000.
In the fall of
2005, university employees discovered that Constance Gee, a tenured associate
professor of public policy and education, kept marijuana at Braeburn and was
using it there, according to people familiar with the matter. A few weeks later,
several trustees and a senior university official confronted Mr. Gee in his
office, telling the chancellor he shared responsibility for allowing marijuana
on university property, the person familiar with the situation
recalls.
Trembling, the chancellor replied, "I've been worried to death over
this," according to this person. Mr. Gee said his wife smoked marijuana to
relieve an inner-ear ailment, this person says. The Gees decline to comment on
the incident.
Mrs. Ingram, Vanderbilt's board chairman, formally reprimanded
Mrs. Gee for possessing and using the illegal drug. The matter was "handled
appropriately and satisfactorily," says Mrs. Ingram, who is chairman of Ingram
Industries Inc., a conglomerate with interests in book distribution and
shipping.
Causing a Stir
Mrs. Gee has
caused stirs on campus with her liberal politics. She lowered the American flag
outside Braeburn to half-staff after President Bush won re-election in 2004. Mr.
Gee says he quickly ordered the flag
raised back up. She and others signed a
letter of protest to the chancellor when Condoleezza Rice, then Mr. Bush's
national security adviser, was invited to address graduating students in 2004.
Mr. Schoenfeld says Mrs. Gee posted the letter on the couple's refrigerator door
at Braeburn.
The marijuana incident troubled some trustees, who were bothered
that Mr. Gee never told the full board about it, according to people familiar
with the matter. To these trustees, the incident demonstrated that Mr. Gee
needed to be more accountable to the board.
Aware of the trustees' concerns,
Vanderbilt General Counsel David Williams reviewed Mr. Gee's spending, looking
for personal expenses. Mr. Williams questioned the absence of clear records
documenting time the chef spent preparing meals for the Gees rather than for
university events. Mr. Gee later agreed to cover about one-third of the chef's
roughly $50,000 salary -- more than before. "When they [university officials]
tell me what needs to be done, I always write the check," Mr. Gee says. "But
sometimes, I get heartburn" from the requests.
Restive trustees then asked
Mrs. Ingram for a broader look at Vanderbilt's governance system, pointing to
the federal Sarbanes-Oxley law on governance of publicly traded companies and
the scandal at American University, according to Mrs. Ingram. She formed a
committee to determine if the university was following "best practices," she
says. The committee, led by retired investment banker Joe Roby, found the full
board never approved the budget and other financial items between 2000 and
2005.
The committee report, which was reviewed by The Wall Street Journal,
recommended that trustees take a more active role in university affairs,
including strategic planning, capital spending and management compensation. It
also suggested a special panel to monitor Mr. Gee's budget and outlays for
entertainment, travel, food, staff and upkeep of Braeburn. The panel would
report annually to the full board.
The recommendations sparked a spirited
board debate. Mrs. Ingram says she initially opposed an April board vote to
adopt the report and create the expense panel. Later she retreated, and the
board unanimously endorsed the tougher oversight measures.
"We have a
chancellor who is performing well," says a trustee. The new checks, this trustee
says, are aimed at making Mr. Gee "more effective."
Other trustees worry that
the board could become a micromanager. "You don't want to cut off your nose to
spite your face," says Mr. Hall, who won a spot on the new expense panel after
lobbying on his behalf by Ms. Ingram and Mr. Gee.
The trustees' effort to
improve oversight has also renewed questions about one of their own -- Monroe J.
Carell Jr., a key Gee supporter on the executive committee and head of the
university's $1.75 billion capital campaign. He and his family have given
Vanderbilt more than $40 million.
Mr. Carell is founder and executive
chairman of Central Parking Corp., the world's largest operator of parking
facilities. He and his family own about 48% of the shares, according to Jeffrey
Heavrin, chief financial officer. Central Parking manages Vanderbilt's parking
lots and related services under a 1974 contract. It currently earns between
$100,000 and $120,000 annually in management fees there, according to Mark
Manner, a lawyer for Mr. Carell.
Vanderbilt never put those parking services
out to competitive bid, says Mr. Schoenfeld, the university spokesman. That
created a fuss in 2002, when Steve Franks, a former associate athletic director,
questioned Central Parking's rates for handling parking at football
games.
After the athletic department switched to a different provider, Mr.
Carell complained to athletic director Todd Turner, Mr. Franks says. "We were
instructed to back our way out of the contract we had signed and return to
Central Parking," he says.
Mr. Manner confirms Mr. Carell called Mr. Turner
to discuss the contract. But the trustee "applied no pressure to him," Mr.
Manner says. Mr. Schoenfeld says the athletic department retained Central
Parking's contract, which had more than a year to run, because it had not
followed proper termination procedures.
A consultant later hired by the
university to review the Central Parking relationship concluded the
parking-management fees were within market rates but advised Vanderbilt to seek
proposals from competitors. Mr. Carell didn't participate in the board
discussions and declines to comment, Mr. Schoenfeld says.
Vanderbilt
requested bids for parking services in July. Central Parking was a bidder.
Vanderbilt will announce the winner soon.
Early this year, board members
began talks with Mr. Gee about a new employment agreement. The chancellor says
he sought to update his offer letter "in light of the changing nature of
corporate governance."
One issue on the table was Mr. Gee's seats on five
corporate boards. Fewer than 2% of U.S. corporate directors hold more than four
seats, according to proxy-advisory firm Institutional Shareholder Services. As
trustees considered inserting a limit into the new agreement, Mr. Gee recalls,
"I said I would move back to three boards" over the next year.
The agreement,
signed in August, restricts Mr. Gee to three public-company directorships. It
also says the chancellor must get prior approval for budgets in five categories
including house maintenance and entertainment, according to a person familiar
with the matter.
Mr. Gee isn't entirely happy with the new limits. He says he
missed few of his 77 board and committee meetings last year at Dollar
General
Corp., Massey Energy Co., Gaylord Entertainment Co., Limited Brands Inc. and
Hasbro Inc. When he travels to these meetings, he says he also conducts
Vanderbilt business, such as conferring with alumni, parents, prospective
students and faculty. "Sitting on a corporate board is a hobby for me," he
remarks, pointing out that he doesn't smoke, drink or play golf. Mr. Gee made
nearly $400,000 in cash and stock awards from his directorships last
year.
Mr. Gee says the governance changes at Vanderbilt will continue.
"You're covering us in the middle of a movie," he says. The chancellor favors
more accountability -- within limits. "We have to make certain that we get it
right first," he explains, "so you don't get the pendulum swinging too far...in
terms of micromanaging."






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