66°F
weather icon Cloudy

Sports subsidies

The wretched Nevada economy and state budget cuts have forced sacrifice across the UNLV campus. This long-overdue adjustment to the university's mission extends to its athletic department, which is projecting a deficit of nearly $2 million for the fiscal year that ends in just seven weeks.

Newly hired Athletic Director Jim Livengood could empty his department's reserve fund to balance the books through June, or he might resort to some combination of furloughs, salary freezes and layoffs to keep UNLV's intercollegiate teams whole.

"Right now, I'm looking at everything," he said. "I'd like to get away from (layoffs). I just don't know that we can."

What Mr. Livengood does know, however, is that he must plan on moving the Rebels forward without the future support of Nevada taxpayers.

Already, the Legislature has reduced state subsidies for UNLV athletics by $2 million through June 2011. The university is counting on nearly $6 million in taxpayer subsidies for next fiscal year, with more than half of it supporting student-athlete scholarships. But if the past three years have taught higher education leaders anything, it's that there are no guarantees. Lawmakers might yet make that number smaller.

UNLV hired Mr. Livengood in December from the University of Arizona, which receives no state subsidies for sports. He kept that department in the black primarily through fundraising and improving its football program.

It's a model Mr. Livengood and UNLV President Neal Smatresk have committed to realizing at UNLV, starting with the hiring of new football coach Bobby Hauck. The Rebel program ran more than $3 million in the red this year.

Losses like that are not sustainable. The sooner taxpayers and UNLV are freed from this burden, the better.

MOST READ
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
COMMENTARY: Devolve government to restore the Republic

America’s experiment in self-government began 250 years ago with the deliberate and inspired design of men who understood the promise and peril of human nature.

COMMENTARY: Wine brings us together; tariffs put that at risk

Recently, American and European trade negotiators announced a sweeping list of tariff exemptions as part of a trade agreement. Unfortunately, wine and other alcoholic products were not listed as exempt.

LETTER: Film tax subsidies and other Nevada handouts

Review-Journal columnist Victor Joecks calls Nevada’s film tax credits “for suckers.” Maybe so, but if that’s true, there are a lot of other suckers sitting at the same table.

LETTER: NYC mayoral election signals trouble

History teaches us that the average age of the world’s greatest civilizations is about 200 years. So with our republic now going on about 250 years, perhaps there is reason for concern that we may be overdue for the end.

LETTER: So Aaron Ford wants to be governor?

So Attorney General Aaron Ford wants to be our next governor. What has he accomplished as our attorney general?

MORE STORIES