|
|
||||||||||||
| Bates Now > Bates Now Story archive |
|
Bates announces $120 million campaign, largest in its history
Oct. 11, 2004
|
||||||||
|
|
Bates College announced the public phase of the most ambitious fund-raising effort in its history Oct. 9 – a $120 million campaign focused on endowment for greater student financial aid, academic programs and facilities improvements. About 500 students, parents, faculty and staff members gathered by Lake Andrews on the Bates campus for the official campus launching of the campaign, called: The Campaign for Bates: Endowing Our Values. • Increased endowment for financial aid ($45 million) The campaign will end in 2006 – at the conclusion of the 150th anniversary celebration of the College's founding in 1855 – and the college is already more than 60 percent toward its goal. Through Oct. 1, leadership gifts, including commitments from all 40 members of the College's Board of Trustees, each of its senior administrators, and from a select group of alumni, parents and friends, have pushed the total to $73.5 million. Included in the current tally are 15 gifts and pledges of $1 million or more. The endowment-focused effort reflects the steps Bates is taking to bring its level of financial resources in line with its national reputation for excellence. Hansen noted a growing gap "between the su At a tent filled with tables next to Lake Andrews, guests were asked to write on cards their hopes for Bates' future. Those cards were placed in a racing shell, and from a dock on Lake Andrews the Bates rowing team symbolically launched the campaign with these aspirations in the shell, rowing across the lake. The master of ceremonies at the launching was College Trustee Michael Bonney of Sudbury, Mass., president and CEO of Cubist Pharmaceuticals and a 1980 Bates graduate. "Bates is powerful and necessary today," Bonney said. Bonney told the audience of his own wish for Bates' future: "As a member of the Board of Trustees, I have learned that the only way to ensure our continued strength is to raise much more money for the college than we’ve ever raised before. A former parent told Elaine two years ago: 'Bates has everything—great faculty, wonderful students, the perfect environment for learning, attention to the individual, a set of values that make everyone who touches the college better. It has everything except money.' "This is true, and we are now at a very important point in Bates' history," he said. "In order to continue achieving at the level we all expect, we must raise significant funds. We’re all going to need to stretch. We provide the same quality education as our NESCAC peers, yet our yearly operating budgets are much smaller. "While we can applaud the College for doing 'so much with so little,'" Bonney said, "we all know that this is not good for the long term, because it cannot be sustained."
Bates has had three fund-raising campaigns in its recent history, raising $59.3 million in a campaign that ended in 1996; $21 million in a campaign that ended in 1984; and $6.8 million in a campaign that ended in 1974. |
|||||||
| Feedback |