OT: U of Arizona's Accounting Boo-Boo

PiscatawayMike

Heisman
Jul 27, 2001
16,951
14,422
113
Season 7 Oops GIF by Workaholics
 

ashokan

Heisman
May 3, 2011
25,325
19,686
0
I'm 100% certain there is a masssive epidemic of this stuff.
We don't know just how broke feds/states/cities/institutions are.
They move money around like three-card monte
New politicans, admins, acquisitions, accountants come around and they don't know where the bodies are buried - then they bury their own.

Pentagon can't do audits.
There some explantions for some of that but its also subversion, misdirection, grift etc.
When "climate change" was made defense issue # 1 it allowed all sorts of money to be wasted and channled into sketchy enterprises, activities etc.

 

rurichdog

Heisman
Sep 30, 2006
116,807
14,389
0
So signing off on quarterly & yearly financials stating the information contained within is complete & accurate when it is complete BS is just an 'oopsie'? What's the point?
 
  • Like
Reactions: Bagarocks

RUTGERS95

Heisman
Sep 28, 2005
26,449
35,624
113
I'm 100% certain there is a masssive epidemic of this stuff.
We don't know just how broke feds/states/cities/institutions are.
They move money around like three-card monte
New politicans, admins, acquisitions, accountants come around and they don't know where the bodies are buried - then they bury their own.

Pentagon can't do audits.
There some explantions for some of that but its also subversion, misdirection, grift etc.
When "climate change" was made defense issue # 1 it allowed all sorts of money to be wasted and channled into sketchy enterprises, activities etc.

no we know, we just ignore it and bail out vs looking into the accounting. The only people who are worse than academia are gov't
 

RUTGERS95

Heisman
Sep 28, 2005
26,449
35,624
113
So signing off on quarterly & yearly financials stating the information contained within is complete & accurate when it is complete BS is just an 'oopsie'? What's the point?
worldcomm...lol

you are right however
 

Knight Shift

Heisman
May 19, 2011
85,672
83,233
113
I'm 100% certain there is a masssive epidemic of this stuff.
We don't know just how broke feds/states/cities/institutions are.
They move money around like three-card monte
New politicans, admins, acquisitions, accountants come around and they don't know where the bodies are buried - then they bury their own.

Pentagon can't do audits.
There some explantions for some of that but its also subversion, misdirection, grift etc.
When "climate change" was made defense issue # 1 it allowed all sorts of money to be wasted and channled into sketchy enterprises, activities etc.

 

Knight Shift

Heisman
May 19, 2011
85,672
83,233
113
Locally we had five volunteer firehouses have treasurers, chiefs and others get busted for pilfering, embezzeling and such. It took about 5-7 years but I started thinking something is going really wrong.
It happens at all levels within boroughs, cities, counties, etc. Volunteer organizations have little oversight, and if someone is opportunistic, this can happen.
 
  • Like
Reactions: rucoe89

ashokan

Heisman
May 3, 2011
25,325
19,686
0
no we know, we just ignore it and bail out vs looking into the accounting. The only people who are worse than academia are gov't
Ever see a film titled "Margin Call" with Stanley Tucci? It was about a fired investment bank analyst passing a thumb drive to another employee while telling him to "be careful."

The remaining employee looks at the data on drive and realizes the IB is over-extended and broke. The secret gets out and there is a mad rush to have a giant sale before the public finds out about the problem.

Its actually a very good cast and film. I heard it was based of some events from financial crisis

 

Knight Shift

Heisman
May 19, 2011
85,672
83,233
113
You don't have lto make a mistake for a public employee to be underfunded. It's almost the norm.
I get that, but mistake or miscalculation or underfunding-they all fall under the heading of "malfeasance." To wit, look at this from the article:

"The UA offers a four-year tuition guarantee, meaning students are promised the same tuition throughout their four years at the institution. In addition, the university spends over $300 million on financial aid and merit scholarships to attract high achieving students, as well.
Despite that investment, the amount of financial aid given out is “not financially sustainable,” Robbins said."

Robbins told faculty members that the university is losing money on students who in high school had a GPA between a 3.75 and 4.0 because of the amount of merit money and financial aid they are awarded.
“If you look at the band from 3.75 GPA to 4.0, there are a lot of students here that pay nothing,” he said. “We lose money on every one.”

^^^Sounds like the obverse of an unfunded pension fund--giving away money that is not there.

Uh oh:

Athletics has also been a drain on the financial resources of the university, Robbins told the faculty, most of whom spoke out against the $55 million loan made by the university to the athletic department during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. That money, Robbins said, has not been paid back “fast enough.”
Here's the CFO:

 

Knight Shift

Heisman
May 19, 2011
85,672
83,233
113
The athletic department’s budget is roughly $100 million. About $40 million of that comes from the Pac-12, about $30 million comes from ticket sales, “primarily in football and basketball,” Robbins said, and the last $30 million comes from philanthropy and contracts.

Johann Rafelski, a physics professor, urged Robbins to consider selling the athletics department to an outside vendor.
“People who are qualified to run an athletics department may turn it into a profit,” he said. “We could perhaps get a good sale price.” 😂
 

RUTGERS95

Heisman
Sep 28, 2005
26,449
35,624
113
Ever see a film titled "Margin Call" with Stanley Tucci? It was about a fired investment bank analyst passing a thumb drive to another employee while telling him to "be careful."

The remaining employee looks at the data on drive and realizes the IB is over-extended and broke. The secret gets out and there is a mad rush to have a giant sale before the public finds out about the problem.

Its actually a very good cast and film. I heard it was based of some events from financial crisis

I was at MF global on Sunday, the day before they announced they had a liquidity issue, as they tried to sell debt to JP Morgan and various other institutions in an attempt to raise the funds

I get it
 

RUTGERS95

Heisman
Sep 28, 2005
26,449
35,624
113
The athletic department’s budget is roughly $100 million. About $40 million of that comes from the Pac-12, about $30 million comes from ticket sales, “primarily in football and basketball,” Robbins said, and the last $30 million comes from philanthropy and contracts.

Johann Rafelski, a physics professor, urged Robbins to consider selling the athletics department to an outside vendor.
“People who are qualified to run an athletics department may turn it into a profit,” he said. “We could perhaps get a good sale price.” 😂
academia are the most out of touch persons in America, just a touch more than of our gov't class
 

RUTGERS95

Heisman
Sep 28, 2005
26,449
35,624
113
I get that, but mistake or miscalculation or underfunding-they all fall under the heading of "malfeasance." To wit, look at this from the article:

"The UA offers a four-year tuition guarantee, meaning students are promised the same tuition throughout their four years at the institution. In addition, the university spends over $300 million on financial aid and merit scholarships to attract high achieving students, as well.
Despite that investment, the amount of financial aid given out is “not financially sustainable,” Robbins said."

Robbins told faculty members that the university is losing money on students who in high school had a GPA between a 3.75 and 4.0 because of the amount of merit money and financial aid they are awarded.
“If you look at the band from 3.75 GPA to 4.0, there are a lot of students here that pay nothing,” he said. “We lose money on every one.”

^^^Sounds like the obverse of an unfunded pension fund--giving away money that is not there.

Uh oh:

Athletics has also been a drain on the financial resources of the university, Robbins told the faculty, most of whom spoke out against the $55 million loan made by the university to the athletic department during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. That money, Robbins said, has not been paid back “fast enough.”
Here's the CFO:

she actually has no real background that would put her in this position anywhere in the real world.

RU has it owns issues here, I know first hand
 
  • Like
Reactions: bumpstock

bumpstock

Sophomore
Feb 27, 2018
258
180
0
she actually has no real background that would put her in this position anywhere in the real world.

RU has it owns issues here, I know first hand
Her B.S. from James Madison Univ. is in Communication Disorders (seriously). Not sure if she took any Accounting classes for her MBA from U. of A., but she sure can cook (the books).
 

redking

All-Conference
Jul 27, 2001
3,975
1,742
113
Ever see a film titled "Margin Call" with Stanley Tucci? It was about a fired investment bank analyst passing a thumb drive to another employee while telling him to "be careful."

The remaining employee looks at the data on drive and realizes the IB is over-extended and broke. The secret gets out and there is a mad rush to have a giant sale before the public finds out about the problem.

Its actually a very good cast and film. I heard it was based of some events from financial crisis


Margin Call is a classic.

I push numbers around on a computer screen. A bunch of glorified crack addicts take that information, pretend to understand it, and they bet against some other jock halfway around the world, who, you know, if he wasn’t doing this, he’d be in an OTB somewhere, putting it all on number seven.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ashokan

brgRC90

Heisman
Apr 8, 2008
34,957
15,859
0
right!!!!!!

academia isn't the best place to find people who perform their duties well sadly and ironically
Or corporate America or government or athletics or churches or anywhere else.
 
Last edited:

RUschool

Heisman
Jan 23, 2004
49,910
14,001
78
she actually has no real background that would put her in this position anywhere in the real world.

RU has it owns issues here, I know first hand
At my prior company, a young very attractive female became VP of Public Relation extremely quickly, she use to travel with the CEO. After the CEO left, she had an affair with another higher up. Later when they fired her, she sued due to the affairs she had in the company, probably retired with her million dollar lawsuits and her stock options. No one thought she was qualified for her position. There were other affairs in the office, you just had to find the most attractive females.

This lady fit the same bill.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: RUTGERS95
Oct 19, 2010
207,474
28,753
0
Ever see a film titled "Margin Call" with Stanley Tucci? It was about a fired investment bank analyst passing a thumb drive to another employee while telling him to "be careful."

The remaining employee looks at the data on drive and realizes the IB is over-extended and broke. The secret gets out and there is a mad rush to have a giant sale before the public finds out about the problem.

Its actually a very good cast and film. I heard it was based of some events from financial crisis


Great movie.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ashokan and thegock
Oct 19, 2010
207,474
28,753
0
Some of the replies in this thread ... initially dumbfounding ... par for the course on this board. Weird right-wing lunatic stuff.

As for the U of A, the Governor and legislature should probably fire the president and the CFO on the spot. A $250 million "surprise" doesn't just happen out of nowhere. Blaming scholarships seems a dubious explanation.
 
  • Like
Reactions: LBusDoor90_rivals

Randal7

All-American
Jul 22, 2009
6,702
6,101
77
someone didn’t extend the function down the entire column haha
 

rucoe89

All-American
Jul 31, 2001
12,300
5,944
113
It happens at all levels within boroughs, cities, counties, etc. Volunteer organizations have little oversight, and if someone is opportunistic, this can happen.
Agree. No organization of any time is immune from this.

The only way things change is accountability. But that requires laws. However, there are, laws on the books to deal with many issues and new laws get introduced. But then there is enforcement. If you don't like the laws or enforcement of them, you lobby to change the laws to carve your favorite moneybag out, starve the enforcement mechanism of resources, and/or don't enforce.

Lather, rinse, repeat.
 

Knight Shift

Heisman
May 19, 2011
85,672
83,233
113
Agree. No organization of any time is immune from this.

The only way things change is accountability. But that requires laws. However, there are, laws on the books to deal with many issues and new laws get introduced. But then there is enforcement. If you don't like the laws or enforcement of them, you lobby to change the laws to carve your favorite moneybag out, starve the enforcement mechanism of resources, and/or don't enforce.

Lather, rinse, repeat.
Seton Hall Law School - an administrator got away with nearly $1M! Happens everywhere.
 

RUScrew85

Heisman
Nov 7, 2003
30,054
16,939
0
Ever see a film titled "Margin Call" with Stanley Tucci? It was about a fired investment bank analyst passing a thumb drive to another employee while telling him to "be careful."

The remaining employee looks at the data on drive and realizes the IB is over-extended and broke. The secret gets out and there is a mad rush to have a giant sale before the public finds out about the problem.

Its actually a very good cast and film. I heard it was based of some events from financial crisis


Seen it. Good movie.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ashokan