Meeting of the Executive Committee of the Alumni Board of Directors, July 10

Meeting of the Executive Committee of the Board of Directors
Antioch College Alumni/ae Association
By dial-in conference call
4:00 p.m. EDT July 10, 2007

Committee members present

Nancy Crow, President
Ina Frank, Vice President
Rick Daily, Treasurer
Mike Brower, Chapters Committee
Ellen Borgersen, Governance Committee
Athena Frederick, Communications Committee

I. Reports from the President
A. John Feinberg is still on an airplane, and can’t serve as Recording Secretary. At Nancy’s request, Rick will serve for this meeting. The minutes of this meeting, once corrected by the group, should be sent to “webeditors@antiochians.org.” for public posting.
B. Nancy has a letter from Steve Lawry, labeled “confidential” which merits discussion among a larger body. She will ask Steve for permission to expand its reach.
C. A special meeting of the Antioch University Board of Trustees will be held on August 24-26; location is likely to be Chicago.
D. Reunion Committee: Nancy has reappointed Bradley Wilburn to serve as Committee Chair, and asked him to make sure that we have a strong, dramatic reunion in 2008.
E. Nominating Committee – Nancy has a call in to Susan Opotow to ask whether she will serve as chair of the Nominating Committee.
F. Anecdote: Nancy reported that at Denver’s Cherry Creek Arts Festival – a ceramicist from YSO was in attendance. When asked what will happen to Antioch, the ceramicist replied: “The Alumni are going to save the College!”
II. Nancy Crow letter to Art Zucker
A. Addressees: The sense of the Committee is that Nancy should talk with Art, and ask who else should get this letter.
B. How detailed should it be?
1. Offer to work with various task forces vs. presentation of an alternative plan
2. Nancy thinks we should come into the August Board Meeting with as detailed a proposal as we can possibly get. The consensus is that we should be working on this detailed plan.
C. Ellen: Our plan needs to take into account moving parts that work together:
1. Plan for an interim period of reduced operations; relaunch of full operations, and sustained operations. we work with faculty.
a) Faculty (E. Miller) have been focused on legal plans and negotiations, and not on curriculum.
D. Nancy: Board of Trustees has concluded that suspension is required.
E. Ellen: There are documents out there that are being used to plan the “new Antioch”
F. Should we demand transparency from the Board of Trustees? Better message: We need to be where decisions are being discussed and made, which we believe means more participation than having our Chair serve ex officio on the Board of Trustees.
G. Specific fundraising targets: we avoid specificity for now; plan to have a good number by late August.
H. Communicate the sense of urgency among the alumni/ae.
1. E.g., Faculty Layoff notices: We don’t yet know what the terms of the layoff notices are, how much notice is being given and what rehiring rights or preferential rights any current faculty members may have if the College is shut and reopened.
I. The Business Plan and the Curriculum Plan are two separate issues, and need to be treated as such.
J. “Closing” vs. continuing operations. We can’t tie ourselves into a position that we’re going to guarantee that the College will not close.
III. Committee Assignments.
A. Nancy has sent out a full list of Committee and task group assignments, and will republish it.
IV. § 501(c)(3) status. Motion to create separate corporation to become a § 501(c)(3) organization, which will take the money, and serve as the College Revival Fund. The mission of the College Revival Fund is to develop a business plan for the College, build a separate governing board for the College, and to raise funds for the continued operation of the College.
V. Treasurer’s Report. Rick reported that the total of pledges and donations is still roughly $525,000. He is busy doing data entry, cross-referencing donations with pledges.
VI. Chapters. Mike Brower reported that before the BOT announced suspending Antioch College we had 7 Alumni/ae Chapters around the country each of which had held at least one meeting. Today, the web page “chapters@antiochians.org” lists 16 Chapters, which means we more than doubled the number of Chapters in one month. Mike reported that he has a list of another half a dozen or more cities in which organizers are working and planning for their first meeting. Very soon we should have over 2 dozen active chapters — or even more if we count the separate Chapters being formed in various boroughs of New York City, probably soon to be followed by separate locations in greater LA. By a month from now we could easily have 30 active chapters in the US and also in Paris and London!
VII. Fundraising (Ina). Ina reported that at last night’s meeting, a donor announced his intention to relocate his pledge to the Revival Fund from the Annual Fund. People are incredibly motivated to act now to raise funds, to capture the momentum on the fundraising front.
A. Foundations. On the foundation front, we need two years minimum of “in the black” balance sheets. We have begun research done on the likely donors. The Alumni/Individual piece is critical to credibility.
B. Corporate relations. Terry Blackhawk has taken on Corporate Relations.
C. Marketing Sub-Committee. We need someone whose job is marketing, media relations, mini-DVD concept. Mike will ask the Chapters to identify a seasoned marketing professional to come on board.
D. Fundraising Plan. Ina will send out a summary fundraising plan within the next day.
VIII. Public Relations. Athena described her efforts to coordinate media relations issues.
IX. Governance. Ellen sent her committee list around via e-mail. Everyone likes the “Antioch 3.0” concept. She will put together a concept paper on this topic for immediate circulation.
X. Association Board Meeting. Brief discussion of whether there should be a meeting of the ACAA Board before our scheduled November Meeting. Rick moved that we have a conference call meeting of the full Board within 2-3 weeks. The motion was seconded and adopted by all voting. Nancy will look at rescheduling the Fall Alumni/ae Board Meeting to coincide with the Board of Trustees meeting.

FAQ: Is my donation to the College Revival Fund Tax-Deductible?

Yes.

The College Revival Fund is an Ohio nonprofit organization and has  been granted  tax-exempt status as a public charity under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.  For purposes of identification, the Employer Identification Number is 26-0709828.

Yellow Springs Emergency Town Meeting: wrap-up and news coverage

Hello from Yellow Springs, the village that continues to hold the constant-beating heart of Antioch College…

I write to you all a brief update on our Emergency Town Meeting we held on Tuesday, July 10, 2007. I keep it brief because I believe that Diane Chiddister, editor of the Yellow Springs News, summed it up best, in her article in the latest issue of our local paper. Despite the unbearable heat of the day, over 300 people crowded into and outside of the meeting space, staying well past the agenda schedule. It was encouraging to see that most of the meeting attendees were in support of keeping Antioch College open (based on their applause and public questions and comments.). We, the meeting organizers, now know that we had over 300 attendees because 280 people signed in as they entered, and well over 20-30 more people entered late, filling in the standing room-only spaces outside and throughout the hallways. The Yellow Springs group to keep Antioch College open has officially increased 7 times from its original number of 40 people! Now, to continue the momentum… The meeting can be heard in its entirety on the WYSO website, where they have kindly loaded a podcast onto their site. It’s good to listen to while you’re multi-tasking (almost 2 hours-worth of listening). Link to WYSO podcast of Yellow Springs Emergency Town Meeting or you can click play directly at the end of this post.

The next meeting we urge people to attend is the Village Council Meeting at which chancellor Toni Murdock and president Steve Lawry will be presenters. The meeting, which is open to the public, will be on Monday, July 16, at 7pm at the John Bryan Center. Two more important dates for Yellow Springs: July 21, 2007 – A fund raiser screening of the film, “The Antioch Adventure” (1967) will be at the Little Art Theatre, time TBA. July 23, 2007 – Next major meeting for subcommittees from the Yellow Springs Residents in Support of Antioch College Revival Resolution, will be at 7pm at the Senior Center.

A heartfelt thank you goes out to the town meeting presenters, to the attendees, to members of the press, to the members of the First Presbyterian Church (which housed the town meeting) and especially to each of the hard-working individuals who helped to organize and volunteer at the town meeting!

Onward,

Judith “juju” Wolert-Maldonado, ’05

(attended ’94-’96, then ’03-’05)

juju70@msn.com

ysrfora07_05_075×10.jpg
Ad from YS News.

More Coverage in :

Executive Committee Report as of July 11, 2007

LETTER TO ALUMNI Nancy Crow, Alumni Association President, has written a letter to all 17,000 College Alumni, reporting on alumni actions since the closure announcement. It will be distributed soon and can be viewed by following this link.
CAMPAIGN TO DATE College Revival Fund pledges and cash : $525,000.

NONPROFIT STATUS The process has begun to incorporate the College Revival Fund as a § 501(c)(3) nonprofit, separate from both the University and the Antioch College Alumni/ae Association. The mission of the College Revival Fund is to develop a business plan for the College, build a separate governing board for the College, and to raise funds for the continued operation of the College.

ROLE OF ALUMNI IN DECISION-MAKING College Alum President Nancy Crow is an ex officio voting member of the University Board of Trustees. In that role, and as representative of the College’s 17,000 alums, she will be working on governance and fund-raising. She will carry the Alumni Association’s governance, fund-raising and business plan proposals to the Board of Trustees and seek the participation of the Alumni Association’s Committees in that process. The Alumni Association represents thousands of alums who are passionately committed to the College, and can marshall resources that the BoT cannot tap for the sur/revival of the College.

  • There has been an outpouring of passion, ideas, and funds. Alumni/ae Chapters are being organized in over 30 cities around the world — that is the foundation on which Antioch College’s future can be built.
  • Many alums have been sitting on their checkbooks because of deep skepticism about the University system.
  • The Antioch College Alumni Association Board is the only entity that can bridge the chasm between College alums and the University BOT.


ACCESS TO INFORMATION
In order to be an honest broker between estranged College alums and the BoT, the Alumni Association needs access to all of the documents and financial data that underlie the decision to suspend College operations; and the BoT has or is considering relating to plans for the operations and assets of Antioch College.

OTHER STAKEHOLDERS
The Executive Committee of the Alumni Board has established liaisons with the faculty and other stakeholders, and is including them in developing a detailed plan to present at the next meeting of the Board of Trustees, now scheduled for August 24-26.

Letter to Alumni Association from Nancy Crow, President Alumni Board

Dear Fellow Antiochian,

On June 12, 2007, the Antioch University Board of Trustees announced the closing of Antioch College on July 8, 2008 due to financial exigency, with an expectation to reopen in 2012 as the “new 21st century model.”

Ten days later, more than 500 Antioch College alumni, spanning more than 70 class years, challenged that decision. They resolved at Annual Reunion that Antioch College is worth fighting for, affirmed their commitment to the uninterrupted continuation of the College as an institution of higher education with a tenured faculty, and raised more than $500,000 in support of that goal.

At the opening session of Reunion in Kelly Hall, alumni heard from members of the Board of Trustees about their decision and from College President Steve Lawry, who called for a change in governance that would provide separate boards for the College and each Antioch campus.

For the next 48 hours, alumni engaged in an active, urgent, organized process, led by members of the Alumni Association and facilitated by former Community Managers. Alumni:

Raised more than $200,000 for the College Revival Fund in 50 minutes, with the total swelling to $400,000 by the end of Reunion, and more than $525,000 today.

Instructed the elected Alumni Association Board of Directors to negotiate with the Antioch University Board of Trustees and the President of Antioch College for establishment of a Board of Trustees for Antioch College, and for the protection of assets of Antioch College for use by Antioch College. All funds will be under the exclusive control and management of the Alumni Association.

Mandated campaigns to raise funds from individuals, private foundations and corporations.

The College Revival Fund will be distributed for the benefit of Antioch College under the direction of the Antioch College Alumni Association Board of Directors.

More than 20 community Chapters have been activated in the past 14 days. To find one in your community, go to antiochians.org/chapters and to organize a chapter, contact Risa Grimes rgrimes@antioch-college.edu or Aimee Maruyama in the Alumni Office: amaruyama@antioch-college.edu. Address and phone number for the Alumni Relations Office, Antioch College, 795 Livermore Street, Yellow Springs, OH 45387 1-800-411-6780. The Village of Yellow Springs held a parade in support of the College, and will host an emergency meeting this week.

I urge you to go to the website and access the listservs right away for up-to-the-minute information, articles about this incredible groundswell of support, opportunities to become involved, and to make a generous donation. Together, we will not only save the College from closure, but also produce a successful and financially sustainable Antioch experience for years to come.

Be ashamed to let it die!

Nancy Crow, President Antioch College Alumni Association