University of Virginia Spends $20 Million On 235 DEI Employees, With Some Making $587,340 Per Year

It takes tuition payments from nearly 1,000 undergraduates just to pay their base salaries!Bacon’s Rebellion is reposting this article published by Open the Books, a nonprofit group dedicated to transparency in government spending, and republished on the Jefferson Council blog. Open the Books CEO Adam Andrzejewski will speak at the Jefferson Council 3rd annual meeting April 9. Register now to attend. — JAB

The University of Virginia (UVA) has at least 235 employees under its “diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI)” banner — including 82 students — whose total cost of employment is estimated at $20 million. That’s $15 million in cash compensation plus an additional 30 percent for the annual cost of their benefits.

In contrast, last Friday, the University of Florida dismissed its DEI bureaucracy, saving students and taxpayers $5 million per year. The university terminated 13 full-time DEI positions and 15 administrative faculty appointments. Those funds have been re-programmed into a “faculty recruitment fund” to attract better people who actually teach students.

No such luck for learning at Virginia’s flagship university – founded by Thomas Jefferson no less. UVA has a much deeper DEI infrastructure.

Reform or abolition must await this summer’s anticipated changes in the school’s Board of Visitors. At least until then, the very highly compensated, generally non-teaching, DEI staffers are safely embedded throughout the entire university – while costing students and taxpayers a fortune.

Our team of auditors at OpenTheBooks.com reviewed the university payroll file for 2023 to sort out the DEI position head counts, compensation, and then estimated the cost of benefits.


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119 responses to “University of Virginia Spends $20 Million On 235 DEI Employees, With Some Making $587,340 Per Year”

  1. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    Is there something called UVa derangement syndrome?

    This is serious…
    https://www.storefrontsafety.org/

  2. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    Is there something called UVa derangement syndrome?

    This is serious…
    https://www.storefrontsafety.org/

    1. walter smith Avatar
      walter smith

      Aversion to Marxism is a survival instinct. Living things at the flatworm level and above know to turn away from things causing pain.

      1. Nancy Naive Avatar
        Nancy Naive

        And yet, capitalism is stronger than ever and so is our economy. Stronger even than 2017 to 2020, pre-Covid, under the 7th worst economic president since the 1960s — the man you would make King.

        1. walter smith Avatar
          walter smith

          You are a f00l. Capitalism? The “booming” economy is the sugar rush of $2 trillion annualized debt. Being laid on future generations. Enjoy your enslavement and the enslavement you inflict on the future generations.
          I don’t want a king. I’d like freedom again. Have you read a document called the Declaration? The indictments against KGIII? Like all his officers eating out our substance… It’s a problem.

          1. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            I think I will. Where you going? Moscow? Or, are you just gonna stay here and continue to be miserable?

          2. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            I’m staying here, out of spite, just to constantly remind you and the rest of the mindless how awful your policies are and the harm they cause to the people you supposedly care about. It brings me much joy.

          3. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            It’s a sick world and we’re happy fellas, eh Walt?

          4. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            Don’t know about you, but I am. That give you sads?

          5. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/7761ef42732c59966a896a6bbf68e1a9543061acf3f421d14c791f2d161633a3.png

            “Those benefits are less than Republicans promised, though, and they have come at a high cost to the federal budget. The corporate tax cuts came nowhere close to paying for themselves, as conservatives insisted they would. Instead, they are adding more than $100 billion a year to America’s $34 trillion-and-growing national debt, according to the quartet of researchers from Princeton University, the University of Chicago, Harvard University and the Treasury Department.”

            https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/04/us/politics/trump-corporate-tax-cut.html?unlocked_article_code=1.a00.N5M5.czaIEiQ1-e8R&smid=url-share

          6. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            Larry – you have plenty of people who print propaganda for you and then you just quote the headline as “proof.”
            I said nothing about Trump. I said we need freedom and less government. We are too highly regulated, but I’m glad you now agree that we need to cut down spending, drastically. And, still suspecting the “study” is bogus, maybe it stands for you can never trust government statistics… which you can’t and always need to read the footnotes and assumptions. You ow, SCIENCE!

          7. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            was responding to:

            ” You are a f00l. Capitalism? The “booming” economy is the sugar rush of $2 trillion annualized debt. Being laid on future generations. Enjoy your enslavement and the enslavement”

            Where did that “annualized debt: come from?

            Your guy who says he’s about “freedom” and less govt?

            😉

            Every hear of NBER?

            https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/07987c75b6afa2ff101986a57377241457d4f901ce46ade03bfb010f8b668bc8.png

          8. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            As usual Larry – do you have a point that makes sense or or you just regurgitating the propaganda fed to you? We are spending ourselves into financial collapse. The “experts” are the ones who invented “modern monetary theory” to justify their Marxism, but everything from the Left requires Unicorns. In the real world, all people with a brain (this excludes very many) know you cannot spend more than you make. Some people adhere to that every year. Some most years. A country eventually has to. The UNiParty and stup!d!ty are the problem. But keep voting for baby-killing and all the other waste and everything will be OK…

          9. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            We are spending ourselves into financial collapse in part because of the Trump tax cuts.

            We’re bleeding deficits because of it.

            re: ” The “experts” are the ones who invented “modern monetary theory” to justify their Marxism, but everything from the Left requires Unicorns. In the real world, all people with a brain (this excludes very many) know you cannot spend more than you make. ”

            geeze Walter, running off the road again.

            whether you run a deficit or not is not because of “marxism” or marxist tendencies.

            Beyond that the US has THE most trusted currency in the world and has been that way for a long time even when Dems were fully in charge!

            If you want to “fix” – START with a budget that does not have structural deficits.

            Trump did not and surely has no interest in it again I suspect.

    2. WayneS Avatar

      Vehicles do not crash into buildings, the drivers of vehicles crash vehicles into buildings.

      1. Nancy Naive Avatar
        Nancy Naive

        Yeah, but they bring their cars with them.

        Still, 100/day? 2400 deaths/year? Yikes, no more strip malls for me!

        1. WayneS Avatar

          I recommend *BFBs at 5′ spacing along the front of any store with parking spaces directly in front of the building.

          *BFB = ‘Large Bollard’

        2. WayneS Avatar

          I recommend *BFBs at 5′ spacing along the front of any store with parking spaces directly in front of the building.

          *BFB = ‘Large Bollard’

          1. WayneS Avatar

            No, but gang members can.

            Whenever the news story says “the victim is not cooperating with police”, and the perpetrator is not a family member, you can be 99.99% certain that the crime was gang-related.

          2. Lefty665 Avatar
            Lefty665

            Brakes are a virtue. Not many accidents are caused by braking, accelerating on the other hand… There’s nothing wrong with making brakes easier to apply.

          3. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            In most accidents braking is attempted just before impact, ergo don’t brake and miss what you might have hit.

          4. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            In most accidents braking is attempted just before impact, ergo don’t brake and miss what you might have hit.

          5. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            I once honked at a driver that pulled in front of me and the dumb SOB hit the brakes and stopped in my path.

            Some drivers clearly think that the brake pedal is like the “UNDO” button in a Windows program.

          6. Lefty665 Avatar
            Lefty665

            Running into someone from behind is called “following too close”. It’s worth a ticket as well as an increase in your insurance premium. Don’t ask me how I know.

            In my apps the NO button is usually more prominent than the yes prompt. When it is a question with consequences (format C:? for example) we follow a “yes” with “Are you sure?” to give the user a chance to think it over.

            I learned that being gentle with end users was more than being kind to bozos, it was a virtue of good coding. Same goes for engineering of brake pedals. Make ’em big and easy to hit, not a contest to see how precise our feet are under stress. User Interface uber alles.

          7. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            This driver was making a left turn from a side street with a stop sign, so had I hit this driver, it would have been clear who caused the accident, as my front bumper was smashed into their driver’s door.

            Somewhat related, I have been trying to get PWC and VDOT to do something about a couple of intersections with extremely poor visibility due to vegetation. Making a left turn from either of these intersections is dangerous because you cannot see oncoming traffic far enough away to make a good judgement as to whether it is safe to make the turn.

          8. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            DO you have a dash cam? What I’m hearing is that not only are some people butts these days but if they cause an accident, they’ll lie about it also unless you have a cam.

          9. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            No, I don’t, and I was in an accident where the driver rear-ended me and then lied through his teeth about what happened. The guy is a Master Sargant in the Army, too, which I found out when dealing with his insurance company (USAA). His name and title was on the paperwork I got from USAA.

            (The guy claimed he rear-ended me as I was changing lanes).

            Guess that was my experience that even the members of the armed services can be as scummy as the general public.

          10. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            got a dash cam… getting it on the dash when I get the car back from the repair folk….

          11. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            go look at some of the dash cam videos on FB. I’d say that it’s a common practice. There’s a lot of “butts” out there nowdays.

          12. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            I’ve seen ’em.

          13. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            In most accidents braking is attempted just before impact, ergo don’t brake and miss what you might have hit.

          14. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            dashcams generally get the truth and expose the liars.

          15. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            “Pedal misapplication” can be a big problem.

            I’m not sure why the NHTSA hasn’t mandated that the “go” pedal be colored green and the “stop” pedal be colored red, with colored indicators in the instrument cluster indicating which one is being pushed.

          16. WayneS Avatar

            I’m not sure color-coding would work but in cars with automatic transmissions (only two pedals) I would think the pedals could be spaced just a little bit further apart – which I think could make a difference. They could also make the accelerator pedal a tad smaller.

            Manual transmission vehicles don’t need any changes because people who drive those know where the pedals are.

          17. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            I’ve seen old GM vehicles like Cadillacs with brake pedals about a foot wide. More target area to make hitting it more likely when you’re driving with a bad case of the shakes, I guess.

          18. Lefty665 Avatar
            Lefty665

            Feet don’t have eyes so color coding pedals would not accomplish much.

            Whenever I’ve had something interesting going on in a car (well except for in the back seat long ago) my eyes have been on the windshield not on the dash.

            Heel and toe rules!

          19. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            Alexa : “STOP NOW”

        3. WayneS Avatar

          2,400 deaths per year? On average, you are about 50 times more likely to be killed by an accident in your own home than by perishing as a result of of a vehicle/building collision.

          CORRECTION: …you are about 50 5 (five) times more likely to be killed by an accident in your own home…

          1. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            Accounts for something like 10% of traffic fatalities, if true, and 36,500 accidents, which seems about right.

          2. WayneS Avatar

            As far as I know there is no fun way to die in an accident — although I may one day try to find one. In 2021 there were an estimated 128,200 preventable home injury-related deaths in the U.S.

            Also, in the above I should have written: On average, you are about 5 (five) times more likely to be killed by an accident in your own home, not 50 (fifty).

          3. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            Throw in all those accidents around the home with all the automobile accidents you won’t have if you’re more than 25 miles from home, then it’s worth renting an apartment in St. Louis and calling it home.

          4. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            I wonder how many of the at-home deaths are electrocutions.

            That reminds me, I need to do the monthly routine of pushing the TEST button on all the GFCIs to make sure they work.

            (Seriously, does anyone do that?)

          5. Lefty665 Avatar
            Lefty665

            Ha ha, seriously:) I check mine not quite as often as I do the batteries in the smoke detectors.

          6. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            Several years ago I noticed that UL has revised the 943 requirements to include a GFCI self-test feature. I guess they know that almost nobody is pushing that test button once a month.

          7. Lefty665 Avatar
            Lefty665

            Good idea, guess that’s one of the reasons they cost more these days. There’s more logic in a self test circuit than in the GF protection.

          8. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            I wonder what a GFCI cost back in the days when they installed one GFCI for the bathroom, garage AND exterior outlets, and usually conveniently located it in the garage. They did this stuff even in supposed “luxury” homes. It’s probably acceptable for a low-end townhouse.

          9. Lefty665 Avatar
            Lefty665

            I recently pulled out a GFI receptacle that my Dad had tucked away years ago. It had a $7.49 price sticker. It still tested ok. A plain old receptacle from the period was about a quarter. I can remember buying GFI breakers for $10-$12. Seemed like a great deal to protect an entire circuit. Looks like a single pole breaker is 50 bucks these days, but it will test itself.:)

          10. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            According to the inflation calculator, $7.49 in 1988 is equal to $19.53 in 2024, which is about what a GFCI costs today ($19.26 at Home Depot).

            The cheapest I ever remember seeing plain outlets is about 39 cents a piece.

            I generally wouldn’t use a GFCI breaker instead of a GFCI outlet, both for cost (it’s at least $30 more), convenience (having the test/reset buttons at the point of use instead of the panel), and ease of replacement (you MUST replace a GFCI breaker with one listed for that panel–even if it fits it may not be listed for that panel and therefore is a code violation to use it–and replacing a breaker is generally less DIY-friendly than replacing a receptacle).

          11. Lefty665 Avatar
            Lefty665

            39 cents versus a quarter, how much older am I than you:)

            What’s so hard about replacing a breaker? On a single pole it’s one screw and a snap in. Plus, if you trip the breakers it’s not even working a hot wire. Each receptacle is 3 wires, hot, neutral and a ground plus a screw for the cover and 2 more to mount the receptacle. You can replace several breakers in the time it takes to replace one receptacle and get a lot more protection.

            Figure the cost on protecting every outlet on a circuit versus a GFCI receptacle at every box. The cost per plug can quickly vary.

            Code? We don’t need no steenkin’ code.

          12. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            I do remember when a can of Coke from a vending machine was 25 cents!

            Some folks who will replace a receptacle will not open a panel. It’s not that it’s hard, it’s that opening the panel can present some risk you aren’t exposed to when replacing a receptacle.

            I just don’t see the advantage to using a breaker GFCI in most situations, and several disadvantages that I already mentioned. As a breaker GFCI protects the whole circuit, the same is true for a receptacle GFCI: there is no need to use a GFCI at each receptacle, a single GFCI can protect every downstream outlet if wired to do so.

            That being said, in my house I replaced 2 regular outlets with GFCIs on the bathroom circuit so the master bathroom has it’s own two GFCIs and the GFCI in the hall bathroom protects the rest of the bathrooms. Original configuration had a GFCI in the master bathroom protecting everything.

            What I’ve seen in commercial buildings is that breaker GFCIs are never used and receptacle GFCIs are never used to protect downstream receptacles, each receptacle gets it’s own GFCI. The advantage to that is that it removes all doubt about where the GFCI is that protects a given receptacle.

            In the case of something like a kitchen, I think the choice is obvious: A GFCI receptacle that’s in the kitchen and protects the outlets in that area is a heck of lot more convenient than one in the panel in the basement. Considering that modern GFCI receptacles have a light that goes out or glows red to let you know they’ve tripped, this can save trouble when someone who isn’t the most technically savvy has to deal with the situation. I wouldn’t want to have to talk my mom through resetting a breaker GFCI. Telling her to push the button on the outlet that has the red light on it is much easier.

          13. Lefty665 Avatar
            Lefty665

            The idea of running the entire load of a branch circuit through a single receptacle gives me the willies. Not a way I’d choose to wire, and although it’s been awhile since I’ve looked at the national electrical code, I doubt it advocates wiring branch circuits that way. Parallel not serial is the trick.

            With the infrequency of tripping (most times never), resetting a breaker does not seem much more burdensome than doing it at the receptacle, and the breaker installation is much simpler. I personally have never enjoyed pulling jammed in wires out of a box. TW gets stiff, the insulation brittle and folding everything back up to stuff it back in the box is goofy. Let sleeping receptacles lie:) It’s a lot easier in a panel where there’s enough wire to work with and only one wire to fiddle with.

            Certainly, the light on a receptacle shouting “Look at me” is easier for someone who knows nothing about electricity. If I was wiring residential I would be tempted to just install GFCI receptacles in a few higher risk places and forego the more comprehensive protection just to cut down on grief service calls, not because it was better.

          14. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            All I can offer is that even 15-amp GFCI receptacles are tested by UL to handle a 20-amp feedthrough.

          15. Lefty665 Avatar
            Lefty665

            You and I agree that is not the way we’d choose to wire. You’re also right that the light on a tripped receptacle is a convenient indicator and that the pushed reset button is equally convenient.

          16. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            Only issue I’ve ever seen or heard of when daisy-chaining receptacles is when the backstab/push-in terminals are used. If the screw terminals are used it is a much more reliable connection. I will not use the backstab/push-in terminals when replacing a receptacle or installing a new one.

            I’ve never seen any GFCI receptacle with backstab/push in terminals. All of the ones I’ve used and installed have screw terminals which also include the pressure plate terminals as used on “spec” or “commercial” grade receptacles.

            In summer, I routinely charge my 2013 Chevy Volt on 120V through a daisy-chained GFCI going on 7 years now. At a 12 amp draw continuing for up to 10 hours, this is probably the highest and longest duration draw a typical GCFI would ever experience. There has been no problem. (During the cooler parts of the year, I use 240V charging. Using 120V in the summer reduces heat build-up in the garage. (I sometimes also use 240V charging in the summer with the car set to begin charging at 2am when outdoor temps are lower).

          17. Lefty665 Avatar
            Lefty665

            Push in connections have always looked like an opportunity to fail under load. Limited contact area is a recipe for resistance and subsequent heat. I agree, and have never used them either. My dear old Dad, a EE, used to opine that dirty contacts are 90% of the worlds problems.

            Protecting all downstream receptacles is why we have circuit breakers. Moving a receptacle into that role seems like a solution in search of a problem.

            Glad you’ve avoided setting a fire with your charging setup. You willing to bet your house and car on that kludge continuing to be flawless?

          18. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            “You willing to bet your house and car on that kludge continuing to be flawless?”

            Sure. In the extremely unlikely event that the GFCI self-immolates, the metal box and cover will be more than adequate to prevent the spread of fire.

            The thermal scan, however, indicates that it is getting nowhere near hot enough for that to happen, even after a 3 hour sustained 12-amp load.
            https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/82c800dde1039d50392ca88ddb29431ccaa209e70293d15b8fa938f7caf657d9.png https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/09821829197fabc33139a42a3419936c45f5eb996e5defb6c72ca92e28d69563.png

          19. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            Throw in all those accidents around the home with all the automobile accidents you won’t have if you’re more than 25 miles from home, then it’s worth renting an apartment in St. Louis and calling it home.

  3. LarrytheG Avatar
    LarrytheG

    Targeting of individuals plus ignoring the other titles the person has.

    Not Good!

    https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/4dcd58364d68f4fd06a490ca37239373d70a61c00e7acc0980a7a0cd4a48cd04.png

    1. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      Damn those double and triple hats. Really screws up the narrative.

      Remember that app? This page would glow orange.

    2. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      Damn those double and triple hats. Really screws up the narrative.

      Remember that app? This page would glow orange.

    3. Dick Hall-Sizemore Avatar
      Dick Hall-Sizemore

      That’s a good point, Larry. It occurred to me that DEI probably not the sole, and likely not the main, function of the 235 folks identified by Open the Books.

      Still, the article does highlight the high salaries that higher education administrators make.

      Finally, the items highlighted by you illustrate a couple of my longstanding criticisms of higher ed. Davidson holds an endowed professorship. How many classes does he actually teach? He is the director of one of the many centers on the campus. How much time does that take? What the heck are “Contemplative Sciences”?

      1. walter smith Avatar
        walter smith

        Good question. From the Darden course catalog…looks like ONE –
        GBUS 734 LEADING ORGANIZATIONS

        High-performing organizations are driven by leaders who enable people to be effective in their jobs. This course helps students cultivate mind-sets and use tools to influence behavior in organizations. In the first part of the course, students will master several foundational skills, including how to take a global-leadership point of view, identify critical business challenges, understand the drivers of those challenges, act to turn those challenges into opportunities, and adopt a global mind-set no matter what the organization or where it operates.

        With this perspective in place, the course helps students build skills in understanding their strengths and weaknesses as leaders and managers, managing performance, giving and receiving feedback, managing conflict, designing and managing teams, designing cutting-edge human-resource systems that get the best performance from employees, managing culture, and leading organizations through both extraordinary and ordinary change.

      2. Not Today Avatar
        Not Today

        Endowed also means he brought *in* money and pays himself. If UVA follows UFs lead, it’ll be on the fast track to circling the academic drain.

    4. DJRippert Avatar
      DJRippert

      Here is Mr. Davidson’s own description of his role as Johnson & Higgins Professor of Business Administration (from his LinkedIn account):

      “Martin Davidson’s thought leadership has changed how many executives approach inclusion, diversity, and equity in their organizations. He teaches, conducts research and consults with global leaders to help them use difference strategically to drive high performance.”

      Sounds like a DEI professorship to me.

      In fairness, he is also the Interim Executive Director, Contemplative Sciences Center, University of Virginia.

      No details are provided for that role in Mr. Davidson’s LinkedIn profile.

      I didn’t know what “contemplative science” meant so I looked it up.

      Here is the definition:

      “It is proposed that contemplative science is an interdisciplinary study of the metacognitive self-regulatory capacity (MSRC) of the mind and associated modes of existential awareness (MEA) modulated by motivational/intentional and contextual factors of contemplative practices.”

      I did not cherry pick that definition. It was the definition that came up at the top of the list when I entered “What are contemplative sciences”? into Google’s search engine.

      1. Lefty665 Avatar
        Lefty665

        “Interim Executive Director, Contemplative Sciences Center, University of Virginia.”

        I think therefore I am an Adam, (temporary) 🙂 UVa actually pays for this?

      2. Dick Hall-Sizemore Avatar
        Dick Hall-Sizemore

        I still don’t understand what it means, unless it means how to sit around and think deep thoughts.

      3. Lefty665 Avatar
        Lefty665

        “Interim Executive Director, Contemplative Sciences Center, University of Virginia.”

        I think therefore I am Adam, (temporary) 🙂 UVa actually pays for this?

      4. WayneS Avatar

        “…the metacognitive self-regulatory capacity (MSRC) of the mind and associated modes of existential awareness (MEA) modulated by motivational/intentional and contextual factors of contemplative practices.”

        Long motorcycle rides are the best way to modulate your modes of existential awareness so that you may explore the motivational/intentional and contextual factors which affect your life…

        Now where’s my $451,000? (They can keep the benefits)…

        1. Lefty665 Avatar
          Lefty665

          “contextual factors” Like the bozos to whom bikes are invisible?

      5. Dick Hall-Sizemore Avatar
        Dick Hall-Sizemore

        I still don’t understand what it means, unless it means how to sit around and think deep thoughts.

        1. WayneS Avatar

          I predict that full legalization of marijuana will result in a significant increase in the number of contemplative scientists in Virginia…

          1. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            dead on correct! 😉

  4. Stephen Haner Avatar
    Stephen Haner

    Wait until they follow their faculty peers at Dartmouth and form a union!

    1. DJRippert Avatar
      DJRippert

      Steve: I see you have replaced your prior Discus artwork (a goat made of beer bottles as I recall) with a new profile picture. This seems to be a chapo at a cannon with a flag that says, “Come and take it” along with a star and a large jalapeno pepper.

      Is this a scene from the under-reported “Battle of Chipotle Grill”?

      1. Stephen Haner Avatar
        Stephen Haner

        That level of disrespect could get you killed in parts of Texas, pardner…They are so proud of that cannon (which is about the size of a small Navy swivel gun…)

    2. Matt Adams Avatar
      Matt Adams

      That will ultimately be the end of less popular Sports as well as Women’s sports in College. Men’s Football and Basketball fund all other sports and good number of them items at Universities. When they are forced by the Union to pay for healthcare and much more, they will use the money they’ve typically distributed elsewhere, back to inhouse.

  5. Rafaelo Avatar

    I am reminded of the well dressed young man who approached me at Metro Center as I awaited the next train, and asked would I be interested in a “great opportunity for income divestment?”

    Unabashed scams like DEI often announce themselves.

    1. Lefty665 Avatar
      Lefty665

      It’s a lot more articulate than “Hey man, got any spare change?” or “Your wallet or your life mofo.”

  6. f/k/a_tmtfairfax Avatar
    f/k/a_tmtfairfax

    Why not fire the DEI staff and use the savings to help fund the free tuition program for low-income students? Adding more low-income students would make the University more diverse.

    1. LarrytheG Avatar
      LarrytheG

      Oh that would rile up the UVA-hates even more!

  7. UVAPast Avatar

    Why not stop the DEI money and transfer it to NIL money and enhance the UVA athletic program?

  8. James McCarthy Avatar
    James McCarthy

    If DEI pollutes the academy, how to regard the sports program:

    The University of Virginia (UVA) offers a variety of sports programs for student-athletes. Let’s delve into some details:

    Total Revenue and Expenses:
    UVA’s athletics program generated a total revenue of $128,298,742 while incurring expenses of $121,148,3411.
    The net profit from UVA’s sports department was $7,150,401. Keep in mind that the financial performance can vary across different sports.

    Sports-Related Financial Aid:
    A total of 999 student-athletes participate in varsity sports at UVA, with 536 males and 463 females.
    Sports-related financial aid is available, and the average award per athlete is approximately $22,273.
    On average, male athletes receive around $22,347, while female athletes receive about $22,187 in sports aid1.
    Coaches’ Compensation:
    UVA has 23 head coaches: 11 lead men’s teams, and 12 lead women’s teams.
    Women’s team head coaches earn an average annual salary of $233,955, while men’s team head coaches receive approximately $1,194,270.
    Additionally, there are 34 assistant coaches for men’s teams and 29 assistant coaches for women’s teams. Their average annual salaries are $82,559 and $242,618, respectively

    1. Matt Adams Avatar
      Matt Adams

      Missing a “then” for that conditional reason, but it’s also irrelevant and a boatload of your usual red herrings.

    2. WayneS Avatar

      Are you recommending that UVA bring DEI to their athletic programs?

      I suppose they could, to be fair to everyone, but I think it might mean their football and basketball teams would suck in perpetuity…

      No, I’m going to have to disagree with you. I think merit is the best way to determine who should play sports at the collegiate level. Only the best players should make the team no matter their race, ethnicity, or whether or not they divert embracity…

      1. LarrytheG Avatar
        LarrytheG

        “Merit” when applies to sports is not exactly a pure concept at all.

        For instance, the teams don’t seek the best players at all positions all the time. They seek to keep players with talent at a position they need filled as opposed to going and finding the best one with the best skills right now.

        That’s what school and learning is about.

        It’s about developing “talent” that is not yet developed to it’s potential.

        It’s the same with the Armed Services. They don’t go out looking for the best talent available to fill their positions and needs at all. They self-train but when they recruit they do have minimal standards for individuals who do have promise to be developed to a desired potential.

        1. WayneS Avatar

          You really are completely unable to recognize a joke when you see one, aren’t you?

          1. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            well, considering the source…

    3. Kaedwon Avatar

      There are exactly two collegiate sports that generate revenue: football and mens basketball. Without them there would be no other sports, men’s or women’s. Every AD in the country knows this, even if they don’t speak it out loud.
      In a fair system the football and men’s basketball players would be paid for all the revenue they’re providing to their athletic departments, and for allowing women’s athletics to exist at all. But it’s not fair, is it?

  9. WayneS Avatar

    Based on the closed-minded & unchanging attitudes and the repetitive speech and actions of those who work the DEI racket, I’m pretty sure the entire DEI staff can be replaced with AI-bots.

    UVA would still be a “leader” in bringing DEI to higher education, and after an initial capital investment they could probably save $19 million per year in salaries and benefits.

    At least until the AI-bots “learn” enough to demand, and begin unilaterally initiating, DEI for AI-bots…

    1. Lefty665 Avatar
      Lefty665

      They will likely be the same AI-bots who recently brought us pictures of Black Nazis and Popes.

      It is not Equity if not Diverse and Inclusive of fact and learning challenged AI-bots.

  10. LarrytheG Avatar
    LarrytheG

    DEI is not going away. It’s probably too much in budget and staff but the fundamental reason is that DEI is actually needed and affects who will attend or not.

    And despite all the talk about cost and tuition – somehow this gets
    ignored:

    ” The University of Virginia will waive all tuition and fees for Virginia state residents whose families make less than $100,000 a year, university president Jim Ryan announced Friday.Dec 12, 2023″

    1. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      “Waive?” Here is the real sentence. “We will raise the cost on every other student so we can provide free tuition….” The term of art is an income transfer program.

      1. DJRippert Avatar
        DJRippert

        Of course that’s right. And income transfers always involve taxes – whether the taking side of the income transfer is called a “tax” or not.

        So, we have the unelected administrators at a branch of the state government called “UVa” implementing a tax.

        Presumably, the Board of Visitors are where the people of Virginia are represented. However, we have seen again and again that:

        1) The primary criterion for selection to the Board of Visitors is making political contributions to the right politicians, and ..
        2) The administrators of UVa routinely keep information and data from the Board of Visitors.

        The net effect is an entity of the state government implementing taxes with no effective oversight and with no mandate from our elected representatives.

        Effectively, taxation without reprersentation.

        1. walter smith Avatar
          walter smith

          And let’s not forget the few years ago $15 living wage that Messiah Jim promised…paid with OPM (other peoples’ money)

        2. LarrytheG Avatar
          LarrytheG

          ya’lls approach to govt these days is conspiracy theories and the like. Congrats

      2. Nancy Naive Avatar
        Nancy Naive

        Art? Is that the “Art of the Deal”?

      3. LarrytheG Avatar
        LarrytheG

        how do you KNOW it’s not from endowments?

  11. Irene Leech Avatar
    Irene Leech

    Be aware that some of this infrastructure has been in place for decades and provides truly needed functions. Don’t throw it all away because it can be linked in some way to today’s DEI culture war.

  12. Thomas Dixon Avatar
    Thomas Dixon

    How much longer will the ignorant elitists allow the Jefferson statue to remain?

    1. WayneS Avatar

      Not sure, but it should probably be counted in months rather than years…

    2. walter smith Avatar
      walter smith

      Ryan has said as long as he is President, the Jefferson statue is safe.
      I interpret that as a threat, not a promise.
      It’s like Clinton saying “I did not have sex with that woman, Miss Lewinsky.”
      He was not denying some form of sexual activity with Monica – he was assuring Monica that he did not have sex with “that woman” – Hillary.
      You always have to parse the words of Dems very carefully…

      1. Lefty665 Avatar
        Lefty665

        Interesting parsing of Bill’s statement. Sorta like his testimony “It depends on what the meaning of ‘is’ is”.

        1. walter smith Avatar
          walter smith

          He didn’t get the moniker Slick Willie for nothing!

          1. Lefty665 Avatar
            Lefty665

            Yeah, but he wasn’t original, it was downstream from Slippery Dick. Think they gravitate to the line of work.

          2. Lefty665 Avatar
            Lefty665

            Yeah, but he wasn’t original, it was downstream from Slippery Dick. Think they gravitate to the line of work.

          3. Lefty665 Avatar
            Lefty665

            Yeah, but he wasn’t original, it was downstream from Slippery Dick. Think they gravitate to the line of work.

  13. James Kiser Avatar
    James Kiser

    Criminal cartel.

  14. Lefty665 Avatar
    Lefty665

    Multiple DIE employees are compensated at more than $10,000 PER WEEK, 52 weeks a year, not just when the kids are around. During summer vacation they make more money than the average American makes in a year. While that is certainly diverse from the norm it is not inclusive or equitable.

    That UVa DIE employees are in the top .1% of earners in the whole country is bizarre, especially while black male enrollment at UVa as a percentage is half what it was 20 years ago and around a quarter of its proportion of the population as a whole. $20 million in DIE overhead and the percentage of black guys enrolled is half what it used to be in the bad old days. What’s wrong with this picture?

    Motto of the DIE elite for the striving masses: “Let them eat DIE statements, I’ve got mine suckers”.

  15. Carmen Villani Jr Avatar
    Carmen Villani Jr

    Thanks for posting this Jim but this isn’t the first time the DEI bloat at UVA has been pointed out. Dr. Jay Greene and Mr. Michael Gonzolez of the Heritage Foundation put out a report last September.

    From the article: “The University of Virginia (UVA) listed 94 people on university websites as part of its DEI bureaucracy (a footnote describes the bureaucracy in greater detail). Two years ago, UVA had 1,454 tenured or tenure-track faculty, giving it a ratio of 6.5 DEI personnel for every 100 faculty members. Only the University of Michigan had more DEI personnel, with 163, but Michigan lagged UVA in the size of its DEI bureaucracy relative to the number of faculty, with a ratio of 5.8.”
    See: https://www.heritage.org/education/report/the-dangerous-dei-bloat-virginias-public-universities

    While I may disagree with policies that Democrat politicians put forth, I give them credit for having the backbone to stand behind their words.

    Governor Youngkin campaigned on getting rid of “inherently divisive concepts” such as DEI. The voters of Virginia elected him to do so. Instead of showing backbone, he does as many Republican politicians by talking a good game but failing miserably in delivering the goods. Even worse, a member in his administration goes to VMI (my alma mater) and asserts that “DEI is dead!”
    See: https://www.forbes.com/sites/janicegassam/2023/07/16/is-diversity-equity-and-inclusion-officially-dead/?sh=245a58849e10

    Maybe if Governor Youngkin could demonstrate some backbone when it comes to DEI, he would look to Virginia law which enables him to remove any “member of the board of any public institution of higher education.”
    See: https://law.lis.virginia.gov/vacodefull/title23.1/chapter13/#:~:text=%C2%A7%2023.1-1300.%20Members%20of%20governing%20boards%3B%20removal%3B%20terms%3B,term%20shall%20be%20filled%20for%20the%20unexpired%20term.

    1. LarrytheG Avatar
      LarrytheG

      This really illustrates that the stuff coming from the right these days is just plain bogus blather that most legitimate leaders will not really follow through with because they know it’s culture war stuff. More bad stuff is coming your way as more and more actual people realize that also.

      The Culture War is going to be the undoing of the right as people realize they’re not about leading and dealing with real issues but boogeyman politics which serves no valid purpose.

      1. Carmen Villani Jr Avatar
        Carmen Villani Jr

        Just to be clear, I support the elimination of DEI from “public institutions.” I do believe there is a “cultural war” going on. In any relationship, there is enough blame to go around with all parties involved.

        Congressman Good highlights what Jim points out in this article:

        https://www.theepochtimes.com/epochtv/lawmaker-calls-out-dei-bloat-in-large-public-universities-5602938?utm_medium=app&c=share_pos1&pid=iOS_app_share&utm_source=iOS_app_share?utm_source=ref_share&utm_campaign=copy

        1. LarrytheG Avatar
          LarrytheG

          DEI has been around for a long time in efforts to insure that all students are treated as welcome and have equal opportunity no matter their race, gender, etc.

          Even the US Military has a form of it as well as many Corporations.

          Ya’ll are riding a wrong horse IMO and when you invoke that particular Congressman, we know the politics.

          1. Carmen Villani Jr Avatar
            Carmen Villani Jr

            There are a lot of people “riding that same horse.” 😄Please allow me to “invoke” others.

            Bill Ackman: “The techniques that DEI has used to squelch the opposition are found in the Red Scares and McCarthyism of decades past. If you challenge DEI, ‘justice’ will be swift, and you may find yourself unemployed, shunned by colleagues, cancelled, and/or you will otherwise put your career and acceptance in society at risk.”
            https://twitter.com/BillAckman/status/1742441534627184760?lang=en

            Former DEI Training Officer Erec Smith: Describes DEI training as “useless” and that it “seems to be making people less likely to interact with people who are unlike them.”
            https://youtu.be/VZSusqfJeD4?si=JTFesF8RBEr_7Ubb

            George Will: Outlines how DEI has hurt “nationally acclaimed and locally revered Masterman School” in Philadelphia.
            https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/03/24/philadelphia-masterman-school-decline-dei/

            John McWhorter: Describing CRT, which there are experts that believe has ties to DEI. “This stuff is scary;” “It’s a religion.”
            https://youtu.be/CXTi56Ilyfo?si=8JVppY50s31Ae_8t(youtube.com)

            You also make mention of the military implementing DEI concepts. While it would be incorrect to say that DEI is the sole reason for a decline in the overall military readiness as outlined in a Government Accountability Office (GAO) and Heritage Foundation report, it is provided as one of the potential reasons in the Heritage Foundation report. The same can be said of a decline in military recruitment.
            https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/23797876-military-readiness-improvement-in-some-areas-but-sustainment-and-other-challenges-persist-may-2-2023?responsive=1&title=1

            From the Heritage Foundation report:
            “As currently postured, the U.S. military is at growing risk of not being able to meet the demands of defending America’s vital national interests. It is rated as weak relative to the force needed to defend national interests on a global stage against actual challenges in the world as it is rather than as we wish it were. This is the logical consequence of years of sustained use, underfunding, poorly defined priorities, wildly shifting security policies, exceedingly poor discipline in program execution, and a profound lack of seriousness across the national security establishment even as threats to U.S. interests have surged.”
            https://www.heritage.org/sites/default/files/2022-10/2023_IndexOfUSMilitaryStrength.pdf

            As for the corporate world, I found articles highlighting corporations reducing DEI programs. I will point out that both articles view this reduction as a negative.
            https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2024/02/20/corporate-diversity-job-cuts/

            https://www.reveliolabs.com/news/social/cutting-costs-at-the-expense-of-diversity/

            It is clear that there is a divide as to whether or not DEI is beneficial. I believe it transcends politics. It is also clear that the voters of VA determined that it should not be in “public institutions” of learning. I also believe that corporations should determine whether they should have DEI programs based upon their assessment and not be coerced into doing so. After all, doesn’t that really speak to diversity, inclusion, and a respect for differing points of view?

            I appreciate you taking the time to respond to my post in a respectful manner. We may still disagree, but civil discourse is a good thing. Enjoy your weekend.

  16. Heimdallr Avatar
    Heimdallr

    Seems quite hypocritical to quote Thomas Jefferson “we hold these truths…” when in fact what he held were slaves and repeatedly had non-consensual relations with at least one of them- they weren’t ‘dating’ as some people like to believe. But I digress, America has had a dirty past with the way it treated blacks and to some extent, women also. There were 4400+ documented lynchings (for those who pretend they don’t know- that’s a form of cold blooded murder and terrorist activity against blacks). 84 were documented in VA, by the way. Redlining, lack of opportunity, segregation during your Daddy’s time (ask him for yourself). Let’s just be honest and genuinely good people- I know it’s hard because we want to continue to thrive on that old slave money to give us the finer things in life that we actually detest working for.
    To understand how the E in DE&I works, let me break it down for you. Tom and Jack would like to run a foot race. The race is 10 miles long. Tom starts off unfairly 30 mins ahead of Jack without warning. Is it simply ok for Jack to just take off running in hopes of catching up to Tom? Or does Jack need a mechanism to help him ‘catch up’ since he most like has no shoes either. Maybe use legos to help you conceptualize this. Unfairness simply doesn’t go away because we suddenly feel good about it. Nickel and diming these folks’ salaries because we think they should be cutting our lawns instead or serving us at the dinner table, only show who we really are inside. How dare these people want to have equal rights and a home, a car and the right to work next to us? All men are created equal but some are more equal than others…

    1. WayneS Avatar

      I absolutely do not want or expect someone with the credentials of Dr. Kevin G. McDonald to cut anyone’s grass but his own (and only if he chooses to). However, as someone who pays part of his salary I do not think it unfair to ask that he be effective in his job.

      When he was hired by university president Jim Ryan in 2019 he was described in UVA Today as “an experienced administrator with a proven track record of advancing initiatives that help universities be diverse, vibrant and welcoming communities“. I have no reason to doubt his past work, and no intention of doing so.

      I do, however, have a couple of questions about his performance at UVA.:

      1) In the four-and one-half years that Dr. McDonald has served as UVA’s Vice President for DEI and Community Partnerships, what initiatives has he advanced at the university to make it a more diverse, vibrant, and welcoming community?

      2) How successful have these initiatives been at making UVA a more diverse, vibrant, and welcoming community?

    2. WayneS Avatar

      I absolutely do not want or expect someone with the credentials of Dr. Kevin G. McDonald to cut anyone’s grass but his own (and only if he chooses to). However, as someone who pays part of his salary I do not think it unfair to ask that he be effective in his job.

      When he was hired by university president Jim Ryan in 2019 he was described in UVA Today as “an experienced administrator with a proven track record of advancing initiatives that help universities be diverse, vibrant and welcoming communities“. I have no reason to doubt his past work, and no intention of doing so.

      I do, however, have a couple of questions about his performance at UVA.:

      1) In the four-and one-half years that Dr. McDonald has served as UVA’s Vice President for DEI and Community Partnerships, what initiatives has he advanced at the university to make it a more diverse, vibrant, and welcoming community?

      2) How successful have these initiatives been at making UVA a more diverse, vibrant, and welcoming community?

    3. WayneS Avatar

      I absolutely do not want or expect someone with the credentials of Dr. Kevin G. McDonald to cut anyone’s grass but his own (and only if he chooses to). However, as someone who pays part of his salary I do not think it unfair to ask that he be effective in his job.

      When he was hired by university president Jim Ryan in 2019 he was described in UVA Today as “an experienced administrator with a proven track record of advancing initiatives that help universities be diverse, vibrant and welcoming communities“. I have no reason to doubt his past work, and no intention of doing so.

      I do, however, have a couple of questions about his performance at UVA.:

      1) In the four-and one-half years that Dr. McDonald has served as UVA’s Vice President for DEI and Community Partnerships, what initiatives has he advanced at the university to make it a more diverse, vibrant, and welcoming community?

      2) How successful have these initiatives been at making UVA a more diverse, vibrant, and welcoming community?

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