As always, great info from VP of Seminole Boosters, Jerry Kutz.
Locker Room Renovation??
Jerry Kutz
5/28/2014
"The locker room, coaches suites and Champions Hall
Apartment Complex/football dorm will be completed before the start of August
practice.
The locker room will have some high tech features in locker
design and will add a head coach's game day office in what was the player's
lounge. We'll renovate the hallways leading to the locker room update the
coaches office suites. Athletics is looking at a phase two project (next year)
to create a much bigger player's lounge and renovate all of the segment meeting
rooms.
Seminole Boosters will launch a capital campaign in July that
will offer naming opportunities in each of these facilities as well as the IPF.
We'll also launch a campaign to make renovations to Doak that will
sandblast, weld, replace, prime and paint the core stadium and make as many
concourse improvements as our fundraising campaign will allow. A club seat
project around the University Center Club has been proposed and will go before
the BOT and BOG which would generate the revenue to fund a bond issue for more
extensive improvements to Doak.
We're looking to launch the Champions
Campaign in July 2016 and start the big stadium projects sometime after the 2015
season pending approvals from the boards, fundraising success and the bonding
process. The stadium projects could take two off seasons to complete."
"The Champions Hall apartment complex is being built by Seminole Boosters and
will house both our football team and more than enough regular FSU students to
meet the NCAA requirements, so the players will have the best of both worlds.
They will have a place where they can all live together, and your leaders can
lead, yet have the diversity of general student housing which is important in
recruiting too.
No need to try to skirt any NCAA rules,
Two
players will share a two bedroom, two bath unit so they will each have their own
bedroom and bath, sharing a kitchen, living room. The facility will be built
like a dormitory with a secure lobby and all rooms accessed by an interior
hallway. Auburn completed a similar structure a year or two ago and believes it
helped pull their team back together improving team chemistry and
accountability.
Fisher said the IPF was priority 1 and the dorm priority
2. In August he will have both.
Even though Champions Hall will generate
a positive cash flow from rental income, we will make the project part of the
Champions Campaign offering naming opportunities ranging from $1000 up to $3
million.
We'll have a site dedicated to the Champions Campaign starting
July 1."
"When we get all the scholarships endowed is largely up to you, our Seminole fans
and Boosters. What I mean by that is every one of our capital campaigns --
including the Champions Campaign -- offers donors the opportunity to choose to
give money toward the scholarship endowment. Some choose to give to scholarships
but many choose to give to facilities.
We ran a campaign a few years ago
that was geared up for scholarships yet many of the people who gave designated
their gift towards facilities.
The key to successful fundraising is
being donor centric. You have to offer an array of choices to your donors to
inspire a passion gift and we certainly have a variety of needs to offer
including scholarships.
Our longterm strategy for endowing scholarships
also includes will and estate gifts. Many people like to see their money at work
during their lifetime building facilities because it is tangible and urgent.
When it comes to leaving their last gift, many choose the scholarship endowment
because it is a gift that lasts forever. When those people pass away -- and I
hope it isn't any time soon -- their estate will pass to the scholarship
endowment and we will see growth in the endowment fund. We have several people
who have left their life estate which would move the needle
significantly.
In the meantime, we ask and encourage people to give to
the endowment. And we create revenue generating projects (like Champions Hall
and College Town and hopefully the Club Seat section) that generate revenue to
fund the athletics budget so that we can avoid tapping into the earnings on the
endowment fund and let the interest compound upon itself.
You all need to
realize that VERY FEW athletic programs are fully endowed. Stanford I hear is
but I don't know of another. North Carolina is significantly ahead of Florida
State and Florida has more in their endowment but they are not close to fully
endowed either.
To give you an idea of why, consider this: Right now it
would take an endowment of about $190 million to fully fund scholarships at
today's costs (over $9 million with 20 sports) if you could earn 5 percent on
the endowment. But the cost of scholarships will continue to rise as tuition,
housing, food, fees, etc. will constantly grow. So if scholarship costs rise to
$10 million, you'd have to increase the endowment to $200 million to remain
fully funded. Add a sport like soccer or lacrosse and you'd have to increase the
endowment more.
Make sense?
In the meantime you have to fund your
operating budget to remain competitive. You have to build facilities that will
attract and retain the brightest coaches and players. And you have to improve
the gameday experience for your fans who are tempted to stay home and watch
games on television which is the greatest threat to athletics
budgets.
There is work that MUST be done on Doak and there is work that
NEEDS to be done on Doak to keep people coming. We ran a campaign a few years
ago that was geared up for scholarships yet many of the people who gave
designated their gift towards facilities.
Sandblasting, welding,
priming, painting HAVE TO BE DONE to keep Doak safe and
maintained.
Improved concourses, restrooms, concessions, WiFi, scoreboard
improvements DO NOT HAVE to be done for safety but they NEED to be done to
create a experience that keeps people coming rather than staying at
home.
If we had all the money in the world, we would do all the things
people demand on these message boards. But, like most of us, FSU has to
prioritize based on our income. By state law athletics cannot operate a deficit
budget nor can we borrow money without a revenue stream to secure it. Thus the
Champions Club generates revenue that increases our bonding capacity and will
allow us to tackle some of the HAVE TO BE DONE and NEED TO BE DONE
projects.
Make sense?"
"We very well could have it done by the 2016 season if all goes well with the red
tape and fundraising. We managed to get the IPF done in record time (and
Champions Hall which will be done in July) so we do have a history for raising
money and building things rapidly. This is a particularly challenging project as
you are working with a big, old, existing structure parts of which have to be
disassembled before you can sandblast, weld, prime and paint.
I think the
fundraising side will go well as we have projects people will want to support
with scholarships and football facilities where our players live, work and play.
I think people will also enjoy voluntarily giving to improve Doak, improvements
that will make their game day experience better.
The revenue engine that
will drive many of these improvements will be the Champions Club seating
section. It can generate enough revenue to support the bonds we will need to do
the stadium improvements. If we can presell the Club Seat project and get BOT
and BOG approval we can secure the bonding this time next year (2015) and start
the work right after the last home game in the third week of November 2015. We
think the right contractors can have the project completed by Sept. 1 of 2016.
If not, they may be substantially complete to where they can finish during the
season (taking Friday and Saturday off for the seven home games)."
"There's been thought to a field level box like Bama has in that South Endzone
but maybe not enough thought. It could be cool and I will discuss it with our
architects. We're still in the early planning stages and will do some additional
surveys and a lot more detailed drawings before we go to bid next year.
"
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