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  • State Government
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Napolitano Defends UC Budget But Apologizes For Audit "Interference"

  •  Ben Adler 
Tuesday, May 2, 2017 | Sacramento, CA
Andrew Nixon / Capital Public Radio

University of California President Janet Napolitano testifies during a California Assembly hearing on the critical audit of the UC Office of the President on Tuesday, May 2, 2017.

Andrew Nixon / Capital Public Radio

University of California President Janet Napolitano is apologizing for what the state’s auditor has called “interference” with a newly-released audit.

“I am sorry we did it this way,” Napolitano testified to state lawmakers Tuesday in Sacramento, “because it has created the wrong impression and detracted from the important fact that we accept the recommendations in the audit report.”

The audit found Napolitano’s office hid $175 million from the public – and the UC’s own Board of Regents – by holding onto unspent money from previous years. It called UC budget practices “misleading” and criticized high management salaries. And it said the president’s office edited survey responses sent to individual UC campuses to make them more favorable.

050317Uc Audit

“I’ve been the auditor for 17 years,” state Auditor Elaine Howle said in response to a question from a lawmaker, “and in that time, I’ve never had a situation like this occur, where we’ve determined that there was – again, in our words – interference.”

The UC insists it has not hidden any money and that its reserve is only a prudent $38 million. Napolitano says campuses contacted her office with questions about the survey, and her office worked to assure the right people at each campus answered the questions.

“While we believe we did things appropriately, it is clear in retrospect that we could have handled this better,” the president said later in the hearing. “I regret that actions taken by (the UC Office of the President) have created misimpressions that shift focus from the progress we have made in recent years through our partnership with the Legislature.”

California lawmakers are exhibiting bipartisan outrage. And Assembly Republicans have asked Democratic Speaker Anthony Rendon to approve a subpoena of UC financial records. Rendon’s office says he’s reviewing the request.

Auditor's report on the office of the UC president by BayAreaNewsGroup on Scribd

President Napolitano's Letter to the State Auditor by Capital Public Radio on Scribd

UC Regents' Letter by Capital Public Radio on Scribd


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 university of californiaJanet Napolitanoaudit

Ben Adler

Director of Programming and Audience Development

Director of Programming and Audience Development Ben Adler first became a public radio listener in the car on his way to preschool — though not necessarily by choice.  Read Full Bio 

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