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The
Emerging Urban University
The
lingering image of Yale as a tranquil college in a peaceful New
England town has been overtaken by one of a global university in
a distressed city. With a combination of moral commitment and pragmatic
concern, the current administration is embracing the new reality
-- with some heartening results.
by
Jennifer Kaylin
April 1995
Jennifer
Kaylin's most recent piece for this magazine was "Myths of
the Model Minority" in the February 1995 issue.
At the
news conference in Sterling Memorial Library introducing Richard
Levin as Yale's
22nd President, one of the first questions posed by reporters was
what his first official act would be in his new job. Without hesitating,
Levin responded that as soon as the conference ended, he would shake
the hand of New Haven mayor John C. Daniels, who was standing in
the crowd.
While many observers
agreed that Levin's answer revealed a refreshing dose of diplomatic
acumen, they also wondered if that's all it was. Did the President
truly plan to reach out to New Haven, to forge a new, more cooperative
relationship with the distressed city, or was he simply displaying
a keen sense of public relations?
The intervening two
years have provided some answers, and the consensus is that this
early act of bridge-building was not just ceremonial, but substantive
as well. From almost his first day in office, Levin-who has lived
in New Haven for more than 20 years-has demonstrated an awareness
of a fact that has long been ignored by many in the Yale community:
that the University long ago lost its identity as a splendidly isolated
institution in a peaceful New England community and is now located
in a city beset with the widest possible range of modern urban problems.
Building on the foundations
laid by his recent predecessors, the new President immediately set
to work on what has come to be known as the Yale-New Haven Initiative.
Among its components are a concerted effort to incorporate urban
issues into the University curriculum, a program that offers $20,000
over ten years to Yale employees who buy homes in New Haven, and
a cooperative venture between the New Haven Police Department and
Yale's Child Study Center to help children traumatized by crime.
The success of such increased civic responsibility has drawn national
media attention and even earned Yale prominent mention in a report
released in January by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development. Entitled "The University and the Urban Challenge,"
the report uses Yale as an example of how "the Federal Government
and institutions of higher learning can work together to revitalize
distressed communities."
But even
more important than the specific steps he has taken is the tone
Levin has set
for a campuswide reappraisal of Yale's relationship with New Haven.
In his inaugural address, the President made clear that there were
practical concerns as well as a sense of moral duty behind his call
for Yale to play a more active role in the fate of the city and
its residents. "We contribute much to the cultural life of
New Haven, to the health of its citizens, and to the education of
its children," he said. "But we must do more. Pragmatism
alone compels this conclusion. If we are to continue to recruit
students and faculty of the highest quality, New Haven must remain
an attractive place in which to study, to live, and to work. But
responsibility to our city transcends pragmatism. The conditions
of America's cities threaten the health of the republic. Our democracy
depends upon widespread literacy, and literacy is declining. Freedom
for all requires that those without privilege have both access to
opportunity and the knowledge to make use of it. We must help our
society become what we aspire to be inside our walls-a place where
human potential can be fully realized."
By most accounts, this
directive from the University's highest echelon is influencing the
way practically all sectors of Yale now operate. The decades-old
First-Year Building Project at the Architecture School is now devoted
to the design and construction of houses for low-income New Haven
neighborhoods (Yale Alumni Magazine, Summer 1994). The Drama
School is currently developing a program to give inner-city youngsters
a taste of the theater. A pilot program has been developed to give
city residents preference for new jobs created by renovating Yale's
power plant, and the "Buy in New Haven" program is expected
to increase by 10 percent the amount of money Yale spends on purchases
from local vendors. It's little wonder, then, that the Association
of Yale Alumni has chosen the changing face of town-gown relations
as the topic for its spring assembly, to be held from April 20 to
22. "Rick Levin made clear from his earliest conversations
with the Presidential search committee that he saw New Haven as
a major area of attention in the next decade," says University
Secretary Linda Koch Lorimer.
"We're serious about being a good neighbor and an involved
partner to a degree that we haven't been before."
Nobody is more aware
of the dramatic shift in Yale's relationship with New Haven than
Frank Logue '48, who was New Haven's mayor from 1976 through 1979.
"Things have definitely gotten much better," says Logue.
Yale students and faculty, particularly in the Medical and Law schools,
have a long tradition of volunteering their time and expertise to
needy city residents. It continues to this day through Dwight Hall,
a clearinghouse for student community service opportunities, and
such efforts as LEAP, an enrichment program that pairs college and
high school students with city children for an intensive regimen
of recreation and learning. But Logue says that what he's observing
today goes well beyond student involvement. "It's an institutional
commitment of an organized sort," he says, "not just extracurricular
altruism."
Logue contrasts this
with the situation when he was mayor-a time when Yale students threw
snowballs at city parades and New Haven residents resented Yale
for being aloof and arrogant. Logue remembers appearing before the
Yale Corporation in 1976 to request that the University pay $500,000
a year for fire protection-a service the cash-strapped city had
long provided at no charge. "They listened politely,"
Logue recalls, "but ultimately they turned me down, saying
that while it was an interesting suggestion, Yale had to do what
it does best, which was to be a world-class institution of scholars."
Logue
says that relations between the city and the University were so
chilly in those days
that in planning his first inauguration, it never occurred to him
or anyone in his administration to invite Yale's President, Kingman
Brewster. "I remember looking up, and off to one side was the
solitary figure of Brewster," Logue says. "I felt guilty
that I hadn't invited him, but things like that just weren't done."
It is symbolic of the changed times that when John DeStefano was
inaugurated last January, succeeding John Daniels, Levin was high
on the list of invited dignitaries. (He was out of town, but Secretary
Lorimer went in his place.)
Even Paul Bass '82,
the news editor at the New
Haven Advocate and a longtime critic of Yale's policies
toward the city, believes that the University's current efforts
transcend window dressing and represent a sincere commitment. "It's
not just P.R. anymore," the normally skeptical Bass says. "They're
doing some big things, but also a lot of little things that show
they're really beginning to understand what New Haven needs."
What particularly impresses
Bass is what he sees as Yale's new willingness to suppress whatever
paternalistic impulses it may harbor and to respect the opinions
of the city. He cites as an example the plans to bring a four-star
hotel to downtown New Haven. Last year, Yale, New Haven, and state
officials hammered out a complex funding package for the effort,
but when the city got nervous about the cost, Yale backed off, even
though it had enthusiastically endorsed the plan. Subsequently,
differences between the city administration and the developer put
the future of the project in serious doubt, but there has been no
"I-told-you-so" phone call from Woodbridge Hall, and Lorimer
stresses that despite the ongoing uncertainty, Yale remains committed
to working with DeStefano to open a downtown hotel. "We're
prepared to say that it doesn't always have to be done our way,"
she says. "One thing we're trying to demonstrate is that being
a more involved institution doesn't have to translate into imposing
our will. We're working in concert with business, city, and neighborhood
leaders to jointly fashion the future of the city."
Although much of the
credit for the new atmosphere of cooperation goes to Levin and DeStefano-who
took office at about the same time-the change in the relationship
didn't happen overnight, nor is it unique to Yale. Around the country,
other urban institutions are realizing that enlightened self-interest
obliges them to try to stabilize the deteriorating communities in
which they are located. Trinity College in Hartford, Columbia in
New York, Brown in Providence, and the University of Chicago have
all taken steps to turn their neighborhoods around.
At Brown, for example,
Thomas J. Anton, director of the Center for Public Policy and American
Institutions, has volunteered to work with the Providence Plan,
a nonprofit partnership between the university and the city to stem
that city's decline. "If Providence goes down the drain, it's
going to be more difficult for Brown to prosper," Anton says.
"We thought the time had come to try some unconventional solutions."
He adds that other urban universities across the country are receiving
wake-up calls they can no longer ignore. Only last month, a gun
battle between robbers and an armored-car guard erupted in Harvard
Square, and MIT is now installing metal detectors at campus parties
in hopes of stemming a series of stabbings and shootings.
Yale
is all too familiar with the impact of such events.
In February of 1991, sophomore Christian Prince was shot and killed
a few blocks from the President's house. That spring, while Yale's
reputation as a dangerous campus grew, applications dropped and
the recruiting of faculty became more difficult. But while the shooting
prompted a massive expansion of Yale's campus security system, it
also signalled a need to address the larger issues that contribute
to such tragedies. "We can never build a wall high enough to
make the campus secure if the surrounding neighborhoods are blighted
and dangerous," says Yale Corporation member David Boren '63,
the former U.S. senator who is now president of the University of
Oklahoma. "The only way to make Yale safe and improve its quality
of life is to improve the quality of life of those in the city around
us."
Douglas Rae, a professor
at the School of Management, is reluctant to put too much emphasis
on the Prince murder in trying to explain the reason for Yale's
new commitment to New Haven. "There's nothing as sharply defined
as an exact turning point," he says. "I think the shock
of discovery about the depth of the city's problems has passed,
and there's been a gradual maturation and recognition about our
circumstances. We weren't all that fast about getting there, but
finally people are saying, 'Okay, now let's try to deal with it.'"
Rae himself is a major
part of that effort. Working with the secretary's office and Yale's
Institution for Social and Policy Studies, Rae has created a series
of maps based on information about New Haven drawn from a variety
of sources. The maps allow policy makers to study in detail such
data as the distribution of income, birth rates, the incidence of
crime, and racial concentrations. The goal is to help assess the
effectiveness of programs such as community policing and neighborhood
watch groups and, by gaining an accurate picture of the city down
to the block level, shape programs and strategies for the future.
The challenge that Yale
faces can be gauged in a number of ways. New Haven has the second-highest
overall tax rate in the state and the fourth-highest residential
property tax rate. The per capita income is $12,968 (roughly half
what an undergraduate pays to attend Yale for one year), while the
average household income is $25,811. Almost 41 percent of New Haven
households are considered very low income, and 97 percent of the
region's poor minorities are concentrated in New Haven. To make
matters more difficult, 40 percent of the city's land is tax-exempt,
meaning that it must rely on a payment in lieu of taxes from the
state, ranging from 60 to 80 percent of the assessed value of the
property.
An ongoing source of
tension between tax-weary city residents and the wealthy university
located in their midst is that Yale pays no taxes on most of its
campus property. Estimates vary widely on how much New Haven would
receive from Yale if the University's 225 buildings and 820 acres
of land were on the tax rolls. The University administration puts
the figure at roughly $19 million, but city activists say it's more
in the neighborhood of $60 million. In an effort to defuse this
situation, former President Benno Schmidt agreed in 1990 to pay
the city more than $1.5 million annually in lieu of taxes, to add
the Yale Golf Course to the tax rolls, and to pay New Haven $1.1
million to close parts of High and Wall Streets to vehicular traffic.
This past year, Yale paid $4.9 million to the city in taxes on noneducational
property and motor vehicles, and in fire, sewer, landfill, and other
fees.
Despite
these steps, however, there are still many in New Haven who believe
Yale should pay taxes.
Lorimer says she knows of no organized effort to lobby the state
legislature to revoke Yale's tax-exempt status, but she admits that
it remains a perennial issue for the University in its relations
with its host city. "What we need to do more effectively,"
she says, "is to communicate the benefits we provide to the
community that justify our tax exemption."
While Yale's financial
commitment to New Haven has been substantial in recent years and
has included a pledge by Schmidt to invest $50 million from its
endowment, Lorimer says money is just part of the equation Yale
officials are applying to improve life in New Haven. She says University
officials are now taking a three-pronged approach that involves
economic development, human development, and neighborhood revitalization.
"Our strategy goes well beyond bricks and mortar," Lorimer
says. "We want to bolster the infra-structure as well as the
prospects of the residents who live in the neighborhoods."
As an example, the secretary
describes the way in which Yale went about reclaiming a Howe Street
apartment building from drug dealers and prostitutes. "We could
have just bought the building, taken it off the tax rolls, and used
it for overflow student housing," she says, "but we decided
it would be better all around if we could invest in the community."
The result was a limited partnership with a local entrepreneur,
who then bought the building and refurbished it.
Another initiative that
Yale and city officials cite as an illustration of how old problems
are being tackled in new ways is the creation of two "Family
Campuses" in New Haven. The idea is to have these campuses,
which will make use of two abandoned schools, serve as one-stop
community centers for families needing human services such as schooling
for their children, prenatal care, job training, drug abuse treatment,
daycare, or family counseling. Yale is helping the city apply for
foundation grants to fund the program, and University personnel
will help provide the services. If these two pilot projects succeed,
the plan will be expanded citywide.
Noble as such enterprises
may be, they inevitably raise the question of whether urban renewal
should be the responsibility of an institution whose main mission
is higher learning, especially at a time when tuition is rising
and the cost of running a major university is burdensome even to
a school with a $3.6 billion endowment. "It's not do-goodism,"
Lorimer responds. "It's part of a plan for enriching a major
component of the Yale experience. Just as we nurture our fiscal
and educational endowments, it's important for us to take care of
our environmental endowment, which is New Haven."
This philosophy is not
lost on members of the Yale Corporation, who support what Levin,
Lorimer, and others are trying to do. "Yale's involvement with
New Haven is not optional," Boren says. "Both from the
point of view of our humanitarian values and our own institutional
self-interest, it is mandatory." As for the city's response
to this burst of civic responsibility on the part of the University,
Mayor DeStefano says he's pleased with the relationship Yale and
New Haven now enjoy. "The fact that we had a change in leadership
at both places at about the same time gave us an opportunity to
redefine our priorities and roles," he says.
Yet pockets
of dissatisfaction persist.
One of the most outspoken critics is real estate developer Joel
Schiavone '58, who is less than overwhelmed by the form Yale's efforts
have taken. "Yale is good at reacting to particular needs-the
Ninth Square, Broadway, whatever," he says, referring to two
current Yale-backed neighborhood improvement projects. "But
its leaders still don't have an overall view of what the city should
look like when they get done." Schiavone argues that Yale is
wasting its money trying to eradicate poverty in New Haven. Instead,
he believes the University should concentrate its efforts on economic
development, particularly in shoring up the neighborhoods that directly
abut the campus, and attracting a more upscale citizenry. "All
of their initiatives are well-meaning and get good press, but what
do they really accomplish?" Schiavone asks.
Lorimer counters that
Yale has paid special attention to the streets adjacent to the University,
but argues that such efforts alone are insufficient. "We could
have done only that, and certainly making sure that our faculty
and students are safe is a priority of ours," she says. "But
we also felt we had a moral obligation to pay attention to the human
dimensions of the city. After all, what is a university if not an
institution that invests in human beings?"
The irony in all of
this is that, while Yale is trying to help stabilize New Haven,
evidence is growing that too much success-turning its host city
into a homogeneous community of gentrified neighborhoods and antiseptic
shopping districts in imitation of some other universities-might
prove a mistake in the long term. Indeed, Yale officials contend
that while the University's setting in the heart of urban America
may prove daunting to some potential applicants, it holds a growing
appeal to many others. More than 80 courses are currently offered
in the College on urban issues, and many have a clinical or field-work
component in New Haven. Largely in response to student demand, plans
are now underway to offer a team-taught course on cities. "New
Haven isn't just the site of students' education; it can be a part
of it as well," says Michael Morand '87, a special assistant
to the secretary.
Yale's fundamental challenge,
then, as it strives to give New Haven a helping hand, is to make
the city as safe and hospitable as possible without losing sight
of what makes it stimulating and diverse. Again, there's that phrase:
enlightened self-interest. "By providing a laboratory of experience
for faculty and students," says Boren, "Yale's location
in an urban environment with social challenges can in fact be turned
into a positive factor for the University."  |
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