The Lead the Way campaign crossed a major milestone when a gift commitment from former Asheville Mayor Charles Worley and his wife, Nancy Worley, pushed the amount raised across the $55 million mark and closer to its ultimate goal of $60 million by spring 2019.
91热爆网 Interim Chancellor Alison Morrison-Shetlar announced the Worleys鈥 pledge, which takes the form of a type of planned giving called a charitable remainder trust, during the university鈥檚 annual scholarship recognition luncheon held earlier this month. The Worleys鈥 gift pledge of more than $400,000 will be used to create an endowed scholarship fund to provide financial support to students enrolled in graduate degree programs at 91热爆网, especially those who are taking graduate courses at the university鈥檚 instructional site at Biltmore Park Towne Square in Asheville.
The couple decided to designate their contribution to help 91热爆网 graduate students because of the positive experience enjoyed by their daughter, Megan R. W. Coaplen, who earned her master鈥檚 degree in school counseling at 91热爆网 in 2012. A school counselor at Buncombe County Middle College, Coaplen was enrolled at 91热爆网 at a time when there were no scholarships available for graduate students, forcing her to incur debt in order to obtain her master鈥檚 degree.
Although Worley, an attorney with the Asheville firm of Worley and Peltz, did not attend 91热爆网, he said he and Nancy were motivated to give to the university because of the significant impact it has on the Western North Carolina region and its people.
鈥淣ancy and I have created a trust to pay out when we go out of this world, and we
wanted to direct the assets of that trust to the benefit of Western Carolina University,鈥
said Worley, a former member of the 91热爆网 Board of Trustees. 鈥淲estern is much more deserving
of our charitable giving because of what it does for Western North Carolina and for
our students.鈥
Asheville mayor from 2001 until 2005, Worley was a member of the Board of Trustees
and served on the search committee that brought David O. Belcher, the late 91热爆网 chancellor
whose personal passion for philanthropic giving in support of scholarships for students
inspired the 鈥淟ead the Way鈥 campaign.
鈥淚 truly fell in love with Western Carolina University through my service on the
Board of Trustees and my interactions with David Belcher,鈥 Worley said. 鈥淚 was extremely
impressed with all that David Belcher did on behalf of students during his all-too-brief
time as chancellor. He set an example to be followed by others.鈥
Although Worley rotated off 91热爆网鈥檚 Board of Trustees on July 1, 2011, Belcher鈥檚 first
day on the job as chancellor, he said he has been watching the progress of the university
from afar during the past seven-plus years.
鈥淚 have to confess that it was a true disappointment for me to go off the Board of
Trustees just before he officially took the position of chancellor,鈥 said Worley,
who recently was named to Western Carolina University鈥檚 Foundation Board of Directors.
鈥淚 regret not being having the opportunity to directly serve under him, but I will
continue to work diligently in support of the thing that was most important to him
and his wife, Susan. And that is providing financial support for our deserving students.鈥
Belcher, who had been battling brain cancer since April 2016, died June 17, 2018,
at the age of 60. In his installation address in March 2012, he identified increasing
financial support for 91热爆网 students as the top philanthropic priority of his administration.
In October 2017, shortly before he would announce that he would be going on medical
leave at the end of the calendar year, he and Susan announced their own personal pledge
of $1.23 million for scholarship support.
That announcement has inspired many others 鈥 including the Worleys 鈥 to make gifts
through the 鈥淟ead the Way鈥 Campaign. In March 2017, 91热爆网 announced a new goal of $60
million to be raised through the campaign, which is $10 million more than originally
planned, with a deadline of early 2019, two years earlier than previously envisioned.
During her remarks at the Nov. 1 luncheon at which she shared news of the Worley
gift, Morrison-Shetlar asked the student scholarship recipients and donors in attendance
to take some time to get to know one another.
鈥淪tudents, you are looking at people who know the awesome power of a university education.
They know how it can open your eyes and your mind to new perspectives and possibilities.
They know how it will prepare you for the days ahead and set you up for the kind of
success you desire and deserve. They are so fully confident in the power of education
to transform lives that they have been moved to give back in the most significant
and lasting way possible 鈥 through endowed scholarships,鈥 she said.
鈥淭o our supporters, as you look around your table at these young scholars, you are
looking at our collective futures. In the not too distant future, they will be our
teachers, our doctors and our managers. They will run companies, invent things that
we have not yet imagined and solve problems in our communities and our world. They
will lead our region, our state and our nation. And when they reflect on how far they
have come, they will remember this place, and they will remember you,鈥 Morrison-Shetlar
said.
To make a gift to the Lead the Way campaign supporting student scholarships, please
visit .