Vice Chancellor Patricia Borger announces her retirement

Patricia Borger, who has served as UWM’s vice chancellor of development and alumni relations since 2008, has announced her retirement. Borger will stay on until January of 2022 to give the university time to hire her successor, who will lead its next fundraising campaign.

Borger leaves big shoes to fill. Her proudest accomplishment at UWM, the comprehensive campaign Made in Milwaukee – Shaping the World: The Campaign for UWM, shot well past its consultant-recommended goal of $175 million to raise $251 million by the time it wrapped up in 2019.

“It’s huge for the university,” Borger said at the time. “The gifts really touch every corner of UWM.”

During Borger’s tenure at UWM, she and her team have helped raise more than $360 million for the university. The contributions help pay for scholarships, facilities, professors – to support the university’s dual mission to be both an access university for students and a top-notch research institution.

Borger is quick to share the credit.

“UWM has a great story to tell,” she said, detailing some of the key factors that made the campaign a success. “Volunteer community leaders played an important role. A chancellor who communicates well that UWM is worthy of philanthropic support. Generous donors and a superb, hardworking, dedicated team. All of those came together.”

‘Smart, consummate professional’

UWM Chancellor Mark Mone said Borger has been invaluable.

“She is among an elite group of leaders for her relationship building, strategy development, administration, and creation of innovative partnerships,” Mone said. “She is a smart, consummate professional who is highly effective at getting major projects visualized, organized and accomplished. There are few people besides Pat who could have maneuvered with such success through constantly changing and volatile environments to attain record-breaking levels of support for UW-Milwaukee.”

Before being lured to Milwaukee and UWM by then-chancellor Carlos Santiago, Borger spent most of her life and career in and near Cincinnati, Ohio. After earning a master’s degree from University of Cincinnati’s College-Conservatory of Music, she stayed on for a decade as director of the college’s preparatory department, which offers performing arts instruction for children and adults.

Then, having developed an interest in law, she enrolled in law school in her late 30s and launched a second career.

“My work as a department head at the University of Cincinnati required me to work with attorneys, and I thought I was sorry that no one ever suggested that I look at law as a career,” Borger said. “And so I decided it’s not too late, I can still do this. … I’m so glad I did. It broadened my outlook and taught me a new approach to addressing issues.”

‘I felt like I could make a difference’

After law school, Borger worked at Fifth Third Bancorp, Arthur Andersen, Cincinnati law firm Keating, Muething & Klekamp and the University of Cincinnati Foundation before UWM came calling.

“I wish I’d found UWM earlier in my career,” Borger said. “It’s been a great fit for me. I love the mission of the university, the wonderfully supportive colleagues, the generous and caring donors, and I have a terrific team of development and alumni professionals. It’s a place where I felt like I could make a difference.”

Borger has made a big difference, Mone said. “I thank Pat for her 13 years of dedicated and extraordinary service and wonderful interpersonal skills – skills that have translated into elevated campus capabilities — and we wish we had found Pat earlier in her career, too!”

At UWM, Borger set to work building relationships and raising money. In her first year, she helped raise annual giving to UWM from $10 million to $15 million, then boosted it further to a consistent average of around $30 million per year.

Building relationships

She also led the university’s development and alumni relations efforts, served on the chancellor’s cabinet and helped cultivate a partnership with deans and others on campus in fundraising projects.

Borger was instrumental in helping create the Connected Systems Institute and the Northwestern Mutual Data Sciences Institute.

“Pat has built a strong team of highly talented, dedicated fundraisers who collectively punch above their weight,” Mone said. “Pat’s mentorship and career-building of others has enabled longevity across the Development and Alumni Relations division. We will miss Pat and extend the absolute best wishes for a long, fulfilling retirement.”

In retirement, Borger plans to return to her first love, music, by rebuilding her proficiency at piano, and to devote time to needlepoint, reading and volunteering.

Meanwhile, she’ll be rooting for UWM.

“It’s a wonderful place,” Borger said. “I’m a first-generation college graduate. I truly believe higher education is transformative.  I want others to have the same experience that higher education gave to me. That’s why I loved being at UWM so much.”

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