By Published: July 18, 2022

Former arts and sciences dean endows new scholarship to help students in financial need


Like many American kids, Peter Spear started his cycling ā€œcareerā€ by pedaling around his own neighborhood with friends. Decades later, heā€™s fused his love of cycling with his desire to help students, and the result is a new scholarship tied to the collegeā€™s annual cycling event, which supports high-achieving students in financial need.

As an adult, he mostly engaged in ā€œcasual road cyclingā€ until 1996, when he left his job as professor and associate dean at the University of Wisconsin-Madison to become dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Colorado Boulder.

ā€œI really got into mountain biking when I moved to Boulder,ā€ Spear says.

Peter Spear and his bike

At the top of the page: The Elevations Credit Union Buffalo Bicycle Classic is an annual event that supports scholarships in the College of Arts and Sciences at CU Boulder.ĢżAbove: Peter Spear, the former dean of the college, has endowed a new BBC scholarship.

He served as dean until 2001, when he returned to serve as provost at UW-Madison. But after he retired in 2010, he headed back to Boulder where, he says, ā€œI got more seriously into road biking.ā€

A dozen years later, Spear rides 3,000 to 4,000 miles a year, typically racking up 75 to 100 miles on three weekly ridesā€”two with a group, one solo. Sometimes he rides the flats, but often heā€™s tackling the kind of climbing you wonā€™t find in Wisconsin (where the average elevation is just over 1,000 feet, with a high point of 1,900 feet, compared to 6,800 and 14,400-plus, respectively, in Colorado).

Sometimes the ride is chill enough, such as ā€œfruit loops,ā€ about a 40-mile route with its midpoint on Apple Valley Road in Lyons, north of Boulder. Other times itā€™s a crank up to Jamestown, Raymond or even Ward, at over 9,000 feet.

ā€œItā€™s how I keep in shape,ā€ Spear says. ā€œIā€™m an old guy, 78!ā€

And every year since returning to Boulder, heā€™s ridden the Buffalo Bicycle ClassicĢż(BBC), which supports scholarships for Colorado students with high academic merit who demonstrate strong financial need.

The BBC has raised more than $4 million to support scholarships since its founding in 2003 supporting more than 425 students.

ā€œI really like the BBC because it supports high-need, high-merit students in the college where I served as dean,ā€ says Spear, who has contributed not just through his annual registration fees, but also his annual donations.Ģż

In 2021, he decided to make a lasting difference through the creation of an endowed BBC scholarship to distribute support for a student annually in perpetuity.

ā€œLast year my wife said, ā€˜You know, you make a donation every year significantly larger than the entrance fee. Why donā€™t you donate $25,000 to create an endowment and forever spin off $1,000 a year for a scholarship,ā€ Spear says. ā€œI thought, ā€˜Wow, thatā€™s a terrific idea.ā€™ Fortunately, we are in a position to do that.ā€

Seleny Banuelos of Denver received the first scholarship from the endowment in 2022.

The scholarship combines Spearā€™s passion for cycling and his philanthropic goal of helping students in financial needā€”and heā€™d like to see other dedicated BBC riders follow his example.

ā€œI think a lot of people who ride every year make a contribution beyond the entrance fee, and if they are able, this is just a wonderful way to continue supporting students even after you are gone,ā€ he says.

This yearā€™s Buffalo Bicycle Classic, scheduled for Sept. 11, offers nine courses, ranging from the 14-mile Little Buff to the 100-mile, 4,000-foot Century and 59-mile Dirty Epic mountain-bike course. Learn more or sign up here.