Report on the UCOP
Budget Discussion and FA
Government Relations Activity
Charles Nash and Myrna Hays
UC Budget News: On November 3 we
had our now-customary annual meeting with Assistant Vice
PresidentAcademic
Advancement, Ellen Switkes, and Vice PresidentBudget, Larry
Hershman.
From Dr. Switkes we heard that there REALLY ARE NO VERIPs in the works,
but,
some campuses are beginning to implement “negotiated
recall” agreements with
eligible faculty members. She said that UC recently lowered its
“normal
age of retirement” from 70 to 60. Apparently there is no
downside to
doing that, and it evidently opens a door that previously was for all
practical
purposes closed. She had nothing to give us in writing on the
subject,
but we surmise that what may be occurring is a creative
application of
Regents’ Standing Order 103.6. (See http://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/regents/bylaws/so1036.html)
Under this RSO retired faculty may be reappointed on a year-to-year
basis, and
in “special circumstances” multiple-year reappointments of
retired faculty for
up to five years at a time may be approved.
In all of our previous meetings, Larry Hershman had one or more bright
spots to
which he could point. This time the mood was pure black. In
past
years, in conjunction with the November Regents’ Meeting, UC
published a
2”-thick budget proposal loaded with numbers and graphs.
Mostly these
budgets built upon a “Partnership” or a
“Compact” that UC had crafted with
Governors Wilson and Davis. Under these, UC expected agreed-upon
budget
increases in return for the fulfillment of agreed-upon goals.
(The
Legislature was never a party to any of these agreements.) This
year all
deals are off and the budget book is about the thickness of the
telephone
directory of a medium-size campus.
Instead of numbers, the Administration will ask the Regents to adopt a
set of
principles on the basis of which negotiations over the numbers can
occur with
the Governor’s Department of Finance. These principles
could include (1)
holding the line against further erosion of the quality of the
institution
(which translates into no further increase in the student/faculty
ratio); (2)
continuing to honor the Master Plan, but only if the funding
which that
document promises is providedotherwise freeze enrollments; (3)
identifying
additional fee increases as a viable option. (On this latter
point,
current CPEC policy provides that student fees should not provide more
than 40%
of the actual cost of education. At the moment, fees account for
less
than 25% of that figure.)
UC’s priorities include doing whatever can be done to improve
faculty
salaries. At the moment they are projected to lag those of the
comparison
institutions by 7 to 9 percent (The numbers are not all in yet.)
Faculty
merits will again be paid, no matter what. [ED comment: this
could be
due in large measure to the lawsuits in the 1990’s that the FAs
supported.} Staff, of course, are not happy with that situation.
Hershman
said that if their merits cannot be funded at an appropriate level,
other
assistance such as improved health-care benefits might be sought.
Finally, he indicated that areas under scrutiny for budget cuts include
Cooperative Extension (once again), Outreach, and targeted research
funds. UC will insist that research cuts be made in
legislatively-specified programmatic areas instead of the more
typical
“Here are the dollar-amounts, you guys figure out where to make
them” kind.
Legislative Activity: The 2003 Legislative Session was a
frustrating one
because most legislators were almost hypnotically fixed on budget
issues, while
realizing as a practical matter that in the long run decisions would be
made at
the eleventh hour by a very small number of players.
Consequently, there
were very few hearings worth attending and even fewer bills worth
following.
On the latter score we tracked 17 bills, of which only six
related
directly to UC. Four of these died between February and April of
2003.
A fifth, AB 491 (Diaz), followed an interesting course (see below), but
at the
last moment its author asked that it be moved to the Assembly inactive
file,
from which it presumably could be resurrected at some later time by the
same
method.
As it was introduced in February, AB 491 was aimed at preventing
instructional
technology project and contract fiascos in the CSU system. In
that form
it passed easily (57:5) out of the Assembly and went on to the
Senate,
where, on September 4 in the Higher Education Committee, UC was added
to the
bill. In the amended version that passed the full Senate by a
vote of
25:9 on September 10, UC and CSU would have been required to have all
IT
projects or contracts exceeding $3 million overseen by an auditor
provided by the
Department of Finance. Systemwide projects exceeding $20 million
would be
required to be submitted to the Governor for approval, be included in
his/her
budget, and reviewed annually. The bill was then returned to the
Assembly
for concurrence with the Senate amendments, but instead, on September
12
Assembly member Diaz asked that AB 491 be placed in the inactive
file.
Only one of the bills we followed, AB 1230 (Hancock), passed the
legislature
and was signed into law. The bill establishes what is called a
“card-check”
recognition procedure for exclusive employee representational
recognition at UC
and CSU, in lieu of a secret ballot election. If an employer
challenges
the legitimacy of a union’s claim of majority support within a
bargaining unit,
a neutral third party may certify proof of majority support using
information
supplied through a signed petition, authorization cards, or union
membership
cards. If another organization claims at least 30% support, the
third
party will then conduct a secret ballot election to determine majority
support
of the employees. UC opposed this bill, arguing that
it would
deny employees the opportunity to make a decision in the voting booth
free from
outside influences, and to have “no representation” as one
of the options on
the ballot.
Only one other bill deserves to be mentioned here. AB 665 (Liu)
is a
two-year bill, which, if passed in a form similar to its present one,
will
profoundly affect higher education policymaking. It would combine
the
California Postsecondary Education Commission (CPEC) and the California
Student
Aid Commission into a new entity, the California Postsecondary
Education Policy
and Finance Commission. By statute, the new commission would be
the
principal fiscal and program adviser to the Governor and the
Legislature on
postsecondary educational policy.
Home | Newsletters | Members
| Join | Contact
| Links
All contents copyright 2003 The Davis Faculty
Association.