Thank-You for taking the time to read my susgestion.
M.Pecore
]]> Thanks for your time.
Sincerely,
Stephen Rose
As for ideas…..
Centralize more support services such as payroll, purchasing, etc. The hiring freeze has really hurt some units and not others because nobody shares support resources. It’s bad management to freeze support positions if that is not followed up with reallocation of human resources. There should be some sort of transparent methodology for departmental support staffing across all colleges. Currently, these decisions are made in the black box of the Deans’ offices and nobody trusts the process.
Last, our decentralized structure is truly a stone around our neck in this budget climate because it causes everyone to hoard their toys and not share. I am seeing that already. Surely there will be push back if Chancellor Martin attempts to centralize more functions, but she appears to have the chutzpah to take this on.
]]>I think it is absolutely essential that we start thinking and talking widely about some “worst case” scenarios. In the same way that we have preparedness plans for natural disasters, we need to have them for economic crisis. As a community, we need to find ways to help people work through their fear and denial, and think constructively and creatively about things like large reductions in available salary money, and reductions in benefits. These conversations are certainly already happening informally and it is an obvious and necessary step to raise them to a public and institutional level.
Some thoughts I’ve had or heard expressed recently:
1) With all the people in Wisconsin, the nation and the world who are losing their jobs right now, it is embarrassing to have the university request a 2.5% pay increase, or any increase for that matter. What a wonderful thing it would be if the Faculty Senate and Academic Staff Assembly voted to voluntarily forgo a raise in the next budget.
2) If we are facing layoffs at the University, consider asking the whole community if they’d be willing to reduce their work hours to keep everyone employed while still achieving the necessary salary savings. As a represented classified staff person, I would definitely be willing to do this. I would also be willing to actively advocate for it among my peers.
Now for my own personal “pie in the sky, wish we’d done this five years ago” idea. I am very concerned about community food security. I think it is critically important to continue and hasten current efforts to develop local food systems. Many people around the country are working on the “victory garden” concept employed in World War II to encourage everyone to grow as much of their own food as possible. Think of all the land we have on campus that we could, all of us working together, turn into vegetable gardens. Think of all the expertise we have on campus to help make those gardens prosper. As a community-wide social experiment, many disciplines, beyond the obvious ones, could have a role. With a little bit of thought, you’ll see how this idea could tie into all aspects of the University’s mission while directly helping, in one the most fundamental ways possible, ourselves and our community.
– Barb Avery