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President Anne Hopkins was welcomed with a
warm ovation. She reported that she had been on campus only
twice in 6 ½ weeks and was very happy to be back.
There are two issues to which she has been
paying a lot of attention the Reorganization Task Force
and the state budget. She addressed several points on each
issue. She assured the Faculty that there will be new university
governance. She urged people to stand back and give it a chance.
She commented that there is no magic to a Board of Regents.
There are other states that have different kinds of university
systems that work. Senator Graham's proposed constitutional
amendment to keep the Board of Regents in place is likely
too late. She feels we can make the new system work by being
smart and working with the new boards.
President Hopkins commented that there are
three issues in the Task Force that are big changes. One is
that the university will have institutional governing boards.
She noted that every institution where she has been has had
an institutional governing board. It is the most common way
that universities are governed. Board members are almost always
appointed by the governor. The primary impact of the changes
will be on her and her staff. They will have to work closely
with the new board. She and her staff will try to get to know
the board members and try to be responsive to their concerns
and issues. Dr. Hopkins said she would put herself on the
line by saying that the success of the university depends
on how effective the president is in dealing with the board.
The second issue is the seven-member state
board of education. They will have a huge array of authority
and power -- sort of like a Board of Regents, only elevated.
There will too much for them to do. There will be someone
who will be in charge of the ten state universities in the
system. They will have staff and she is hopeful those people
will come to understand the issues we face.
The third thing is that UNF will no longer
be a state agency. There are pluses and minuses to that. What
she has been told and what she hopes will happen is we will
be able to contract with the state for retirement and health,
etc. She commented that UNF can do its own contracts if we
like or work in collaboration with others. She said that there
will be much greater autonomy in the new system. We can make
our own rules. State laws will influence what we do.
The Governor's proposed budget is available
in electronic form from the state web site. There is a 1.25
percent reduction in the base budget. She promises that she
will keep the instructional budget intact. By budgeting differently
the university may be able to make this transition and not
have to cut other things on campus. She assured faculty that
UNF is okay for now. There will be some things happening but
she will be very open with information.
Pat Plumlee asked if the Foundation Board
would disappear. Dr. Hopkins replied no. It may do some different
things but it will be there. She gave some examples of what
it might do.
Verna Urbanski asked if UNF is not a state
agency, what is it? Janet Owen responded that it will be a
public body corporate. There is more flexibility.
Andrew Farkas asked if a public body corporate
has the right to strike? The response was, "It depends."
The UFF contract will be binding for three years and so it
is not a concern right now. There are a huge number of decisions
to be made. Dr. Hopkins said she wants to stretch out decisions
as long as possible. The university is too thinly staffed
to deal with them all immediately.
Steve Shapiro asked how a contract can be
binding if one entity will disappear [the Board of Regents].
Janet Owen said that there will be an interim board. The contract
can be enforced by law for two years.
Paul Mason asked Dr. Hopkins what she had
heard about the one extra hour of teaching that has been mentioned
in the press. Dr. Hopkins replied she had not heard much.
The workload is bargained collectively. She commented that
there are all sorts of productivity measures. She urged flexibility.
Bill Wilson asked if UNF will maintain its
tax exempt status. Yes. Dr. Hopkins said that there are lots
of uncertainties but no "horribles". That would
be a "horrible". She assured faculty that there
will be glitches, but that they will be fixed.
Dr. Hopkins remarked that the presidents
of the ten state universities had met collectively. She feels
the scare has brought people together. There are lots of good
things that can happen. She urged faculty not to worry about
a war among the institutions. She feels they realize that
the cost of a war will be so high that they will lose.
The question was asked if members of the
board will have to be from the institution's vicinity. Janet
Owen said there have been final recommendations about the
trustees. There will be nine. They can be from anywhere. Members
will have two term limits, four year staggered terms. If a
trustee misses three meetings, he is dismissed. Each will
undergo a background check. They can lobby. Dr. Hopkins remarked
that we should be thinking about who would be good trustees.
Judy Solano said she had heard that UF President
Young had said at alumni meetings that this would be their
opportunity to establish a presence throughout the state.
Philip Handy reportedly had said this would be their opportunity
to rise above mediocrity. She felt the things she had heard
were not consistent with what Dr. Hopkins had said about the
presidents working together. Dr. Hopkins said she didn't know
what to say but that there are different entities that he
speaks to and may forget that there are media present. Might
they want to have more of a presence in Jacksonville? It is
possible. Some of their health programs are fine. She commented
that we don't want people coming in this area to offer programs
that we offer or might want to offer, but there are some that
would be okay. When the Board of Education is in place, she
will ask for rules about service areas. That is one of the
areas that will have to be addressed.
Ellie Sheirer asked for more information
about retirement and health care. Dr. Hopkins said that the
services we now receive from the state will be available to
us for contracts and those could be either permanent or short-term
contracts. The presidents have talked about and are intending
to start an association of presidents to set up a consortium
that might decide to deliver services collectively. Janet
Owen talked about Community Colleges being statutorily authorized
to contract for packages. We could continue existing contracts
or contract for others. We could have a collective group called
"safe harbors" to make sure that things don't fall
through the cracks during the transition. Dr. Hopkins noted
that the Transition Task Force has said to tell them what
safe harbors we want to do and they will work with us. There
are many options.
Pali Sen asked about the tenure issue. Dr.
Hopkins said the changes will not affect tenure. She said
the issue of tenure and academic freedom has been discussed
and will be discussed. It has happened at other places in
other states and always is protected. She noted that she and
other presidents would have to help new board members understand
about tenure. She believes tenure is so essential that she
would "die on the sword for tenure". She believes
that is so essential to what we are as an academic institution
that she would fight for it. She thinks the Task Force members
did not even think about those kinds of things at all. They
were not even on their radar scope.
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