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March 1, 2007

Stormy
weather at HSU
story and HSU protest photo by HELEN SANDERSON
Be still, sad heart, and cease repining;
Behind the clouds is the sun still shining;
Thy fate is the common fate of all,
Into each life some rain must fall.
-- HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW
The rain was coming down
in relentless sheets Monday, hard and steady upon the dozens
of Humboldt State students who gathered midday on the quad, cardboard
signs sagging, shoulders raised up to jaws for warmth, to rally
about, um ... Why were they rallying, exactly?
For an observer, it was hard to understand the
exact purpose of this foul-weather shindig, and not merely because
too many mic-wielding pontificaters chased obscure tangents on
topics that had little to do with the crisis at hand. No, beyond
that, it's not a surprise that the waters got muddy, what with
such big issues competing for attention: $5.5 million-worth of
looming budget cuts, faculty walk-out threats, eroding university
programs. And so, student sentiments flowed into a confusing
confluence of frustration that still, somehow, managed to be
uplifting.
So what was the objective, anyway?
"Mostly, the rally was to show [CSU] Trustee
Roberta Achtenberg that we won't just sit back and not have a
voice," explained Sarah Schneider, an environmental ethics
sophomore. "We figured it would be a good time to talk about
budget concerns and how wonderful HSU is and to express this
to her in person."
Achtenberg, Chair of the California State University
Board of Trustees, visited HSU Monday as part of the CSU-wide
Access to Excellence, an initiative to establish program priorities
and meet future challenges at state universities. During a break
from the all-day brainstorming session, Achtenberg and HSU President
Rollin Richmond briefly listened to rain-soaked students but
did not, however, address the crowd.
And while Achtenberg's presence generated buzz
and "raised awareness," as students like to say, it's
a small blip on the radar compared to the storm brewing over
HSU's shrinking budget and the proposed strike of some 24,000
CSU faculty across the state because of a contract negotiation
impasse.
So there are two issues of equal gravity following
parallel timelines: While HSU is trying to trim its expenditures
by 7 percent, or by around $5.5 million, unionized faculty are
negotiating for pay raises that they say are overdue and would
put them in line with other institutions around the country.
After almost two years of wrangling between administrators
and instructors, a "fact-finding" neutral third party
is now attempting to find common ground between the two. But
in the event that an agreement cannot be reached, the California
Faculty Association has authorized a vote to strike. The system-wide
vote will begin later this week and wrap up March 15, around
the same time the fact finder is expected to release a report.
If a majority of instructors call for a strike
before salaries are agreed upon, faculty will walk out in late
March or early April. Such a job action is something that CFA
President John Travis, an HSU government professor, is calling
a "very distinct possibility."
The CSU has offered the union a 24.5 percent faculty
salary increase over the next three years, but the union
argues that when state budget contingencies are taken into consideration,
the raise only amounts to 15 percent, which, the union counters,
will barely keep pace with inflation. Another sore point for
the CFA: the substantial pay raises university executives have
taken in recent years.
The impasse appears to be taking its toll on President
Richmond. In a Feb. 27 letter to HSU colleagues, he wrote: "The
failure of the negotiations between the CFA and the CSU is unprecedented
in my experience and troubles me a great deal."
But the troubles don't end there for Richmond.
Budget reduction talks are reaching a critical stage, with each
department of the university responsible for outlining ways to
cut 7 percent of its budget. Richmond has asked for final recommendations
by mid-March and plans to announce his finalized university budget
by the first week of April.
With the clock ticking, everything is on the chopping
block. To help prioritize university programs, the 13-member
University Budget Committee used a scoring method called the
Delphi technique to find out which programs are perceived as
the most vital to HSU's success and which ones are not.
Topping the list of 30 programs were the College
of Natural Resources and Science, Enrollment Management and the
University Police. At the bottom were the Career Development
Center, Public Affairs, KHSU-FM public radio and First Street
Art Gallery. Athletics also received low scores. The Student
Health Center fell toward the middle and the library was near
the top.
Along with possible staff reductions, class size
increases, limited class offerings and perhaps program eliminations,
a 7-percent increase in student fees is being considered to hack
away at the $5.5 million deficit by as much as $1.5 million.
A fee hike, however, would likely face resistance from students,
as Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is also proposing a 10 percent
fee increase for all CSUs for the next school year.
Ever since the budget woes were first laid
out last fall, faculty, staff and students have pointed
to the downward spiral effect the university is experiencing.
And the trend isn't showing any sign of slowing: Program erosion
leads to a drop in student enrollment and retention. Unmet enrollment
goals lead to reduced budgets. And so on.
Meanwhile, at least one professor, Phyllis Chin,
has voluntarily taken a salary cut to help assuage the impending
budget reductions. Since last month, Chin has donated 5 percent
of each pay check to the HSU math department where she been teaching
for the past 31 years. On Tuesday she said she was hoping that
other HSU employees -- in particular administrators -- would
follow her lead, but as far as she is aware, not one has.
"The administration recently had gotten raises
and I was hoping that some of them might see to doing the same
thing," she said. "By myself I don't make much of a
difference."
The next University Budget Committee meeting will
take place this Friday at HSU's Corbett Conference Room from
1-4 p.m.
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