| As cuts loom, Lombardi vows to preserve
quality
by Sarah
R. Buchholz, Chronicle staff
ith a potentially significant decline in state
support looming in the coming fiscal year, Chancellor John Lombardi
assured the Faculty Senate March 27 that his administration is committed
to maintaining the quality of the core of the University. Lombardi
indicated that while the current fiscal state of the commonwealth
would likely necessitate some "pain," he believes that
the University can continue to be strong in teaching and research.
"We're looking
at some serious kind of conversation about a budget reduction we
expect sometime in April," Lombardi said. "Exactly how
much that will be we can't estimate at this point.
"The President's
Office is working very hard to try and get a fix on this and at
the same time to make a very strong case for what the University
and its campuses require to be able to continue the kind of high
quality performance that has characterized our service to the commonwealth.
How successful that effort will be depends a great deal on how difficult
the [budgetary] problem is that the Legislature faces."
Describing the Legislature
as "on the fast track," Lombardi said he anticipated at
least a general indication of the size of the Uni-versity's state
appropriation by the end of April.
"Any kinds of adjustments
we need to make, the more time we have to make them, the more effectively
and the more expeditiously we can make them with the least damage
to the institution," he said. "In all reality, we have
to anticipate that we will share in the kind of pain that is being
talked about and likely to be distributed across the commonwealth."
Lombardi said he has
a "pretty tight focus" on maintaining the campus's commitment
to its students, whom, he pointed out, have been covering some of
the appropriations shortfall by paying higher fees.
"Now our job is
to persuade our legislators they need to do their part to help match
the kind of support and commitment that our students have already
shown. Unless there's some unimaginable catastrophe in the financial
realm, we expect to maintain the quality of the academic programs.
We expect to maintain the core activity that we have imagined that
we're going to do in the area of maintenance and construction in
order to keep this campus from falling apart around us. We expect
to maintain the commitments that we have made to stay with our research
programs in terms of matching and the like.
"What a lot of
people don't recognize is that this system and this institution
in particular have already taken a sequence of significant reductions
and shrinkages and activities that actually extend back far longer
than the immediate two years of crisis. That is, we took a big hit
for the retirement process, the money of which was sucked up in
budget reduction instead of being used to reinvigorate our enterprise.
We took another hit mid-year last year.
"But in addition,
over the past...decade or so, the University has been trying to
keep body and soul together by robbing Peter to pay Paul, and so
we have not done the kind of maintenance everybody wanted to do;
we haven't done the kind of construction and renovation we've wanted
to do. ... We are now faced with a whole series of those kinds of
things that we must do - all of which takes the fat out of the system,
if there were any fat.
"There ...
is ... no ... fat. Consequently, reductions of scales that
have been talked about in various places, will change the campuses
... in fundamental ways. How they will change them depends a lot
on how much it is.
"The way we would
proceed, of course, is to start at the outside of the enterprise
because our primary priority is to sustain the teaching and research
enterprise of the University," he said. "And so we would
begin looking at things where we have subsidies and support out
in the countryside, out in programs and activities which, while
highly valuable, may not actually be supportive of the core mission
of teaching and research, and then work through that process until
we have arrived at the number that allows us to continue these core
programs that define the University."
Lombardi also noted
that, although the Legislature is unlikely to be receptive to addressing
unfunded employee contracts this year, he is committed to continuing
to raise the issue so that, as funds become available, the problem
will be addressed.
"Whatever happens,
at this University, we are going to maintain the core of teaching
and research at the highest level," he said. "What we
do, we're gonna do perfectly well; ... we're gonna do at nationally
competitive levels, in part because we owe it to our faculty and
in part because we owe it to the students who are paying the bill.
So whatever the news that's delivered to us, when we then come back
to you with the adjustments we have to make and we go through the
process of consultation that is mandated and is appropriate through
this council and its various subcommittees, we will be speaking
to that priority, those academic imperatives, to coin a phrase,
that are at the center of what we do."
Lombardi reiterated
that even substantial and severe cuts would not be the downfall
of the campus.
"Everything's not
gonna fall apart. We have a plan and we have a system, and we have
the capacity in this institution to guarantee that the stuff that
we're continuing on with here in the center of our academic mission
is gonna be first rate, it's gonna continue, the students are gonna
be supported, the classes will be there, the seats will be there,
they will be taught well, the faculty will be supported in their
teaching and their research enterprise."
|