It might be a somewhat different story here at Sac State. We have a fee card system that funds the technical staff. All students that want to use practice rooms, the listening lab, check out instruments, etc. are required to purchase a fee card. The money from the cards is divided up among the four tech staffers of the music dept. I have found that to be enough to keep the tools and supplies flowing in. Perhaps this is similar to the class fees that Fred mentions. A side benefit is for security. If I see someone that I am not familiar with in a practice room I can sweetly ask them if they have a fee card. It is pretty easy to waltz into the building so this situation comes up from time to time. I am still full-time but we did lose one secretary in the music dept. Many part timer faculty are gone. I think the worst symptom so far has been the low morale. Rumors are running wild. Folks gripe a lot and threaten to be less productive. I see some of the things Israel mentions with holes in the administrative system. It's a Brave New World. Ted Kidwell, RPT California State University, Sacramento Capistrano Hall, rm. 153 6000 J Street Sacramento, CA 95819-6015 916.278.6737 -----Original Message----- From: caut-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:caut-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of Greg Granoff Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 9:28 AM To: caut at ptg.org Subject: Re: [CAUT] bursting at the seams Fred, Israel gives a very good summation of much of the situation at CA State campuses, of which Humboldt, where I work, is one. All of us are at the mercy of Arnold and a totally dysfunctional state legislature that can't pass a budget because of a 2/3 majority requirement, and a small "superminority" of obstructionists who can stop anything in its tracks, no matter how worthwhile or obviously necessary. To be fair to the "governator", he has proposed a partial restoration of funding to us that has been lost over the last couple years, but no one knows if the final budget will have it--assuming a budget is even passed. Things are that bad. We have not seen the decimation of adjunct faculty that Israel's SF campus has seen, but we are on a very tight leash and time base cuts to staff positions have taken their toll. My full time position remains, but I may be the only staffer in the department whose situation didn't change. That said, OE money is almost non-existent, and many facility/equipment issues that desperately need addressing will continue limping with a constant "robbing Peter to pay Paul" approach. The other campuses in this system may have different situations; it all depends on how planning for budget emergencies has been conducted by administrative types. Ted Kidwell at the Sacramento campus may have a different story. Ted? Greg Granoff Humboldt State University -----Original Message----- From: caut-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:caut-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of Israel Stein Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2010 8:17 PM To: caut at ptg.org Subject: [CAUT] bursting at the seams Fred, It appears that you are embarking on the path that we here in California have been treading for the past 7-8 years, thanks to the Governator's continuing cuts to education funding. First we followed the same "do more with less" as you are now attempting to do (and that was on a system-wide basis, on all 33 Cal State University campuses, of which SFSU is one. The breaking point came last year, with the draconian cuts following that California budget impasse. So the University did not admit a Spring 2010 class, cut admissions, and cut faculty. We lost all adjunct faculty - which amounted to the entire winds faculty - and a whole lot of graduate assistants. The department was essentially decimated. When Federal stimulus funds came in, some of the faculty cuts were restored, and the Director figured out a workaround to allow wind students to finish their degree by using scholarship money (which the School of Music and Dance controls) to pay the dismissed faculty for private lessons - and have them fulfill the degree requirements that way. That was last year. This year we have a reduced enrollment, so the piano service workload has not increased - but it has become almost impossible to purchase supplies, since the administrative staff has been decimated, and all purchases have to be approved by the Dean's Office. It took me 3 hours of running around on 2 successive days to get a $100 purchase approved - not because the Assistant Dean who actually approves purchases was uncooperative (I have worked with him on several matters and we have a good, trusting relationship) but because of the staff cuts nobody knows who is supposed to do what... In the end, the purchase was put through by the same woman who I have been dealing with in the Music Office for the past 3 years - but who is now working in the Theater Office but appears to be the only one who knows how to put through Music and Dance purchases... This is going to be a very interesting year. In the Chinese proverb sense... Especially if Meg Whitman (retired E-Bay CEO) succeeds in buying the Governorship - so far she spent $108 million of personal funds on her campaign, and she is still in a dead heat with Jerry Brown who is hardly campaigning... Seeing her announced plans, we will be wishing for the "good old days" with Arnold... Israel Stein > Message: 1 > Date: Thu, 19 Aug 2010 14:36:21 -0600 > From: Fred Sturm <fssturm at unm.edu> > To: College & University Technicians <caut at ptg.org> > Subject: [CAUT] bursting at the seams > Message-ID: <5CF2D39F-FB2C-48E8-86F2-274CA521891C at unm.edu> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed; delsp=yes > > I am curious whether other institutions are experiencing significant > rises in enrollment. We have been heading steadily up over the past > decade, with a faster increase the last couple years, and it seems to > be accelerating. 160 freshman enrolling in theory this fall, which is > double what it was five years ago. Classes are full to bursting, rooms > are in short supply. > Meanwhile, we face a 3.2% budget adjustment (cut) this fall semester, > and a projected additional 5% in the spring. And are told both cuts > are likely to be "permanent." On top of two years of 5-10% cuts each > year (this being a cut in the money allocated by the state). Well, I > guess that is the same story everywhere, pretty much. We tighten our > belts and move on. We are insulated to some extent, because 50% or so > of our budget comes from various class fees, and that income is rising > with the additional enrollment. > Regards, > Fred Sturm > fssturm at unm.edu > http://www.cdbaby.com/Artist/FredSturm >
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