Monthly Archives: November 2007

“Security consultant to conduct EMU audit”

Also in this weekend’s Ann Arbor News, “Security consultant to conduct EMU audit.” To quote:

A national firm whose specialties include security consulting will conduct a safety audit of the Eastern Michigan University campus.

The TranSystems Corp. will review a wide variety of issues that include building access, campus lighting and surveillance. The audit was among several new measures discussed at a campus safety and security forum last week at the EMU Student Center.

TranSystems has conducted similar reviews at Central Michigan University, Cornell University and the University of Virginia, said Janice Stroh, EMU vice president for business and finance. The firm will complete its work in March.

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“Anonymous blogging makes slander easier than it’s ever been”

From today’s Ann Arbor News “other voices” on the op/ed page comes “Anonymous blogging makes slander easier than it’s ever been,” written by Rev. Michael P. Orsi, who “is a research fellow in law and religion at the Ave Maria School of Law.” I don’t quite agree with Orsi, and– at the risk of being slanderous– I’m not sure he really knows what he’s talking about. But I thought people here might find it interesting. Here’s a quote from the opening paragraphs:

Calumny is defined by the American Heritage Dictionary as a “false statement maliciously made to injure another’s reputation.” Calumny has been part of life since the dawn of time. But opportunities for calumny have proliferated with the advent of the Internet, especially since the rise of the phenomenon known as “blogging.”

But the power to reach a wide audience while remaining in the shadows has proven a source of great temptation. All too many online commentators have been dazzled by this technology that magnifies personal identity and stokes the ego while providing a shield from the consequences of their words. Whole new avenues of calumny have been the result.

Regent Okdie

We now have a new Regent to complete the set:

 ”New EMU regent appointed

Mohamed Okdie, a social worker for the Detroit Public Schools, has been appointed to the Eastern Michigan University Board of Regents. Gov. Jennifer Granholm announced the appointment today.

Okdie, a graduate of Wayne State University, is appointed for a partial term expiring December 31, 2008. He succeeds Ismael Ahmed, who resigned to lead the state’s Department of Human Services. …

Security Forums

I went to the security forum on Thursday, which had around sixty people in attendance.  The one held Tuesday may simply have suffered in attendance because of the late hour, but this one was pretty flush with engaged people.  There is a Echo article on the event:

 ”Forums discuss security changes

 I found Loppnow and Stroh very informative about the 16 new security initiatives.  Some random information that stands out is that the Chiefs of the Ypsilanti and University of Michigan police are reputedly on the search committee for our new chief of police.  In addition, the “gotcha” program will be expanded from the dorms to faculty and administrative offices.  All and all, it seemed that the administration recognized the lapse in security conscientiousness the other week when the dorm burglaries were first being reported (or not), and now seems to be sincere and pro-active in its attention to security from here on out. 

I had to leave early for my office hours, so if anyone was there for the Q & A, I would be curious what kinds of questions were asked and what kind of responses where given.

This emphasis on security seems all the more important given that we seem to have a sexual predator on the loose near campus:

 ”Police see link between attack, earlier incident

EMU DPS releases information the right way

I (and along, I am assuming everyone else) received an email a couple hours ago from DPS, an “Informational Release” about a guy on the bus stop who might have had a gun. While the story is alarming enough, I wanted to bring to folks’ attention the email that was sent around about this:
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From “Office of the President:” News on budgets and security

Most (many? all?) folks at EMU just received an interesting email from “Office of the President,” aka Don Loppnow. You can read it all below the “read more” thing, but I will mention two things. First, I’ve heard rumors about money going back to academic departments as result of the funding we’re getting back from the state, though this might be a one-time only kind of thing. And second, I actually saw a bunch of people walking around campus the other day in security guard outfits. I had assumed they were here for some sort of training day or something; I’m glad to read that they are employees.
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EMU has cut spending on academics by over $21 million in 5 years, as university revenues have grown

EMU’s management has, in the last five years, cut over $21 million from Academic Affairs, even as university revenues have grown by over $45 million.

Why? Because Welch Hall lacks qualified budget officials who comprehend the purposes for which a university exists. Because Welch Hall is out of touch with the campus, and because Welch Hall officials fail to understand that EMU’s student retention problem is tied to the quality of academic programs we can provide for our juniors and seniors.

My sources for these budget figures are as follows:
1. the document “Four Year History of Budget Reductions” dated July 21, 2006 and prepared by the Division of Academic Affairs, which covers the fiscal years 2004 thru 2007, and notes that for that four year period, the total cut to the Division was $17,987,536;
2. the Ann Arbor News article on the EMU budget, published Oct. 7, 2007, which notes that for the current fiscal year, which started July 1, 2007, “Academic Affairs took a cut of more than $4 million”;
and 3. the May 15, 2007 Business and Finance Division’s one page document on Eastern Michigan University “Revenues,” which lists $245,914,967 as EMU’s revenue for 2001 and, for 2006, revenues of $289,519,396.

So the numbers I’m using understate the size of cuts to academics: The actual cut to academics in this five year period is probably over $22 million, as in the four year period it was nearly $18 million, and for this year it is over $4 million. Further, the university’s revenues for the current fiscal year are no doubt substantially above what they were last year (given the 8% tuition increase, and increased funds, nearly $8 million, from the state).

Despite increasing revenues, EMU has cut funds for academics, which means instruction, by an average of about $4.4 million per year for five years.

“Education First” indeed!

I urge faculty members to attend the special Session of the Faculty Council tomorrow at 3pm, which will be devoted to a discussion of the University budget. Senior VP Don Loppnow and the VP of Business & Finance, Janice Stroh, who controls budget decisions, are to be in attendance. This Faculty Council meeting is open to the entire EMU faculty.

Budgets are how priorities are set. If EMU really means to be a university that puts “Education First” substantively and not just in terms of empty rhetoric, we need a far better budget making process. This Faculty Council meeting is a step in that direction, and I commend the leaders of FC for putting it together, and Don and other administrators for their cooperation.

Time stops for no one

I’m on an accreditation visit to a medium small university (16,000 FTE students, approx 685 FTE faculty –> EMU does not have too many faculty. But that’s an aside!)

In June, their president of 30-some years announced he was stepping down.  They began their search immediately. Yesterday, November 12th, they  introduced the five finalists to the university community.

EMU is doing a search for a president and for a CAS college dean.  I don’t think we have our ads posted yet.

I can appreciate wanting to do it right, but if we take much longer to get off the mark we’re going to box ourselves into a corner again.

Reforming cost/budget structure

Which has gone up more in cost: medicine or higher education? Answer: Higher education.

Which compensates its professionals better: Answer: Medicine.

So, if it’s not the faculty compensation that is driving increasing higher education costs, what is it?

According to various sources referenced at http://www.democracy-project.com/archives/003525.html, what drives up higher education costs are subsidizing non-academic activities (e.g., athletics), inefficient use of resources (e.g., the underutilization of academic brick and mortar versus medical brick and mortar).

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No Ypsi income tax; now what?

The Ann Arbor News has a couple of good articles in today’s paper about the Ypsilanti income tax (or lack thereof) and what might happen next.
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