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By SUE WUETCHER Reporter Editor
The university is working to establish a formal consortium with some
universities in Southern Ontario and New York State to facilitate
collaboration between the institutions, Provost Satish K. Tripathi told
members of the UB Council on Monday. The group, which had its
first meeting a month ago in Niagara Falls, Ontario, would be called the
Transborder Research University Network. The effort began a year
ago, Tripathi explained, when he and the provost of the University of
Toronto began talking about getting the leading Canadian and U.S.
universities in the region together to build relationships for research,
student/faculty exchanges, joint programs, symposia and shared
resources, such as libraries and facilities and equipment.
Although individual faculty members and researchers at the various
universities already collaborate, there are no formal relationships at
the institutional level, he said. Tripathi noted that because of
the increased security at the U.S.-Canadian border, many Canadian
universities have been having problems getting some items, such as
plasma, from the U.S. "How can we work together to lobby [the federal
governments] and get some of these things streamlined?" he asked. A goal
of the consortium, he said, is to remove these kinds of barriers so that
collaboration between faculty can continue. The next step for the
universities will be to determine a formal framework for the group and
identify a headquarter university for the consortium, he said. In
addition to UB and the University of Toronto, the institutions that
would be part of the consortium are the universities of Western Ontario,
Guelph, Waterloo, Rochester and Albany; York, McMaster, Queen's, Syracuse
and Cornell universities; and the Rochester Institute of Technology.
In other business, President John B. Simpson told council members he
has been spending a lot of time "finding ways to make UB 2020and
the plans it calls for in the push toward an excellent
universityhappen." This effort, he said, is focused on
finding resources to finance UB's physical and academic growth, mainly
through his work as a member of the state Higher Education Commission
and by lobbying the governor and the state Legislature "so they see a
way to support what we're trying to do here." In light of the
fact that tuition will never be free and the state is unlikely to make a
major financial investment in SUNY, "some change in the way we deal with
tuition is probably the means by which we will be able to push this
agenda of excellence and have the resources we need to support it."
Simpson warned that maintaining the status quobeing unable to
regulate UB's financial environment and, therefore, being unable to
compete in the world of international research universitiesis "a
recipe for continuing a long, but inexorable slide into mediocrity."
He noted that he spends a lot of time dealing with these issues in
his work with the Higher Education Commission. The commission has
held four meetings, and will meet once more before the Dec. 1 deadline
for its final report, he said. "I hope the outcome of this is to
give the governor something which is bold and actionable and genuinely
beneficial to the state and this university as we go forward."
In other business, Alexander Cartwright, professor of electrical
engineering and vice provost for strategic initiatives, updated council
members on the progress of the strategic strength initiatives of UB
2020. Cartwright noted that 10 strengths were identified at the
beginning of the UB 2020 process, but that over time, the strengths have
merged and been transformed "so that now we have eight, fairly diverse
strengths." The strengths, he said, "allow us to start to combine the
faculty from the different schools in unique ways. More importantly,
this gives us the opportunity to focus in these areas." He
offered some examples of "noteworthy" activity, including the hiring of
Esther S. Takeuchi, an outstanding researcher and member of the National
Academy of Engineering, as a senior faculty member in the School of
Engineering and Applied Sciences. The university also has hired
some excellent junior faculty members, he said, citing as an example
Igor Zutic, an assistant professor of physics, who is the recipient of a
National Science Foundation CAREEER Award. UB has hired 200 new
faculty members since 2005, with 63 of those hires coming just this
year, he said. Moreover, the faculty of the College of Arts and
Sciences has grown significantly, he said, with almost half of the total
hired since 2002. "The hiring, of course, is in alignment with
what we planned with the strategic strengths," he said. To
illustrate this point, he noted that UB has hired 14 faculty members
affiliated with the Integrated Nanostructured Systems strategic
strength. These faculty members, he said, reside in seven different
departments in three different schools. "This is a substantial
investment," he said, of more than $1 million a year in recurring costs
and more than $7 million in start-up costs. The final phase of
the strategic strength process, he said, involves constant evaluation of
the strengths. "What is the current status of the strengths, what have
they done and what can they do in the future and, more importantly, are
there opportunities for us to look at other capabilities? What else do
we want to build," he said. This evaluation process, he pointed out,
will involve faculty, the deans and senior administrators. Some of the
strengths already have entered this phase, he added, while others will
start the process next year. But the strategic strengths
initiative is not just about the research, he stressed, pointing out
that faculty are teaching more than 30 freshman seminars and are
actively involved in community outreach, including pre-K-16
activities. This activity, though, can't happen without some
investment, he said. "I think it's necessary to continue to
explain to the State of New York why it's important to invest in this
university," he said. "These are the reasons why we think we're headed
in the right direction. I think we can get there." He also
praised the UB Believers program. "I think it's an opportunity to
continuously tell people how important this university is," he said,
noting that the strategic strength framework provides an easy way to
inform potential donors of the areas in which the university thrives and
where their donations would be put to good use.
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