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By MARY COCHRANE Contributing Editor
If Tuesday's meeting of the voting members of the Faculty Senate
could be compared to a class, then President John B. Simpson taught a
compelling one. He also, as tough professors are known to do,
included some hefty homework for his fellow academics and the State of
New York. Saying that "UB is doing pretty well" as an institution
of public higher education, Simpson outlined his evidence, including the
hiring in the past three years of 270 faculty, including 94 new
positions, with 22 of the hires "distinctly linked to our strategic
strengths, the eight areas of excellence" in the UB 2020 plan.
"It is my view that faculty are the university," Simpson said. "Their
work defines the university and therefore we should maximize the number
of faculty we have." UB also is well under way in its master
planning process for all three campuses, and the recent purchase of the
former M. Wile building in Buffalo "will continue to augment and
genuinely establish the presence of the university downtown."
"Some of you may not know there are already considerable UB
facilities scattered about downtown Buffalo and this will provide a
specific and direct home which is easily identifiable as part of the
university and which will establish us as very much a part of and an
important player in the City of Buffalo and its future," Simpson
said. Gov. Eliot Spitzer, in regard to the UB 2020 plan, "likes
it, supports it and wants it to happen," Simpson said, adding that "he
does not, however, control the financing." And there begins the
homework, or rather, the agenda that Simpson has for UB. "What we
are trying to do is to change the way the State University of New York
system behaves and the way higher education behaves in the state, what I
might call a change from socialism to social Darwinism," Simpson said.
"We are trying to force the state and SUNY to invest selectively in its
universities." Public universities across the nation are subject
to "oppositional forces: a continuous and almost relentless decrease in
the funding to those universities by the state, coupled with an equally
relentless increase in regulatory controls," Simpson said. UB
compares unfavorably with six peer institutionsthe universities of
Wisconsin, Michigan, Iowa, Washington, North Carolina at Chapel Hill and
Pittsburghin several categories: the number of undergraduates (UB
has 17,329; the average number at the six universities is 21,338); the
amount of money spent per student (UB: nearly $25,000, the others, an
average of $45,000), and faculty-student ratios (UB: 11-1; the others,
6.5-1). "It's simply a matter of resources and at the end of the
day, that is what determines what happens and, more importantly, what
can happen in public versus private universities." Simpson
called on the faculty to join UB Believers, the initiative that enables
university community members to join him in Albany "directly, by email,
by letter and by calling our elected officials" to support this agenda.
"That's votes, so they will listen, and this becomes a community
imperative," he said. Following the president's remarks,
Phillips Stevens, associate professor of anthropology, asked whether
Simpson had considered withdrawing UB from inclusion in the college
ratings issues of some national magazines. Simpson said that
while he is frustrated "with the incredibly wide range of these ratings
that may or may not say anything" about the schools they profile, "I
don't want to ignore them because they are important in who we get
access to as students and how we're viewed as a university nationally."
Robert E. Baier, executive director of the Industry/University
Center for Biosurfaces, asked about the progress of plans for a UB
department of bioengineering, which Provost Satish K. Tripathi replied
is still in the works and would be housed within both the schools of
engineering and the medical school. Asked whether new student
housing is part of the UB master plan, Tripathi said there is one
600-bed project in the design phase. Simpson added that UB also is
considering other kinds of housing for graduate students and using UB
land to provide homes for postdoctoral students, faculty and retired
professors "to make a more balanced community." David G. Ellis,
director of the telemedicine program, asked about the proposed merger of
Kaleida Health and the Erie County Medical Center. The president replied
he believes the board overseeing the matter, which he serves on, will
produce "some sort of organization that functions very much like a
university hospital." "My view is that I would like to not own a
hospital, but I'd like to have all the benefits of it," he said to
laughter. "So maybe we can get to a place like that."
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