Is the UC system too good to get its act together?
By Peter Schrag, Sacbee.comPublished 12:00 am PDT Wednesday, August 22, 2007
University of California President Robert Dynes' biggest problem wasn't extravagance; it was tackiness, much of it inherited.
Dynes, who is being nudged out by the regents in the same generous and collegial spirit that helped fuel last year's great brouhaha over executive pay, sinned not so much by commission as by get-along avoidance.
Yet Dynes' departure may be an opportunity for UC to get things right on a range of issues that go beyond administrative compensation and, in some ways, to the nature and structure of the university itself.
Next to executive pay at other major universities -- not to mention the pay packages of UC football and basketball coaches -- UC's executive compensation was modest. But in trying to compete with elite private universities to get the people they wanted -- or in some cases just to stroke each other -- UC leaders tried to make up with under-the-table perks what they felt they couldn't offer in straight pay in a public university with rising tuition.
The topper was a $30,000 dog run for the chancellor at UC Santa Cruz. But all told the undisclosed bennies -- off-the-books sabbaticals, jobs for significant others, comfy retirement packages -- added up to no more than a few million in a $20 billion budget. Nor was there any hint that executives were lining their own pockets.
When he became president in 2003, Dynes was paid $395,000 a year. In the same year Mary Sue Coleman of the University of Michigan was getting $725,000, Mark Yudof, head of the University of Texas system, was getting close to $700,000 and many presidents of private universities were making a lot more. At last count, seven were getting $1 million or more.
But are all those deputy assistant vice presidents and deputy provosts necessary? Even Regents Chairman Richard Blum believes that UC's central administration with its "layers of bureaucracy" has grown too large and is "semidysfunctional."
More fundamentally, said Pat Callan of the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education, UC is caught in an impossible bind: maintaining the myth that all of UC's 10 campuses are equal and should be treated in the same way that it treats its premier research institutions at Berkeley, Los Angeles and San Diego. Should the base pay of a professor at Merced be the same as the pay at Berkeley?
Given the shrinking share of overall expenses that state funding now provides, Callan believes UC has to decide between equity for 10 campuses and maintaining the prestige of the top campuses as one of the best research universities in the world.
Is the system, which is unique in its size and scope, simply too big and complex to be run as a single institution by a single administration? Is it too incestuous, with presidents almost inevitably chosen from the inside and a corresponding sense of entitlement among those near the head of the line?
The much-publicized problems of the past few years -- in the organ transplant program at UC Irvine medical school, in the perks for administrators, in the apparent mismanagement of the nuclear laboratories at Los Alamos and Livermore -- are hardly new (or even, in the case of missing computers at the labs, unique among similar institutions).
During another state fiscal crisis in the early 1990s, President David Gardner retired with a lavish pension package negotiated in better times but which hit just when tuition was rising sharply, programs were being cut and undergraduates were waiting hopelessly to register for required classes that were too crowded for them to get into. The resulting uproar was not very different from the one that hit Dynes in 2005-06.
In those same years, UC, instead of looking for other efficiencies, offered an across-the-board package of early retirements to some of its best teachers and researchers. Many quickly got jobs at other universities.
The responsibility doesn't begin at the university's door. It begins with a tax-averse Legislature that's quick to cut funding for higher education when budgets are tight and almost as quick to increase it and lower fees when things get better. The result is a boom-bust roller coaster that makes reasonable financial planning by students and parents nearly impossible.
And as Murray Haberman of the California Post-secondary Education Commission argues, policymakers better also concern themselves with broader funding questions -- with affordability and access at a time when students are graduating with increasingly heavy loans to repay, which he says average close to $50,000 among students with debt.
UC has an unmatched reputation among public research universities. But that reputation may also foster insularity in the executive suites and an unavoidable conflict with its status as a taxpayer-supported public institution, even in an era when taxpayers pay a shrinking share of the bill.
On both counts, more openness is obviously necessary. And at a moment like this, some radical re-examination of old ways and ideas, from both inside and outside, wouldn't hurt either.
About the writer: Peter Schrag can be reached at Box 15779, Sacramento, CA 95852-0779 or at pschrag@sacbee.com.
Very nice article. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteUC's management structure and LANL's current structure are both costly and dysfunctional. Education and research do not benefit from a management structure where most jobs are justified because the manager is just another signature on a document, thus promoting the CYA management style so common everywhere and supported by management cowards who are afraid to take responsibility and push it off on someone else.
ReplyDeleteThere is no reason for LANL's current structure, except as a reward for those who supported LANS winning the bid. However, DOE can never be convinced of how wasteful this structure is since it mimics the DC norm.
The problems at UC are the problems at LANL, not because UC is part of the managment team but because any institution that is so management top heavy will have the same problems. Until UC makes each campus much more autonomous, problems will continue. Until LANS reconfigures LANL management, slicing away layers of the useless, costs will rise, science will suffer, and LANL will continue down the path to nothingness.
LANL suffers from another problem, possibly worse than the management structure, and that is stifling the scientist's questioning of anything and everything. Every requirement has now become legal, required, unexplainable, costly, etc. When one can't question why those who are not permitted to drive on Pajarito Road still have to take a training course related to how to drive on Pajarito Road during material transport, one realizes that LANL is being run by cowards whose only concern is their next paychecks and who have no feelings of responsibility towards those pay their salaries.
10:27 am:
ReplyDelete"one realizes that LANL is being run by cowards whose only concern is their next paychecks and who have no feelings of responsibility towards those pay their salaries."
One need not ascribe to malice that which is adequately explained by incompetence.
I didn't ascribe anything to malice but to cowardice. I agree that incompetence is a factor, but what I have been hearing can be better described as cowardice.
ReplyDelete"When one can't question why those who are not permitted to drive on Pajarito Road still have to take a training course related to how to drive on Pajarito Road during material transport, one realizes that LANL is being run by cowards whose only concern is their next paychecks and who have no feelings of responsibility towards those pay their salaries." - 10:27 AM
ReplyDeleteGreat post! You took the words right out of my mouth. Yes, indeed, our management is now largely populated with quivering cowards who will go along with any new policy insanity in return for their fat paychecks. Alas, most of the LANL's workforce also falls into the same situation. No resistance will be offered from any quarters at LANL. LANS and DOE know this only too well.
The only way I believe one can begin to make a change at LANL is not through LANS management but through the DOE Inspector General.
ReplyDeleteEmail to ighotline@hq.doe.gov with copies to our congressional delegation describing the problem as waste, fraud, and abuse, and asking for protection from retaliation from LANL. If enough complaints are received, perhaps someone will wake up to the gross waste of money on management salaries for the CYA managers at LANL.
Good luck with that. If your congressman doesn't ignore you, his inquiry to DOE will be ignored. If you pester the inspector general long enough they will eventually read you some irrelevant BS over the telephone and tell you to file a FOIA request if you want a copy. The request is ignored, of course, and you will never get a copy.
ReplyDeleteYou people do not get the simple point of all of this training:
ReplyDeleteTHE MEANS JUSTIFIES THE END!
This reference in the article is precisely the problem at the Los Alamos National Lab as well...
ReplyDelete"too incestuous, with presidents almost inevitably chosen from the inside and a corresponding sense of entitlement among those near the head of the line"