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APSCUF officers provide input on proposed weapons policy

During the PASSHE webcast on its proposed weapons policy, APSCUF president, Dr. Steve Hicks, and vice president, Dr. Ken Mash, offered brief remarks expressing concerns about the draft policy. Dr. Lisa Millhous, APSCUF’s chapter president at West Chester University, also provided perspective on how the draft policy would affect the campus learning environment.

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PASSHE seeks comments on proposed weapons policy

PASSHE will host a webcast on its proposed weapons policy this Thursday, January 9, at 10:00am. APSCUF president, Steve Hicks, will offer comments opposing the policy. Last May APSCUF’s Executive Council adopted a formal statement on the policy, which reads:

APSCUF believes the best learning environment for students is one in which all members of the university community feel safe from the threat of violence. APSCUF believes that this is best secured by reliance on university security and police professionals. Given the free flow of traffic on a college campus to academic buildings, dormitories, and extracurricular events, APSCUF believes that the best policy remains one where deadly weapons are prohibited from campus (except as secured by university police). APSCUF further believes that prior to changing policies regarding deadly weapons, PASSHE and university officials should fully consult with all constituent groups in the campus community.

According to a media advisory issued by PASSHE, the webcast can be viewed on its website, www.passhe.edu. A panel of PASSHE officials will answer questions about the policy. You can submit comments and questions in advance via email to publicsafetytaskforce@passhe.edu.

Independent report shows that State System universities mismanage budgets

Today the Association of Pennsylvania State College and University Faculties (APSCUF) released a report indicating that the State System of Higher Education (PASSHE) has been allowing the fourteen state-owned universities to mismanage their budgets by hiding debt in affiliated corporations, funding new construction based on questionable assumptions, and misleading the public about their financial difficulties.

APSCUF commissioned Boyer & Ritter, a Harrisburg-area accounting firm, to study the finances of the seven universities that claimed they needed to lay off faculty to balance their budgets: Cheyney, Clarion, East Stroudsburg, Edinboro, Kutztown, Mansfield, and Slippery Rock.

In every case, the accounting firm discovered that the university created affiliated entities or used foundations to take on debt for new construction.

“We are extremely troubled by the findings. The universities and the State System are mismanaging public dollars,” said Dr. Steve Hicks, president of APSCUF. “Every university is using a scheme to transfer debt to ‘component units,’ including the university foundations and student housing associations.  Money that the public believes is dedicated to academics is instead going to these affiliates to pay for buildings.” 

In many cases, the affiliated entities are taking on debt to pay for new dormitories and other lavish construction.

 â€œTuition, fees, and state support monies are regularly being transferred to these entities, both directly and indirectly,” Hicks stated. “The universities and the State System must be good stewards of the public dollar. Instead, their poor budgetary decisions are forcing students to double pay because universities are using both their tuition dollars and their fees to pay off debt on buildings. Our students, their families, and the public deserve to know how their money is actually being spent.”

The independent analysis of seven state-owned universities also concluded that there is a lack of oversight in State System budgeting practices.

“In terms of faculty layoffs,” Hicks pointed out, referring to the original impetus for commissioning the report, “Boyer & Ritter make it clear that the university budgets are just that – plural – and, therefore, it is hard to give credence to their budgetary claims. There are pages full of charts showing the wide divergence between the universities’ budgets and their actual collections and expenditures.”

The report states: “there appears to be minimal accountability for budgeting at the University level with the PASSHE Board of Governors.”

Hicks added, “There are no common statewide budgeting practices among the universities.”

 The report also indicates that there is a demonstrable lack of quality budgeting: “in common practice once an oversight board…approves a budget, changes are not made without further oversight approval. Throughout…we noted various budget versions being utilized by each University.”

 â€œOur universities continue to be in dire need of additional state funds, and it is clear that cuts to the system have led to some very bad decisions at universities,” Hicks commented. “We are concerned that PASSHE, the State System Board of Governors, and the individual universities’ Councils of Trustees have not exercised the fiduciary responsibility to oversee how the universities spend money.”

APSCUF has commissioned Boyer & Ritter to look at the financial statements for the other seven universities, as well.

The Association of Pennsylvania State College and University Faculties represents more than 6,000 faculty members and coaches at Pennsylvania’s 14 state-owned universities.

 

Mansfield University’s mission is to provide a well-rounded education

By Dr. Rob Clark, Mansfield University professor and MU-APSCUF vice president

On Friday, November 8, Mansfield University faculty and students rallied for quality higher education. Dr. Clark gave the following speech at the rally.

 

Mansfield University is a jewel of the Endless Mountains. It is a lifeblood to Tioga County and neighboring communities. And we are a diverse lot, we Mounties. We hail from around the state, country, and world. Yet here we gather in the mountains of northern Pennsylvania to foster or pursue the common vision of a well-rounded education rooted in the liberal arts. I’ve taught at a range of institutions, ranging from an Ivy-League university to a maximum security prison. Yet never before have I seen such a close and often trusting relationship between students and faculty—relationships that often seem to defy the superficiality so prevalent in the current era. Out of these initially formal student-professor relationships develop long term friendships and reciprocal gratitude. As faculty, there is no greater reward than seeing our students succeed.

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Retrenchment is nothing more than “Lord of the Flies”

By Jamie Reese, News Editor of the Stroud Courier and student at East Stroudsburg University

East Stroudsburg University’s Theatre Department recently presented “Lord of the Flies,” an adaptation of William Golding’s famous novel about a group of boys who are stranded on an island after a plane crash and forced to set up a society.

The boys start out united; however, there are power struggles, lapses in communication, and poor planning. Eventually two factions are created.

One faction follows Jack, the boy who most strongly seeks power and created the split, while the other follows Ralph, the original leader and main protagonist.

The groups of Jack and Ralph enter a pseudo war.

Jack carries the spears and the willingness to kill, so Jack carries the power. read more…

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