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Friday, March 11, 2011

More on the Other Wisconsin Story

Inside Higher Ed has been tracking the story of the pursuit by the University of Wisconsin-Madison for more autonomy from the larger U of Wisconsin system. That story has been submerged due to the controversy over the collective bargaining issue. As prior posts on this blog have noted, this effort has the support of Governor Walker but has not been cheered by the system's regents. In fact, they were opposed.

However, today's Inside Higher Ed notes that the system's regents have now come up with their own plan for more autonomy of the campuses, reproduced below. But, as the bold text towards the bottom indicates, they clearly don't want substantial campus autonomy.

From the UC perspective, this other Wisconsin story suggests a path our system might end up following in the face of continued budgetary pressures.

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

March 10, 2011

“Wisconsin Idea Partnership” proposes flexibility for all campuses

Facing $250 million in cuts, UW institutions need tools to sustain quality and access

MADISON, Wis. – Faced with the challenge of trimming budgets by more than $250 million over the next two years, all University of Wisconsin System institutions need new managerial flexibilities to preserve educational quality and maintain broad college access.

The UW Board of Regents today officially endorsed a new proposal – the Wisconsin Idea Partnership – that would build on Governor Scott Walker’s proposal to offer new operational freedom to UW-Madison. The new proposal would preserve the core features and benefits for the flagship campus, while extending the new flexibilities to all UW campuses as part of a unified system.

UW System President Kevin P. Reilly noted that Governor Walker has expressed interest in helping all UW campuses benefit from new administrative flexibilities.

“The good news here is that Governor Walker recognizes that universities need to do business differently. We’ve been asking for new administrative and managerial flexibilities for years – decades perhaps – and this Governor gets it,” said Reilly. “We want to offer the Governor and the Legislature a way forward that is simple, reasonable, and equitable.”

“We propose an approach that does not require wholesale changes to large sections of existing State Law. We want to preserve the vast majority of language in Chapter 36, including all the shared governance rights of UW faculty, academic staff, and students. We want to be reasonable, so we will not ask for any more flexibilities than what the Governor has already shown he’s willing to do as part of his budget provisions concerning UW-Madison,” said Reilly.

“Most important, we want a budget alternative that is equitable – offering all the management tools to all UW campuses during the 2011-13 biennium. We will put forward a package of statutory changes that gives all UW campuses the necessary flexibilities to manage all the limited resources available, as members of a unified System,” said Reilly.

The Regents formally endorsed the proposal and UW System officials promised to provide detailed statutory language to the Governor’s office and the Legislature before the Joint Committee on Finance begins deliberations on the UW System budget.

Under the plan, each local UW campus would have new statutory authority in budgeting, tuition, human resources, capital planning, purchasing and other functions. Regents want the new framework to include specific performance measures, building upon the UW System’s annual accountability reports.

“We need to be on record supporting these vital flexibilities for all UW institutions, and we need to clearly state our intent to delegate those flexibilities to each institution,” said Regent President Charles Pruitt. “At the same time, we express our firm opposition to fracturing what is arguably one of the best Systems of public higher education in the country if not the world.”

The Board of Regents will discuss the matter again in April at a regularly scheduled meeting to be held on the UW-Platteville campus.

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The document above refers to the "Wisconsin Idea Partnership." It can be found at:

http://www.wisconsin.edu/assets/growth_agenda/docs/2011-13/2011-03-10_wip-summary.pdf

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We will have to see whether it is the regents or the governor of Wisconsin who get their whey:

1 comment:

  1. FYI, this site includes links to all available (on the web) materials about the proposals you are interested in:

    http://badgerfutures.wordpress.com/

    Best, Kris Olds

    ReplyDelete