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Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Another guess on what will come up at the Regents meeting in July

Coming soon?
Our previous post dealt with an issue - a stadium near UC-SF - which was raised somewhat mysteriously at the last Regents meeting. Now that it is clear what the complaint was, it seems likely that we will hear more about it - at least in the public comments - in July. The other issue that seems likely to be raised (apart from the budget/tuition/pension Committee of Two deal) is the continuing issue of whether UC campuses are adequately handling complaints of sexual harassment. There will surely be some briefing of the Regents on two recent lawsuits - one at Berkeley and the other at UCLA - by women complaining of harassment that was (in their view) improperly dismissed or given inadequate attention by officials. But such briefing is typically done in closed sessions. However, there is always an opportunity for public comment or possibly some scheduled discussion. Links to the two cases are provided below:

http://blog.ebosswatch.com/2015/06/the-ucla-professor-gabriel-piterberg-sexual-harassment-lawsuit-allegations/

http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-berkeley-sexual-assault-20150629-story.html

Today, there is a closed session of the Regents concerning selection of a new director of the Lawrence Berkeley National Lab:

http://regents.universityofcalifornia.edu/regmeet/jun15/LBNL%20June%2030,%202015.pdf

Presumably, the appointment matter will be aired at the July Regents meeting.

Puzzle resolved

At the last Regents meeting during the public comments period, a group (construction unions) favoring a new sports stadium in San Francisco complained about another group that was opposed within UC. But it was unclear who this opposing group was or why - if it existed - it was opposed. That matter is now more clear:

The Golden State Warriors could face some unexpected opposition in their drive to build an arena in Mission Bay: nurses.On Monday, the California Nurses Association, a union that represents 900 UCSF nurses, came out against the plan for an 18,500-seat arena across the street from the new UCSF Medical Center on the southern edge of Mission Bay. In a statement, the nurses union cited “impacts on access to care, patient health and the ability of patients, family members and health professionals to access Mission Bay’s hospitals and clinics in gridlock traffic.” ...

Full story at http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/UCSF-nurses-union-comes-out-against-S-F-Warriors-6356794.php

Presumably, more will be heard about this matter at subsequent meetings.

Monday, June 29, 2015

Hidden Meaning?

The Calpensions.com website has a piece on new accounting standards aimed at retiree health care plans (such as the one operated by UC). Such plans have typically not been pre-funded, unlike pensions. The new standards are intended to display the incremental yearly costs of retiree health care promises. One thing, though, about retiree health care that differs from pensions. UC in particular takes the position that retiree health care is not a legal obligation (unlike pensions) and instead is just a nice thing the university does. But it is something that UC is free to take away. Were there to be pre-funding including an employee contribution, it would be hard to maintain that position, as we have noted in prior posts. How could employees be asked to pre-fund a benefit that was not theirs? Requiring an employee contribution would seem to create a legal obligation.

If you scroll down the Calpensions article, hiding towards the bottom you will find:

...Last January Gov. Brown proposed a long-term plan to cut costs. State worker retiree health care would be shifted from “pay-as-you-go” funding, which only pays the health insurance premiums each year, to pension-like “prefunding” that invests additional money to earn interest. State workers would contribute half of the normal cost of the plan, work longer to qualify for full retiree health care, receive a subsidy no higher than active workers, have the option of a lower-cost health plan, and face tighter dependent eligibility and Medicare switch reviews. The plan must be bargained with unions. An incentive for unions might be that agreeing to the plan would strengthen the “vested right” to retiree health care, which some think may not have the legal protection currently given to pensions...
See http://calpensions.com/2015/06/29/new-rules-try-to-spotlight-hidden-retirement-debt/
 
The text, in short, seems to have semi-hidden meaning that is easy to miss:
 

Supreme Court on Admissions

Inside Higher Ed has a lengthy article on a lawsuit against the U of Texas regarding its affirmative action policies. Apparently, the U.S. Supreme Court has just announced it will take up the case with a likely decision in 2016. The issue might seem to have no potential effect on UC since it is banned from using such practices under Prop 209 of 1996. Prop 209 was enacted by voters after the Regents adopted an anti-affirmative action policy favored by then-Gov. Pete Wilson. (The Regents rescinded the policy after 209 was passed since it had become redundant.)

There could be an effect in California, however, were 209 to be repealed or modified. The legislature nearly put a proposition on the ballot that would have allowed the voters to repeal 209. But after protests from the Asian community, there were not enough votes for such an action and the matter was dropped. It is possible, however, that the issue of a repeal proposition could come up again. The meaning of such a repeal, were it ever to occur, would be constrained by whatever the Supreme Court might say in the Texas case.

Story at https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2015/06/29/supreme-court-will-once-again-consider-affirmative-action-college-admissions

A news report on the UC Regents' action on abolishing affirmative action can be seen below:
 

Sunday, June 28, 2015

That Committee of Two Deal on Pensions...

Look closely. Maybe they were just kidding!

Like they say... 

Saturday, June 27, 2015

Just keep smiling

The Remaking the University blog carries a piece by Joe Kiskis (UC-Davis) on the state budget entitled "Don't Worry, Be Happy." It suggests a few (big) problems with the state budget as it relates to UC: http://utotherescue.blogspot.com/2015/06/dont-worry-be-happy.html

Just a few missing elements, particularly with regard to the pension, compared to what was supposed to be in the Committee of Two deal:
Nonetheless:

Comet Slab

"Comet Slab" (1983) by Ronald Davis, on the walls of the Anderson School

Friday, June 26, 2015

Would you like PEPRA with that?

That is a Big Deal
Yesterday, we posted UC prez Napolitano sunny explanation of her Committee of Two deal on the UC pension. A somewhat more nuanced  exposition appears in the Sacramento Bee.* We’ll come back to the Bee article below but first it’s important to understand the PEPRA** cap and its effect on new hires if the Committee of Two deal is put into operation.

The cap is $117,020. But that cap isn’t just a limit on the top pension that can be paid under the PEPRA methodology. It is also the top amount of pay that can be used in the pension calculation. CalPERS is now under PEPRA and here is CalPERS' explanation:

============================

Pensionable Compensation Cap: Caps the annual salary that can be used to calculate final compensation for all new members.***

============================

Many faculty who are paid more than the cap amount under the current pension would not receive a pension more than $117,020 in any case. Let's take a simple example. If you earned double the cap as your highest pay under the current plan, but had worked 20 or fewer years at UC and had a 2.5 age factor, your basic pension would be 50% of your highest pay. (20 x 2.5 = 50) So with 20 years or fewer, a simple cap of $117,020 on earnings wouldn’t affect your pension using the current formula

But under PEPRA, the limit is not a simple cap on the payout. The cap is on the earnings used for the formula. So only half your salary, if you earned twice the PEPRA cap, would be used in the calculation. Your pension with 20 years of service and earnings twice the PEPRA cap would be one fourth your earnings instead of one half. Again, the key point is that, as the CalPERS explanation says, the cap is on formula earnings, not on pension payout. Lots of faculty would have pay above the PEPRA cap and would be affected by the cut; the impact would not be limited just to eventual retirees with super-long service to UC. Any new hire earning more than the PEPRA cap would be affected, even if he/she would not have received more than $117,020 as a pension under the current formula. [Did the UC prez fully understand the cap and what it entailed?]

Cutting a pension benefit in half, as in our example above, is a Big Deal, even if it's just for new hires (who over time will become a larger and large share of the system). Creating some kind of alternative system that compensates the new hires for the cut is not a simple matter (and will eat up the “saving” caused by the cap). Napolitano promised in her sunny explanation that everyone would be consulted in the design of the new program. But will everyone want to go along? From that Bee article:

…AFSCME Local 3299, which represents custodians, cooks, bus drivers and other UC workers, has long pushed for a more modest pension cap. Spokesman Todd Stenhouse criticized the potential alternatives for higher-paid employees, which he said would undermine intended savings that could be used elsewhere at the university. “If you’re simply going to just take the money out of your right pocket and put it into the same place, does it really solve the problem?” he said…

Trouble ahead.

======


**PEPRA = Public Employees’ Pension Reform Act of 2013

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Radio Debate

We earlier blogged about the "microaggression" debate at UC.* Yesterday, the issue was debated on "Airtalk" with Larry Mantle by UCLA Law Prof. Eugene Volokh and Prof. Derald W. Sue at Teachers College at Columbia University. You can hear the program at the link below. A somewhat-related take by yours truly is on another blog.** I suspect that this matter will come up at the July Regents meeting when there will be a debate on an anti-Semitism resolution. As we have noted earlier, UC prez Napolitano said an an NPR broadcast that she personally endorsed the resolution.*** Recently, a state legislative commitee endorsed a less-specific version which Regent Pérez appears to endorse.****

I cut a few seconds off the Airtalk program to fit a 20 minute limit. Click on the link below:
https://www.facebook.com/137929602903675/videos/vb.137929602903675/1068115016551791/

If you have trouble with the link above, try:
http://media.scpr.org/audio/upload/2015/06/24/Microaggressions_-_Should_they_be_censored_on_college_campuses-d855f9ab.mp3

--------
*http://uclafacultyassociation.blogspot.com/2015/06/campus-level-discussion-needed.html
**http://employmentpolicy.org/page-1775968/3400944#sthash.MYLFSFRo.dpbs and update: http://employmentpolicy.org/page-1775968/3408546#sthash.eVn43gYy.dpbs
***http://uclafacultyassociation.blogspot.com/2015/05/listen-to-may-20-2015-regents-meeting.html
****http://www.latimes.com/local/political/la-me-ln-assembly-panel-approves-resolution-condemning-anti-semitism-at-colleges-20150623-story.html

Flunked

Joe Mathews has an interesting column in Zócalo:

Californians, I regret to inform you that your diploma is being held up. You won’t be able to graduate. 

You flunked higher education. 

Another state budget, accompanied by an eight-month-long controversy over the University of California, demonstrated once again that we Californians don’t have a clue about what our public universities mean to the state. Because if we did, we wouldn’t make them beg us for the money needed to educate more of our children.

Instead, Californians—from our leaders in Sacramento to average voters—think that the UC and California State University systems are too costly and administratively bloated. That tuition is being raised to cover academic nonsense. And that taxpayers already give too much money to higher education. These claims are either nonsense—or the fault of Californians themselves, not the universities...

Full column at http://www.zocalopublicsquare.org/2015/06/25/californians-have-no-idea-how-important-public-universities-are/inquiries/connecting-california/

Put on a Happy Face! (We'll Just Quote Without Comment)

June 24, 2015
University of California Community

Dear Colleagues:

I am happy to share with you that Governor Brown has signed a final State budget that includes significant increased support for the University consistent with the multi-year funding framework agreement reached earlier between UC and the State. We’ve come a long way since the release of the Governor’s preliminary budget in January, and with this final 2015-16 budget UC enters an era of increased State funding and financial stability that we all can celebrate.

One of the important outcomes of this funding agreement is that it allows us to budget for annual pay increases for faculty and non-represented staff over the next several years. All employees deserve to be appropriately compensated and our pay practices for many of our talented faculty and non-represented staff employees have lagged the market in recent years. The additional funds we will receive under the budget agreement will also allow us to make merit-based pay a more regular com­ponent of our systemwide salary programs to help recognize the contributions of our deserving employees.

The funding agreement also allows us to reduce our unfunded pension liability, which helps to ensure the long-term fiscal solvency of the UC Retirement Plan. Additionally,undergraduate resident tuition will be held at current levels for the next two years with moderate increases pegged generally to the rate of inflation beginning in     2017-18, giving students and their families predictable tuition information so they can accurately plan for the cost of a UC education.

In exchange for increased State funding for the University’s pension plan, the Governor is requiring UC to implement by July 1, 2016, a new category (“tier”) of retirement benefits for future UC employees that aligns pension-eligible UC employee pay with that of State employees. I want to be sure everyone understands the following facts about this new UC pension tier:

-- Pension benefits for current faculty and staff are not affected.  This new pension tier will apply only to future employees hired after it is implemented, which is currently scheduled for July 1, 2016. There will be no changes to your pension benefits – accrued pension benefits are protected by law and cannot be reduced or revoked.

-- Details to be developed.  The specific design of the new tier hasn’t been decided and will be developed over the coming months. In general, the new tier   is expected to include the option of a new traditional defined benefit pension plan with a pension-eligible salary limit up to the California Public Employees’ Pension Reform Act of 2013 (PEPRA) cap (currently $117,020); a defined contri­bution plan such as a 403(b); or a combination of the two.

-- Faculty and staff will help shape the new tier.  The design of the new tier will be informed and guided by input from members of the UC community, including Regents, faculty, staff, and other stakeholders, as well as an advisory UC task force that will include faculty and staff.

-- Unions will help determine choices for their members.  As with previous pension reforms, application of the new tier to union-represented employees will be subject to collective bargaining, and union leaders will help determine their members’ choices.

We will keep everyone informed about the development and details of the new tier as we move through this process.

This is a bright day for UC, and I want to again thank the scores of faculty and staff who helped advocate for our funding needs. You have been instrumental in helping to bring about this historic agreement and I deeply appreciate your partnership.

Yours very truly,
Janet Napolitano
President

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Scroll down to our previous post (towards the bottom). And while you're doing it, click below:

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

No state budget surprises

There were no surprises for UC in the budget signed by Gov. Brown today relative to previous information. The governor made minor vetoes, none affecting UC. However, the $25 million for UC contingent on adding 5,000 students is explicit. In contrast, as noted in a prior posting, UC prez Napolitano interprets the budget to mean UC can discuss with the legislature exactly what the provision means.  The language related to UC is on pp. 21-22 of the budget document.*

As noted in prior posts, budget accounting is now complicated by the fact that some revenue is taken off the top and diverted by formula to the rainy-day fund. So there are two reserves: the regular reserve in the general fund and the rainy-day fund. It’s best to combine the two into total reserves and add back the revenue diverted to the rainy-day fund into total revenue. (Revenue shown below is actually revenue and “transfers,” a mischievous category that adds a minor distortion.)

Let’s first review what happened in the 2014-15 year that is soon to end.  Reserves at the beginning of that year (7/1/14) and the end (6/30/15) were estimated at various points of time: ($millions)

Fiscal 2014-15               Beginning   Ending   Deficit
---------------------------------------------------------
Enactment of 2014-15 budget:    $3,903   $3,010     -$893
January 2015 budget message:    $5,100   $3,029   -$2,071
May Revise 2015 message:        $5,589   $3,965   -$1,624
Enactment of 2015-16 budget:    $5,589   $4,029   -$1,560
---------------------------------------------------------
While it may be a surprise to some, readers of this blog will have known all along that the current fiscal year (2014-15) was always estimated to be in deficit, although the amount varied.

In contrast, the 2015-16 budget just enacted was always planned to be in surplus. The chart below shows the revenue and spending estimates for the current year and next year:

$millions                FY2014-15  FY2015-16
---------------------------------------------
Beginning reserves:         $5,589     $4,029
Revenues:                +$112,913  +$116,887
Expenditures:            -$114,473  -$115,369
Total deficit/surplus:     -$1,560    +$1,518
Ending reserves:            $4,029     $5,547
---------------------------------------------
The ratio of end-reserves to spending rises from 3.5% for the current year to 4.8% for next year. The volatile personal income tax accounts for almost two thirds of total revenue. As has been pointed out in prior posts, such levels of reserves provide little cushion for an unexpected downturn. We have also pointed out in prior posts that there is a problematic pension deal embedded in the budget and the multi-year features of that deal seemed to be contradicted by legislative language that denies any obligation for UC pension funding beyond 2015-16. 

Note: It appears that the final budget language dropped the explicit language ruling out a future commitment to the pension. The language passed allocates one-year's worth of funding but makes no future commitment for the rest of what was promised as part of the Committee of Two deal. No mention of the future is better than explicitly stating that there is no future obligation. But it still lacks any future commitment.** [SEE CORRECTION BELOW]
---
*http://www.dof.ca.gov/documents/FullBudgetSummary-2015.pdf
**Assembly Bill No. 93
CHAPTER 10

An act making appropriations for the support of the government of the State of California and for several public purposes in accordance with the provisions of Section 12 of Article IV of the Constitution of the State of California, relating to the state budget, to take effect immediately, budget bill.
[Approved by Governor  June 24, 2015. Filed with Secretary of State  June 24, 2015. ]…

6440-004-0001—For support of University of California ........................
96,000,000
Schedule:
(1)
5440-Support ........................
96,000,000
Provisions:
1.
The funds appropriated in this item shall be released to the University of California only upon certification by the Director of Finance that the Regents of the University of California have approved a retirement program that limits pensionable compensation consistent with the limits specified in the Public Employees’ Pension Reform Act of 2013.

http://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billTextClient.xhtml?bill_id=201520160AB93

CORRECTION: IT HAS BEEN BROUGHT TO MY ATTENTION THAT ANOTHER COMPANION BILL - SB 97 - STILL CARRIES THE OBJECTIONABLE LANGUAGE WHICH RETURNS US TO THE ORIGINAL PROBLEM OF A ONE-YEAR ALLOCATION AND AN EXPLICIT STATEMENT THAT THERE IS NO FURTHER OBLIGATION:

SEC. 85.

 Item 6440-004-0001 of Section 2.00 of the Budget Act of 2015 is amended to read:
6440-004-0001—For support of University of California ........................
96,000,000

Schedule:

(1)5440-Support ........................ 96,000,000

Provisions:

1.The funds appropriated in this item shall be released to the University of California only upon certification by the Director of Finance that the Regents of the University of California have approved a retirement program that limits pensionable compensation consistent with the limits specified in the Public Employees’ Pension Reform Act of 2013.

2.The funds appropriated in this item shall be used only for unfunded liabilities of the University of California Retirement Plan, in excess of current base amounts, to satisfy the requirements of clause (ii) of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) of Section 20 of Article XVI of the Constitution of the State of California.

3.Upon release of the funds, the Regents of the University of California shall submit a report to the Director of Finance and, in conformity with Section 9795 of the Government Code, to the Legislature demonstrating that the funds have been used to supplement and not supplant funding otherwise available to pay for unfunded liabilities of the University of California Retirement Plan.

4.This appropriation does not constitute an obligation on behalf of the state to appropriate any additional funds in subsequent years for any costs of the University of California Retirement Plan. The Legislature shall determine the amount of additional funds, if any, to be appropriated in subsequent years for costs of the University of California Retirement Plan.
.
http://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billTextClient.xhtml;jsessionid=e331f2a98adfe924fcadabf64eed?bill_id=201520160SB97
 

Diddy Problems - and Others

Fred Cozens, UCLA's first football coach
LA Times sports columnist Bill Plaschke raises some unpleasant thoughts about the recent football-related confrontation at UCLA involving singer "P Diddy" and his son.* Plaschke points to other recent football-related issues at UCLA and suggests that nowadays, they may be inherent in big time college football. We have posted about other legal challenges currently in the mill regarding collegiate sports that have as their theme that the major sports are essentially commercial ventures and that the athletes are quasi-employees, even if not treated as such. And, of course, there is now concern about football concussions.** From the Plaschke column:

...All these crooked roads led to Monday's events in the school's weight room, where the Bruins suffered through the perfect storm of an overbearing parent [Diddy], a marginal athlete [his son], and a law-and-order coaching staff. While the legal system will decide the fault here — a yet-unreleased surveillance tape is key — there will remain larger questions that only [UCLA football coach] Mora can answer.

How can a parent, even one as rich and influential as Sean "Diddy" Combs, feel so empowered he would bypass the head coach's office and enter one of the team's sanctums and demand to talk to an assistant coach? Are the monetary and recruiting benefits of a parent such as Combs really worth the roster spot that his undersized son Justin requires and the access that Combs demands? If Mora truly wants to build a championship program with hard work, commitment and discipline, are these really the kind of glamour deals he wants to be making? ...


Full story at http://www.latimes.com/sports/ucla/la-sp-plaschke-ucla-20150624-column.html

The complete column is worth reading and pondering.
---
*Three years ago, we posted about an issue related to Diddy and his son's athletic scholarship at UCLA:
http://uclafacultyassociation.blogspot.com/2012/06/moguls.html
We noted the more recent event two days ago at:
http://uclafacultyassociation.blogspot.com/2015/06/good-thing-to-know-brendan.html
See also http://uclafacultyassociation.blogspot.com/2015/06/integrity.html
**http://uclafacultyassociation.blogspot.com/2015/06/and-if-research-finds-injuries.html

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Monday, June 22, 2015

Good thing to know, Brendan...


P. Diddy has been arrested for allegedly getting into a fight with a football coach at UCLA ... where his son is on the team, TMZ Sports has learned... Diddy is still in custody at campus jail... Sources connected with Diddy tells us the rap mogul is adamant he acted in SELF DEFENSE and was not the aggressor. 


Seeing What Isn't There

It's quite possible to look at the design on the right and see what isn't there. Is there really a downward pointing triangle, for example? Or an upward pointing triangle?

An email from UC prez Napolitano analyzes the legislature's budget for 2015-16 as follows:

...By adopting the provisions of the funding framework agreed to by the Governor and the University, the budget approved by the Legislature puts UC in a strong financial position that provides the University with predictable and stable support for the next four years and offers students and their families the certainty to confidently budget for the costs of a UC education.

The budget agreement also provides $25 million for undergraduate resident enrollment growth at UC. This funding could be a substantial first step toward achieving UC’s goal of enrolling almost 10,000 new California undergraduate and graduate students over four years, beginning in the 2016-17 academic year.  We are grateful that the Legislature and the Governor share our goal of enrolling more California students.  We look forward to analyzing the provisions accompanying this funding over the coming months and continuing conversations with the Legislature and the Governor about enrollment growth...


We can all understand the ambiguity of the second paragraph since the legislature's understanding of when the enrollment growth might occur or can occur seems to be different from UC's. So maybe the discrepancy can be worked out if it can be said that conversations are "continuing." On the other hand, the pension piece of the Committee of Two deal involved a multi-year commitment of state funds for the UC pension in exchange for certain changes we have discussed in prior posts. But what the legislature proposes is a one-year contribution with an explicit statement that the rest of the money in the future is not obligated and may not appear. It also indicates that despite the lack of commitment of future funding, UC should quickly (hastily?) develop pension changes and put them into effect before even the first year's money will flow. That is not the "funding framework" of the Committee of Two.

It takes a great act of will to see a multi-year deal when it's not being provided. Guess you just have to believe:

The Potential Pension Initiative: Continued

We have previously blogged about a potential ballot initiative that would bar anything but defined contribution pensions after 2019. The proponents evidently had the $200 to file it but are hoping some wealthy sugar daddy or daddies will come along to finance a campaign to a) get the needed signatures for putting it on the 2016 ballot and b) then finance a campaign to get voters to support it.* Such an initiative would further complicate the pension challenges for UC created by the Committee of Two deal which would likely produce some kind of hybrid plan.  So far, no one has reported anything about sugar daddies that might have appeared. But it is evident that if the proposition got on the ballot, the opposition campaign would largely be financed by public sector unions.

One complication is that unions may have other ballot items to promote or oppose and there is a limit to how much they will want to spend in 2016. There may be some taxes on the ballot that will likely attract union financial support. Example:

Hoping to influence a special health care budget session, a coalition of labor and medical groups has put $2 million into an initiative to raise California’s tobacco tax and use the revenue to fund health care for low-income Californians. The money flowed from a coalition of groups that include SEIU California State Council – a union umbrella group whose members include thousands of health care workers – the California Medical Association, the California Dental Association, the American Cancer Society and groups promoting heart and lung health. Their twin ballot initiatives would impose a $2-per-pack tax on cigarettes to fund health programs that include smoking prevention and Medi-Cal, California’s health insurance program for low-income residents...

Full story at http://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article25118476.html

Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article25118476.html#storylink=cpy

There are other tax proposals that may be coming, too, such as a change in Prop 13 allowing a "split roll" with non-residential property in one way or another assessed differently (paying more than at present). Such a move would likely attract support of teachers' unions and others. We will see.
---
*http://uclafacultyassociation.blogspot.com/2015/06/now-what-happens-on-pension-initiative.html

Sunday, June 21, 2015

Integrity


From the LA Times:

UCLA offensive line coach Adrian Klemm has been reinstated by the university. Klemm was suspended for alleged NCAA violations. The review continues but Klemm is being allowed to resume his duties as the offensive line coach. Klemm has been an assistant at UCLA for the past three seasons and is also one of the school's top three recruiters and has rebuilt the Bruins' offensive line. He missed spring ball and was not allowed to recruit after being suspended in March. A person familiar with the situation said Klemm's only likely punishment will be the time he has already missed, including spring practice. UCLA said they will refrain from comment to "protect the integrity of the ongoing process."

Source: http://www.latimes.com/sports/ucla/uclanow/la-sp-ucla-adrian-klemm-reinstated-offensive-line-coach-20150619-story.html

From the Daily Bruin:

UCLA football offensive line coach Adrian Klemm was reinstated to the team Friday, according to the Los Angeles Times. Klemm was suspended from the team on March 16 because of alleged NCAA rules violations and missed the entirety of the team’s spring practice. While Klemm is allowed to the return to the team, the review of his alleged violations is ongoing. It remains unclear as to what specific transgressions led to Klemm’s suspension, details that will be released following the review’s close, according to UCLA Athletics.* Klemm had been a member of the Bruins coaching staff for three seasons before his suspension. During his tenure, Klemm has helped UCLA to a 29-8 record, including back-to-back 10-3 seasons.

Source: http://dailybruin.com/2015/06/19/suspension-lifted-for-ucla-offensive-line-coach-adrian-klemm/
=====
*Not wanting to disturb the integrity, we'll wait.

Gubernatorial Tolerance for Contradiction: Rail But Not Pension

=======================
======================
The Committee of Two deal requires major and adverse changes to the UC pension plan because its features differ from those of other state plans. Apparently, the contradiction cannot be tolerated by Gov. Brown. But when it comes to high-speed rail, a major funding source of which is the state's cap-and-trade program, complete contradiction is possible. See above. 

"A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by little statesmen and philosophers and divines." [Emerson]

Apparently, it's OK to have a little mind and be a little statesman in the pension category but not for rail.

Saturday, June 20, 2015

UCLA History: Grads

The UCLA library system recently circulated this graduation photo from 1930s via Facebook.

Friday, June 19, 2015

The Budget for 2015-16 in a Nutshell

The Legislative Analyst's Office (LAO) has come out with summaries of the state budget prior to any line-item vetoes by the governor. Since the governor has a deal with the legislature, it is unlikely that there will be significant vetoes but we will wait to see. In the current year, reserves were falling, i.e., a deficit in common parlance (but not necessarily in Sacramento-speak). However, in the coming year (2015-16), total reserves (regular plus rainy day) are projected to rise, i.e., a surplus.

The LAO summarizes the UC budget for 2015-6 as follows:

$3.2 Billion General Fund Support for UC. This is an increase of $241 million (8 percent) from 2014-15. Of this increase, $119 million is ongoing and $122 million is one time. The bulk of the ongoing funding is unallocated, but the budget includes various earmarks for the remaining funds. Specifically, the budget earmarks (1) $96 million (one time) to supplement payments made by UC toward its unfunded pension liability (this is counted as a Proposition 2 debt payment),* (2) $25 million (one time) for deferred maintenance (provided through a budget control section), (3) $6 million (ongoing) to support two UC centers on labor research and education, (4) $1 million (one time) for the Wildlife Health Center at the Davis campus to administer grants to local marine mammal stranding networks, (5) up to $1 million for UC to continue planning a medical school at the Merced campus, and (6) $770,000 (ongoing) for an elections database housed at the Berkeley campus. In addition, the budget specifies funding is available from UC’s base budget for the California DREAM Loan Program, though it does not designate a set dollar amount for this purpose.

Source: http://www.lao.ca.gov/Publications/Report/3275

Because revenue is now diverted to the rainy day fund under Prop 2, some adjustments have been made to the figures below for 2015-16 including adding back an "encumbrance" of $971 million:

($ billions)

Reserves at start of year: $4.0

Revenue and transfers
including received by
rainy day fund          +$116.9

Expenditures            -$115.4

Surplus                   +$1.5

Reserves at end of year    $5.5

As we have noted in prior posts, at the end of the year total reserves would be less than 5% of the budget which could be eaten up quickly in any kind of downturn.

Source: http://www.lao.ca.gov/Publications/Report/3279
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*This blog has previously noted that the language in the budget is not in accord with the Committee of Two accord which promises a multi-year inflow into the UC pension. Instead, there is a one-time allocation only for the first year with language - unless it has been changed - saying there is no guarantee of future contributions. The quid pro quo for the multi-year deal was creating a Tier 3 in the pension with a cap that will require substantial reworking of the pension program. Without even the quid pro quo, it is very difficult to see how UC benefits. See http://uclafacultyassociation.blogspot.com/2015/06/unbalanced-pension-deal.html

And if the research finds injuries?

Dozens of UCLA student-athletes will participate in research by UCLA scientists that is expected to deliver new clues about the biological and genetic risk factors for sports-related concussions. UCLA researchers in medicine and athletics have outfitted 22 Bruin football players with helmet sensors that measure the speed, intensity and location of hits to the head during all games and practices. The scientists also will track the health of 40 men’s and women’s soccer players. The information they gather could shed light on why concussions strike some athletes more than others, and why certain people recover faster from head injury. The innovative studies are part of the Concussion Assessment Research and Education Grand Alliance, a landmark $30 million initiative funded by the National Collegiate Athletic Association and the U.S. Department of Defense to collect “big data” on concussions. The three-year project aims to fill critical gaps in knowledge about concussion and translate research findings into new safety guidelines for the more than 450,000 U.S. collegiate student-athletes...

Football players in the study will wear helmets outfitted with sensors that measure the impact of collisions they sustain on the field. The sophisticated gadgets wirelessly transmit data to a laptop for analysis, and pagers connected to the helmets alert medical staff to what could be a significant hit...

Full story at http://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/ucla-scientists-will-monitor-student-athletes-to-further-explain-biology-of-concussions

As the title to this posting suggests, the article doesn't say what happens if significant injuries are found.

UCLA History: Empty Space

In 1933, there was a lot of empty space in the fields around Westwood Village.

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Unbalanced Pension Deal

Bob Samuels pointed me to a link to the current state budget language.* That's not the same as the overall budget summary - which will eventually be published by the Dept. of Finance (once the governor has signed off) that gives you an overall view of inflows and outflows and reserves.

However, it is worth noting that there is a certain imbalance when it comes to pensions. The overall UC language appears on pages 105-113 and the pension language in particular is on pages 112-113. The pension language requires the UC pension to implement what amounts to a Tier 3 with a cap at the same level as other state plans.** If implemented, as we have explained in earlier postings, it will require UC to create a hybrid defined-benefit/defined contribution plan. That's a BIG DEAL and a BAD THING by itself. It is being done because of appearances presumably since it doesn't look good for UC to do its pension differently from CalPERS (and therefore CSU). In exchange for the bad thing, the arrangement negotiated by the Committee of Two is supposed to be that UC gets a series of pension contributions from the state over three years.*** But the appropriation in the bill a) is for one year only and specifically notes that there is no obligation by the legislature to honor the rest of the deal or make any future contributions thereafter. Therefore, the bill implicitly continues to proclaim that the UC pension is not the liability of the state.

Here is the language:

This appropriation does not constitute an obligation on behalf of the state to appropriate any additional funds in subsequent years for any costs of the University of California Retirement Plan.  The Legislature shall determine the amount of additional funds, if any to be appropriated in subsequent years for costs of the University of California Retirement Plan.

Note the asymmetry: It looks bad for UC to have different rules from the plan covering CSU so UC should change its rules for appearances' sake. But apparently it doesn't look bad for the state to be obligated to make whatever future contributions are needed for CalPERS (CSU), but not have that same obligation for UC. Sure seems like a lack of balance. And one might argue that in fact even the limited Committee of Two accord is not properly reflected in the budget bill since the future pension payments promised by the governor are not reflected as any kind of legislative obligation - quite the contrary. Sure seems like bad faith.
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*http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/pub/15-16/bill/asm/ab_0101-0150/ab_123_bill_20150616_amended_sen_v98.pdf
**UC created a Tier 2 to cut pension costs before the state acted on its own programs.
***There are supposed to be three annual payments which will total $436 million. But the bill appropriates only $96 million for one year. See http://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/press-room/uc-press-release-governors-revised-budget

Stay Home

We have previously noted that President Obama would be on the Westside (and elsewhere) today and tomorrow. More details:

The Los Angeles Police Department issued a list of areas to avoid today and Friday because of President Barack Obama’s visit.
The following areas should be avoided between 1-6 p.m. today:
-- Evans Road and Monorca Drive; and
-- Napoli Drive and Sunset Boulevard.
The following areas should be avoided between 2-3 p.m. today:
-- Sepulveda Boulevard between Lincoln Boulevard and Century Boulevard;
-- Pico Boulevard and 23rd Street; and
-- Barrington Avenue and Palms Boulevard.
The following areas should be avoided between 2-4 p.m. today:
-- Centinela Avenue and Bundy Avenue;
-- Bundy Avenue and the Santa Monica (10) Freeway; and
-- San Diego (405) Freeway and Sunset Boulevard
The following areas should be avoided between 3-6 p.m. today:
-- Sunset Boulevard and the San Diego Freeway;
-- San Diego Freeway and Mulholland Drive; and
-- Mulholland Drive and Coldwater Canyon Drive.
The following areas should be avoided between 5-8:30 p.m. today:
-- Coldwater Canyon Drive and Beverly Drive;
-- Beverly Drive and Sunset Boulevard; and
-- Wilshire Boulevard and Santa Monica Boulevard .
The following areas should be avoided between 8-11 a.m. today:
-- Wilshire Boulevard and Santa Monica Boulevard;
-- Santa Monica Boulevard and Century Park East;
-- Century Park East and Pico Boulevard;
-- Pico Boulevard and Overland Avenue;
-- Overland Avenue and National Boulevard;
-- National Boulevard and Santa Monica Freeway; and
-- San Diego Freeway and Centinela Avenue.
The following areas should be avoided between 8 a.m.-noon Friday:
-- Arroyo Boulevard and Mountain Street;
-- Mountain Street and the Foothill (210) Freeway;
-- Ventura (134) Freeway and Colorado Boulevard; and
-- Colorado Boulevard and Figueroa Street.
The following areas should be avoided between 9 a.m.-noon Friday:
-- York Boulevard and Avenue 51; and
-- Yosemite Drive and Avenue 56.
The following streets in Pasadena will be closed from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday:
-- Seco Street between West Drive and Lincoln Avenue;
-- Rosemont Avenue between West Drive and Lincoln Avenue;
-- Rosemount Avenue between Prospect Terrace and North Arroyo Boulevard;
-- West Drive between Linda Vista Avenue to Salvia Canyon Road; and
-- Rosemount Avenue between North Arroyo Boulevard and Seco Street.
Merv Griffin Way between Wilshire Boulevard and Santa Monica Boulevard in Beverly Hills will be closed from 2 p.m. today to noon Friday.

Source: http://patch.com/california/centurycity/obama-road-closures-avoid-today-friday 

Like we said:

Waiting for an analysis of the budget?

Readers of this blog may be waiting for an analysis of the new state budget and wondering why we haven't presented one. The answer is simple. No budget publication or summary has yet appeared from the governor, the legislature, the Dept. of Finance, or any official source. So apart from fuzzy news accounts, we don't have any real numbers to analyze.

We'll keep looking. Stay tuned:

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Reminder: Don't Be Hooked by Phishing

From time to time, we remind readers of email frauds including "phishing" attacks specifically aimed at UCLA. If you get an email, supposedly from UCLA, saying you somehow have to renew or reactivate your email account, delete it. Do not click on any link provided.

Apparently, there is a current phishing attack against UCLA. Here is a notice I received from the folks who run the Anderson system:

The UCLA IT Security Office has reported that there is a new phishing email that has been making its way across campus.  Apparently, it originated from a legitimate UCLA email account that had been compromised.   If anyone has received a message like the one posted at the end of this notice, please just delete it.   If anyone actually followed the link in the original email and entered his/her credentials on its website, he/she should consider their credentials compromised and must change them.

The phony phishing email in question below has all the hallmarks of fraud including strange English since the attacks are often of foreign origin. "Current" is capitalized. No space between 24 and hours The first two sentences are separated by a comma. "...loose access to your account soon as..."  Etc.

UCLA;
Your Current password will expire in the next 24hours , you are here by directed to kindly click on Sign in to kindly reset your password or you will loose access to your account soon as your password expires.
NOTE: Your login will time out after 60 minutes. Your responses will be lost if you do not click on the "Sign in" button before 60 minutes lapses. There is no prompt when your 60 minute session has expired. Please save extensive comments periodically and check your time.


Again, ignore all such messages and delete them.

Campus-Level Discussion Needed?

We have previously blogged about the Kipnis case at Northwestern U in which an article by a faculty member in the Chronicle of Higher Ed led to a Title IX complaint and a rather Orwellian investigation.* That event sparked considerable online discussion. Now the libertarian-leaning Volokh Conspiracy blog (on the Washington Post website) has a piece (by UCLA Prof. Eugene Volokh) regarding "training" programs at UC and "microaggressions" that might occur in the classroom or elsewhere that seems related.** Apart from such programs, there has been little formal discussion on campus at UCLA about boundaries, triggers, balancing viewpoints in the classroom, academic freedom, etc. Maybe it's time for the Academic Senate to take an independent role from the administration and sponsor such a forum. Online debate is fine but surely an in-person, campus-level discussion would be preferable.
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*http://uclafacultyassociation.blogspot.com/2015/05/a-cautionary-tale-follow-up.html
**http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2015/06/16/uc-teaching-faculty-members-not-to-criticize-race-based-affirmative-action-call-america-melting-pot-and-more/. The Volokh blog also featured an earlier piece by another author on the Kipnis case: http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2015/06/08/a-kipnis-accuser-speaks-and-kipnis-corrects-the-record/.
UPDATE: A version of Prof. Volokh's blog item later appeared in the LA Times at http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-0623-volokh-uc-microaggressions-20150623-story.html
UPDATE: The LA Times appeared to endorse the Volokh op ed with its own editorial at
http://www.latimes.com/opinion/editorials/la-ed-microaggression-what-not-to-say-at-uc-20150624-story.html

Choreographed Ending to Budget "Negotiations"

Blog readers will have to wait a bit until we get an actual budget document outlining the deal between the governor and the legislature. But what is clear is that there really wasn't a negotiation. Instead, there was a choreographed arrangement in which the legislative leaders could display (without much documentation) a kind of wishlist budget and then largely concede to the governor what he wanted. Real negotiations don't end in a day and typically end close to the deadline (which in this case would have been June 30).

That said, UC prez Napolitano can't be happy with this tidbit in the news media:

...The budget is a time for payback. As part of the final accord, the California State University system received an additional bump of $97 million in ongoing funding. UC received a one-time payment of $96 million to pay down its pension liability. In a news conference with (legislative leaders) de León and Atkins on Tuesday, Brown dryly noted that the Cal States did somewhat better in this year’s budget than UC. UC President Janet Napolitano was public in her demands for more money. CSU Chancellor Timothy White took a more low-key approach...


Apparently, Brown was willing to dance with the legislature but not with UC: