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I think setting an overhead limit for the administrative duties is a workable idea that may be implemented across the university (with reasonable adjustments).
__________________ Behraad Bahreyni, PhD, PEng MSE 4176, 250-13450 102nd Ave T. +1 (778) 782-8694
F. +1 (778) 782-7514
W. http://sense.fas.sfu.ca/ From: annie ross <annier@sfu.ca> dear friends, in response to the thread regarding what i would consider excesses in bureaucracy at our home institution, i would like to pose a thought: in my previous capacity as the director of a not-for-profit foundation, there were and are clear guidelines as to how much of an overall and annual budget may be used for administration,
relevant to how much is used for fulfilling the actual mandate/mission of an organization. do universitites in canada have similar restrictions, expectations, or social contract? in other words, once a certain percentage of the budget (used for 'administration'), exceeds a maximum percentage of the overall budget, the foundation is considered to no longer
be fulfilling its mandate, and would lose it's legal status. something to consider. annie dr. annie g. ross Love and thanks to all Wild, Sacred, and Good. I especially acknowledge that i live, learn, work with and benefit from the unceded, ancestral, and traditional territories of
the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm, Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh, Kwikwitlem, and Skwxwú7mesh Úxwumixw First Peoples' HomeLands.
From: Michael Filimowicz <michael_f@sfu.ca> I think we just need to deprive administrators of money, analogous to one way you put out fires– deprive them of oxygen. The more money administrators have, the more silly things
they will do with the money, and the more they will autopoietically keep replicating themselves by expanding their ranks. The best way I can think of to deprive admin of money is to give big raises all around– to faculty, academic unit staff, TSSU members and librarians. So, in addition to salary parity
with UBC and the cost of living in YVR, we can add ‘keep SFU admin from wasting money’ as another rationale in bargaining for higher salaries for employees who are focused on the core mission. We could even invent fictional faculty and pay them, and let the money accumulate in non-existent faculty accounts to cover the eventual costs of new hires and giving them research
startup fees with the money stored in these fake faculty placeholder accounts– anything to keep the money out of hands of people who don’t know how to spend it well. Michael Filimowicz, PhD Faculty of Communication, Art and Technology School of Interactive Arts and Technology
Simon Fraser University
From: Cynthia Patton <cindy_patton@sfu.ca> I echo Henry's observations. The idea that there currently isn't sufficient funding for the Black Cluster Hire is especially ridiculous given the reports we have recently received about the dramatic expansion in non-faculty, non-permanent staff,
and the lack of replacement of faculty. Perhaps our colleagues Media Relations and in Communications and Marketing can report to their VP that they are in a rather difficult moral position because they are being asked to promote a university that is ongoingly
and blatantly not meeting its "Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion" benchmarks at the faculty level. (I note that the University threw away an opportunity in the recent FASS Dean hiring process.) From: Henry Daniel <hdaniel@sfu.ca> SFU remains Canada’s top university for innovation, rises to first for entrepreneurial spirit in global ranking! …and yet we can’t seem to find the budget to hire the fifteen new Black Professors that a crucial Senate ruling established a year ago!??!! Regards, ———
Henry Daniel, PhD - Artistic Director & Choreographer: Full Performing Bodies
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