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Apr 20 2015

Contact Speaker Rosenberger and Republican Members of the House Finance Committee

Thank you to those who have spent time sending messages to members of the House Finance Committee. Your activism is absolutely critical. This is an extremely serious situation, as our collective bargaining rights are being threatened.

We now need to refocus our efforts on contacting only the Republican members of the Finance Committee AND House Speaker Cliff Rosenberger. Their offices need to be inundated with calls and e-mails so that they realize these provisions are strongly and widely opposed.

The bill will be voted on in committee on Monday, and the full House will vote on Wednesday. Place calls and send e-mails through Monday.

Here is the contact information:
Speaker Cliff Rosenberger: (614) 466-3506; rep91@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Ryan Smith: (614) 466-1366; rep93@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Kirk Schuring: (614) 752-2438, rep48@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Marlene Anielski: (614) 644-6041; rep06@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Tony Burkley: (614) 644-5091; rep82@ohiohouse.gov
Rep.  Robert Cupp: (614) 466-9624; rep04@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Timothy Derickson: (614) 644-5094; rep53@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Mike Dovilla: (614) 466-4895; rep07@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Mike Duffey: (614) 644-6030; rep21@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Doug Green: (614) 644-6034; rep66@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Cheryl Grossman: (614) 466-9690; rep23@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. David Hall: (614) 466-2994; rep70@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Stephanie Kunze: (614) 466-8012; rep24@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Ron Maag: (614) 644-6023; rep62@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Jeff McClain: (614) 644-6265; rep87@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Rick Perales: (614) 644-6020; rep73@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Bill Reineke: (614) 466-1374; rep88@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Mark Romanchuk: (614) 466-5802; rep02@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Gary Scherer: (614) 644-7928; rep92@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Barbara Sears: (614) 466-1731; rep47@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Robert Sprague: (614) 466-3819; rep83@ohiohouse.gov
Rep. Andy Thompson: (614) 644-8728; rep95@ohiohouse.gov

For purposes of sending one e-mail message to all of these representatives, here is a list you can simply copy and paste: 
Rep06@ohiohouse.gov; rep82@ohiohouse.gov; rep04@ohiohouse.gov; rep53@ohiohouse.gov; rep07@ohiohouse.gov; rep21@ohiohouse.gov; rep66@ohiohouse.gov; rep23@ohiohouse.gov; rep70@ohiohouse.gov; rep24@ohiohouse.gov; rep62@ohiohouse.gov; rep87@ohiohouse.gov; rep73@ohiohouse.gov; rep88@ohiohouse.gov; rep02@ohiohouse.gov; rep92@ohiohouse.gov; rep48@ohiohouse.gov; rep47@ohiohouse.gov; rep93@ohiohouse.gov; rep83@ohiohouse.gov; rep91@ohiohouse.gov; rep95@ohiohouse.govMany of you may call these offices over the weekend when no one is there. That is fine. Leave messages. Whether or not someone answers, you can say:

“I’m calling to express my strong opposition to the language in Substitute House Bill 64 that is aimed at taking away collective bargaining rights for faculty. I hope that Representative (their name) will work to remove this language in the House Finance Committee.”

And here is a revised, sample e-mail message:

Subject: Please remove anti-faculty language from HB 64

Representative,

I am writing to express my strong opposition to the language in Substitute House Bill 64 that is aimed at taking away collective bargaining rights for public college and university faculty.

The language would reclassify faculty as management, and contends that they are managers because of basic functions they perform in their jobs, like choosing curriculum. 

If faculty had true decision-making power at our institutions of higher education, our institutions would be run much differently. There would be more focus on instruction and research rather than on a construction arms race and deficit-spending on athletic programs.

Apparently, this language has been included to help institutions “control costs.”

Faculty are not driving up costs at our institutions, and the data proves that. Over the last 10 years, faculty salaries and benefits have failed to keep pace with inflation. In fact, when adjusted for inflation, instructional compensation has declined over 4%. The real problem is that administrations are prioritizing spending on things that are peripheral to the educational mission of our public institutions. That is the issue that needs to be addressed.

In addition, if faculty were elevated to management status, wouldn’t that imply they would earn more, not less? If staff were hired for the service work that faculty volunteer to do, employment costs at our universities would soar. Faculty service provides exactly the kind of efficiency the legislature is always demanding. Why undermine it?
This language is a thinly-veiled attempt to strip faculty of their collective bargaining rights and is no different than the attack that was in SB 5 four years ago. We do not need another divisive collective bargaining battle in Ohio. 

Please do the rational and right thing and push for the removal of these amendments from Substitute HB 64.

Thank you,

[Your Name]

Written by admin · Categorized: Uncategorized

Apr 20 2015

House Finance Committee Passes HB 64 Without Anti-Faculty Union Provisions

Thanks in large part to the activism of our members and allies, the House Finance Committee passed Sub. HB 64 this evening without the language that would have stripped faculty of their collective bargaining rights.

The synopsis of the omnibus amendments can be found by clicking here.

The bill is slated to be voted upon by the full House of Representatives on Wednesday.

We cannot thank those of you who took action enough for helping to flood the representatives’ offices with calls and e-mails. It made a difference!

In addition, we thank the House Democratic Caucus, in particular, Minority Leader Fred Strahorn, Rep. Denise Driehaus (Ranking Minority Member on Finance), and Rep. Dan Ramos (Ranking Minority Member on Finance Higher Education Subcommittee).

Without our legislative allies drawing a line in the sand on this issue, we couldn’t have been successful.

Of course, we greet this development with cautious optimism. There is a chance that this language could reappear in the Senate. We will be diligent as the budget process continues to unfold.

Stay tuned for more information. And great work. We couldn’t have done it without YOU.

Written by admin · Categorized: Uncategorized

Apr 03 2015

Kasich Vetoes Voter Suppression Language; Election Results; DDN Reports on University Athletics

Kasich Vetoes Controversial 
Voter Suppression Measure

On Wednesday, April 1, Gov. Kasich signed HB 53, the transportation budget bill, into law, but not before applying a line item veto to the controversial language that would’ve made it more difficult for college students to vote.

As we reported to you last week, HB 53 contained language that would have required people from out-of-state to obtain an Ohio driver’s license and register their vehicle with the state within 30 days to establish residency and thus be able to register to vote.

This measure, inserted by Senate Republicans prior to passage of the bill, appeared to be designed to create barriers to out-of-state college students from voting in Ohio just ahead of the 2016 elections. Reports estimated that over 100,000 students would have been affected.

We commend Gov. Kasich for doing the right thing and vetoing the language. We also thank our members for contacting members of the conference committee and governor to protest the provision!

OCAAUP Election Results

Congratulations to Martin Kich, Heather Howley, and Anita Waters for being re-elected to their positions of Vice President, Treasurer, and At-Large Member, respectively.

We appreciate their continued commitment to serving all Ohio AAUP members through their positions on the OCAAUP Board of Trustees. And we appreciate all of you who took the time to cast your vote.

Dayton Daily Reports How Much Students Pay for University Athletics Without Knowing

Last Sunday, March 30, the Dayton Daily News published this story about the price students at Ohio’s universities are paying to subsidize intercollegiate athletics.

Journalists at Dayton Daily were prompted to investigate this issue after reading our 2015 Ohio Higher Education Report and discovering that each university, save Ohio State, takes heavily from the academic side to pay for athletic programs that can’t sustain themselves.

The article revealed startling numbers of how much students will pay for – or how much debt they’ll accrue to pay for – athletics over a four-year college career.

For instance, each student at Miami will end up paying over $4,500 to subsidize their athletic programs and their new ice arena.

At BGSU, students will pay nearly $3,300 by the time they graduate, if they graduate in four years.

The article quoted the questions raised in our report:

“We have to ask ourselves if the athletic expenditures are worthwhile, especially when students are the ones footing a substantial part of the bill, probably largely unknown to them,” the report says. “This is an issue of priorities and whether we are willing to say it is acceptable for students to accumulate thousands in debt over a four-year period to pay for athletic programs that neither make money nor are self-sustaining.”

Written by admin · Categorized: Uncategorized

Mar 23 2015

ACTION ALERT: Contact Legislators to Oppose Student Voter Suppression

Contact Legislators Urging Removal of Student Voting Suppression Amendment

It has come to our attention that last week, the Ohio Senate inserted a provision into HB 53, the state transportation budget bill, which would require out-of-state college students to acquire an Ohio driver’s license and register their vehicle with the state of Ohio in order to be able to register to vote.  Clearly, such a last-minute amendment buried deep into a transportation funding bill is an underhanded attempt to create substantial obstacles to students exercising their right to vote and without the public being able to weigh in on the matter in any substantive way.

Consequently, we are asking you, our members, to advocate on behalf of all of our students by contacting members of the House and Senate Conference Committee to encourage them to remove this provision. 

The ConferenceCommittee is meeting tomorrow, so we need you to take action immediately in the form of e-mails and phone calls.

Below is a list of the Conference Committee members with their contact information, as well as a sample e-mail to send:

Rep. Ryan Smith (R-93): (614) 466-1366; rep93@ohiohouse.gov

Rep. Cheryl Grossman (R-23): (614) 466-9690; rep23@ohiohouse.gov

Rep. Alicia Reece (D-33): (614) 466-1308; rep33@ohiohouse.gov

Sen. Gayle Manning (R-13): (614) 644-7613; sd13@ohiosenate.gov 

Sen. Tom Patton (R-24): (614) 466-8056; sd24@ohiosenate.gov 

Sen. Capri Cafaro (D-32): (614) 466-7182; sd32@ohiosenate.gov

Subject: Don’t make it harder for students to vote

Body: Dear Representative/Senator,
My name is [your name], and I am a professor at [your institution]. I am writing to you today in your capacity as a House Bill 53 Conference Committee member. Respectfully, I urge you to remove the provision from the bill that would require an out-of-state college student to acquire an Ohio driver’s license and register their vehicle with the state in order to be able to register to vote. This provision will create additional barriers to my students engaging in the electoral process. I believe we should be trying to find ways to make it easier, not harder, for students to vote. We should be welcoming to our out-of-state students so that they feel like a part of our great state and stay here after they graduate. Please do the right thing and remove a voting rights measure from this transportation funding bill.
Sincerely,

[Your Name]

Written by admin · Categorized: Uncategorized

Mar 18 2015

McNay Relays Faculty Concerns Over Budget Bill; OCAAUP Elections Information

McNay Testifies on State Budget Bill

Earlier today, Wednesday, March 18, OCAAUP President John McNay testified to the House Finance Higher Education Subcommittee on House Bill 64, the state budget bill.

McNay began his testimony by emphasizing that faculty should be consulted on higher education policy proposals. He said, “We respect the work of our institutional presidents and the organizations that represent them, but you only get one of several important campus perspectives by consulting them.” He went on to say that the new college and university funding formulas are based on course completions and graduations, in which faculty play a key role, and yet, faculty were never consulted in any meaningful way about such a major policy shift.

His testimony pointed out that the new university funding formula gives a lopsided benefit to institutions like Ohio State and Miami that have selective admissions, while open-enrollment institutions are penalized. “One size doesn’t fit all,” he stated. President McNay also addressed the continuous decline in state funding, and pointed out that while Gov. Kasich is referring to his proposed higher ed appropriations as increases, even the proposed funding for Fiscal Year 2017 doesn’t restore funding to where it was before the governor slashed it in his first budget in 2011.

Additionally, he encouraged the committee to examine critically the College Credit Plus program – a program slated to receive additional funding under HB 64. He said that while the program is well-intentioned, it threatens the lifeblood of regional campuses, which exist primarily to offer introductory-level courses. 

Furthermore, McNay expressed quality concerns over the proposed funding to train “college-level teachers” at poorer high schools and using Western Governors University to award competency-based credit. 

He finished his testimony by referencing OCAAUP’s 2015 Ohio Higher Education Report, and briefly mentioning the issues of administrative bloat, athletics spending, and debt-incurring real estate spending. “When students graduate, employers judge them on knowledge of their field and being able to think critically, not by how well their college football team performed or how upscale their dorm was,” he said.

McNay received and answered questions from committee members for nearly an hour. 

For example, Rep. Ramos asked how the overuse of adjuncts might affect educational quality and even the local economy. McNay responded that adjuncts are often teaching courses at multiple institutions, and receive very little institutional support.
He explained that full-time faculty are in a better financial position to contribute to the local economy by buying homes, purchasing cars, and other spending. Adjuncts, he said, are more worried about piecing together a living wage.

Rep. Anielski asked how the faculty to administrator ratio could be improved. President McNay stated that it’s not something that could happen overnight, but there are places that have made an attempt to address the issue.

He used Iowa State University as an example, which he said has increased its full time faculty by over 40 percent over the last 10 years by shrinking its administration. “We should be looking at and learning from these examples,” he said.

Chair of the committee, Rep. Mike Duffey, called McNay’s testimony “thought-provoking” and asked him if he thought capping tuition by a percentage was the right idea or whether the legislature should cap increases by some dollar amount. He also asked whether addressing tuition was enough or if they should cap total cost of attendance.

President McNay said that he believes a tuition cap percentage makes more sense than a one-size-fits all dollar amount. He also stated that total cost, not just tuition, needs to be taken into account.

For a copy of the full testimony, click here.

OCAAUP Elections Information

The Ohio Conference AAUP is conducting its trustee elections electronically via Ballot Box Online.

On Thursday, March 19, all Ohio AAUP members should receive an e-mail with instructions on how to vote. The voting period will last for two weeks, through April 2.

The candidates appearing on this year’s ballot are:
-Vice President: Martin Kich, Wright State University – Lake Campus
-Treasurer: Heather Howley, University of Akron – Wayne College 
-At-Large Member – Public Institution with <100 or Private Institution: Anita Waters, Denison University

Thank you in advance for taking the time to vote! If you have any questions or concerns, please send an e-mail to sara@ocaaup.org.

Mark Your Calendar for Upcoming National AAUP Meetings

Please consider attending these upcoming National AAUP and AAUP-CBC meetings:

AAUP-CBC Spring Regional Meeting

04.18.2015

University of Cincinnati 
400B, Tangeman University Center
Cincinnati, Ohio 45220

The AAUP-CBC Spring Regional Meeting will be at the University of Cincinnati in 400B of the Tangeman University Center from 9:00am-4pm on Saturday, April 18th.

2015 AAUP Annual Conference

06.10.2015 to 06.14.2015

Mayflower Hotel
1127 Connecticut Avenue NW
Washington, District Of Columbia 20036

Join your colleagues for the AAUP’s Annual Conference on the State of Higher Education and the annual business meeting of the AAUP.

2015 Summer Institute

07.23.2015 to 07.26.2015

University of Denver
2199 S University Blvd
Denver, Colorado 80208

Please plan to join us at the University of Denver, July 23-26, 2015, for an intensive, four-day series of workshops and seminars that will prepare you to organize your colleagues, stand up for academic freedom, and advocate for research and teaching as the core priority of higher education.


Written by admin · Categorized: Uncategorized

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