Author: admin

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    Hotel/Conference Center Train Halts; Mishap Averted

    As readers of this blog will know, a public forum on the proposed hotel/conference center to replace the current Faculty Center structure is scheduled for April 6 (7 pm, Faculty Center). This forum was shaping up to be an unpleasant confrontation. However, it appears that the train has been halted before unfortunate consequences ensued. The Council on Planning and Budget’s (CPB’s) negative evaluation of the project described in an earlier post – combined with other communications from faculty and senate committees – seems now to have led to a re-evaluation by the administration. After the CPB report was received by…

  • Student Interns: Must They Be Paid?

    Yours truly is involved in a conversation on another website in which the following question arose. It has been increasingly common for college students to undertake unpaid internships with private organizations (including businesses) for course credit. In fact, to they have to be paid? Can someone decide to work for free despite the existence of minimum wage and overtime laws? As it turns out, the answer seems to be that such activities have to be paid – at least the minimum wage – except under a narrow set of circumstances. Below are the guidelines from the U.S. Department of Labor,…

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    Let’s Hope It’s More Than Hope

    We have been noting the need for UCOP to engage the governor concerning his pension proposals which – as has been reported – include UC and could override the Regents’ actions taken last December. From a San Jose Mercury-News article about higher ed lobbying activities planned for tomorrow: …University officials hope that “Advocacy Day” in Sacramento will help stave off further reductions to public colleges and universities, as some in the Legislature threaten to adopt an “all-cuts” budget to close the state’s budget gap without additional revenues… …On Tuesday, UC President Mark Yudof, Cal State Chancellor Charles Reed and California…

  • The U of Wisconsin Email Case

    Inside Higher Ed today carries a story on the request in Wisconsin for emails of a history professor by the state’s GOP in relation to the passage of anti-union legislation in that state. Wisconsin has a state equivalent of the federal Freedom of Information Act – as does California. One take-away from this episode is that faculty should not assume emails are private communications. Even if you use an outside service such as gmail, your communications can be forwarded around and wind up on services which are subject to outside scrutiny. Undoubtedly, UCLA would take a position similar to the…

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    UCLA History: Nuclear Reactor

    The Daily Bruin last week ran a history of a small nuclear reactor that operated at UCLA from 1959 to 1984. The caption to the photo above read “Thomas E. Hicks (right), engineering professor and then-chief supervisor of the UCLA reactor, and Ronald MacLain, his chief assistant, stand on top of the newly built reactor in December 1960. The nuclear reactor, which had the power of 100 toasters, was small and used mostly for research purposes.” Full story at http://www.dailybruin.com/index.php/article/2011/03/small_ucla_reactor_used_by_students_shut_down_in_1984_because_of_potential_safety_hazards_declining_

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    CPB Report Nixes Hotel/Conference Center Project

    The Council on Planning and Budget (CPB) of the Academic Senate yesterday sent the letter below to the chair of the Academic Senate. I have reproduced the text below. Yours truly broke the letter down into more paragraphs than the original for readability on this blog and marked some sections with bold printing for emphasis. In simple terms, the CPB thinks the hotel/conference center project is likely to fail and doesn’t think failure is a good option for UCLA. Here is the CPB letter: Professor Ann KaragozianChair, UCLA Academic Senate Re: Residential Conference Center Proposal Dear Professor Karagozian, On The…

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    Letter by Farseeing Astronomers and Physicists to the Chancellor Concerning Faculty Center Demolition for a Hotel/Conference Center

    Yours truly was given a letter sent yesterday to the chancellor concerning the Faculty Center affair. The text is below since direct reproduction of the letter (as you can see at right) is difficult to do legibly on this blog: Dear Chancellor Block: Due to the unusual amount of discussion regarding building the proposed residential conference center on the site of the Faculty Center, the faculty within the Department of Physics and Astronomy encouraged a departmental faculty vote to ascertain if there was strong feeling within our department concerning this issue. A ballot was sent out asking whether to urge…

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    FAQs On the Faculty Center Replacement Project (FAQsTHNGAAIASYWHSPAATPFOA6)

    Prof. Dora Costa of Economics has sent yours truly an interesting list of FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions) about the proposed hotel/conference center slated to replace the Faculty Center. They are reproduced below. Actually, they are not just FAQs. They are FAQsTHNGAAIASYWHSPAATPFOA6 = Frequently Asked Questions That Have No Good Answers Although I Am Sure You Will Hear Some Purported Answers At The Public Forum On April 6th. Why is a luxury hotel a UCLA priority? The whole UC system is facing budget shortfalls. Faculty and staff positions have been cut, employee benefits have been cut, class sizes have increased, and…

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    Ever Heard of UBTI? Those Pushing the Hotel/Conference Center Undoubtedly Have

    If you are wondering, UBTI = Unrelated Business Taxable Income. In the case of UCLA entities – which are normally tax exempt – getting into commercial business renders the activity taxable. The IRS ruling below would seem not only to challenge solicitation or acceptance of such business at the proposed hotel/conference center slated to replace the Faculty Center, it seems also to challenge the kinds of activity going on – or proposed to go on – elsewhere on campus. That would include the “other” hotel/conference center going up in the Northwest area that this blog reported on earlier. See:http://uclafacultyassociation.blogspot.com/2011/03/did-you-know-about-other-conference.html The…

  • University Autonomy Issue in Oregon

    The current budget crisis seems to be pushing university system and campuses to press for more autonomy. Earlier posts on this blog have noted developments at the University of Wisconsin. Below is an excerpt of a report from the U of Oregon: From Inside Higher Ed today: …Governor John Kitzhaber and the president of the University of Oregon, Richard Lariviere, agreed Tuesday that the university would postpone for a year its push for legislation that would give it a new financing stream and an independent governing board separate and apart from the existing State Board of Higher Education. Under the…