Author: uclafaculty

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UC Submits Legal Brief on Affirmative Action to US Supreme Court

There is currently a challenge to the University of Texas’ affirmative action plan before the U.S. Supreme Court. Various interested parties have submitted friend-of-the-court briefs in support of the U of Texas program. Inside Higher Ed today carries a lengthy article on the case. California voters enacted Prop 209 in 1996 which barred affirmative action in student admissions, so it might seem that UC has no interest in the Texas case.  (In 1995, before voters enacted Prop 209, the Regents had enacted a similar ban.  That ban was removed after Prop 209 made it redundant.)  However, UC has submitted a…

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And in the State Senate?

From the Sacramento Bee‘s Capitol Alert blog last night: By a razor-thin margin, the California Assembly passed legislation today to raise a billion dollars annually for middle-class college scholarships by altering tax law for numerous out–of-state corporations. The measure, Assembly Bill 1500, passed 54-24, the bare-minimum two-thirds vote needed for tax or fee increases. Democrats supported the measure, as did Republicans Brian Nestande of Palm Desertand Independent Nathan Fletcher of San Diego Assembly Speaker John A. Perez proposed the bill as a companion to his separate legislation, Assembly Bill 1501, which would spend the billion dollars raised to assist college and university students whose families earn less than $150,000 per year……

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The Legislature is Watching

From the publication “Supplemental Report of the 2012-13 Budget Package” put out by the Legislative Analyst’s Office (LAO): Item 6440‑001‑0001—University of California (UC) Audit Report. It is the intent of the Legislature, and in follow‑up to State Audit Report 2010‑105, that by July 31, 2012, UC provide to the appropriate legislative budget subcommittees and LAO the recommendations of the systemwide working group established to examine variation in funding across the system.  Further, it is the intent of the Legislature that UC identify the amount of revenues from the general funds and tuition budget that each campus received in 2012‑13 for…

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You Might Not Want to Look…

…at the July cash statement of the state controller. Because if you do, you will find out that revenues in the first month of the fiscal year came in over $400 million below estimates in the recently-enacted state budget. And, of course, there could be trigger cuts in the budget (including at UC) although such cuts are more contingent on the passage by voters (or not) of the governor’s tax initiative, Prop 30. If you do want to look, nonetheless, the report is at:http://www.sco.ca.gov/Files-ARD/CASH/fy1213_jul.pdf Look if you dare:

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Even the Email Identity Thieves Targeting UCLA Can Improve

The identity thieves that have been sending UCLA email users phishing messages designed to steal your passwords, etc., turn out to be followers of Émile Coué (shown at left). In past messages from them, there have been incorrect spellings and odd grammar, as we have noted in past blog posts.  But they are getting better, day by day. Still, you should not reward their efforts at self improvement by clicking on their messagessuch as today’s edition: Dear Bruin OnLine E-mail user, This is to inform all users that our server upgrade/maintenance is scheduled for August 30 2012. You may experience login…

Student Evaluations of Teaching: Always a Hot Topic

What are they saying? Inside Higher Ed today notes complaints from Australian faculty about increased use of student evaluations of teaching for faculty advancement.  The article is at http://www.insidehighered.com/quicktakes/2012/08/13/australian-professors-object-student-evaluationsand it links to an article in the Sydney Morning Herald which says (excerpt): …Teachers at the Australian National University now need to explain themselves if too many students are not pleased with them and colleagues must argue why courses with student satisfaction rates of less than 50 per cent should be kept. One teacher emailed the union: ”I feel under pressure to lower standards and make the student experience more comfortable…

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UC History: Teller Tells You About the Universe

A legacy of the World War II Manhattan Project to develop the atomic bomb was UC’s inheritance of the nuclear labs.  The photo from the early 1950s shows key personalities related to the Lawrence Berkeley National Lab: Left to right are Glenn Seaborg, Edward McMillan, E.O. Lawrence, Donald Cooksey, Edward Teller, Herb York, and Luis Alvarez. Edward Teller, often dubbed the father of the H-bomb, was undoubtedly the most controversial of these individuals. Google him for the history. However, in the 1950s, he recorded a program for lay persons on the state of cosmology in that era.  You can hear…

The Golden State of Electoral Affairs

As readers of this blog will know, there will be all kinds of exciting propositions on the state ballot this coming November, including the governor’s tax initiative that the Regents have endorsed. Since this is a sleepy weekend with not much happening UC-wise, here is a little lesson in direct democracy. Apart from the various tax and other initiatives, there is a referendum, Prop 40. A referendum is a proposition which – like an initiative – is put on the ballot via a petition. But while an initiative creates legislation or a constitutional amendment, a referendum repeals legislation that has…

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Blue Deal

From the LA Times yesterday:===Nonprofit insurer Blue Shield of California said it resolved a lengthy contract dispute with UCLA and other UC system hospitals over reimbursements for patient care. Effective Sept. 1, Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center and the Santa Monica-UCLA Medical Center and Orthopaedic Hospital will be back in the Blue Shield network. The San Francisco health insurer said this new contract with all UC providers statewide runs through June 30, 2015… Full story at http://www.latimes.com/business/money/la-fi-mo-ucla-blue-shield-20120810,0,3160712.story Fact of the matter is that although we have these disputes from time to time, big insurers don’t want to cut UC medical centers out of their…

And I guess they can

In case you missed it in UCLA Today:===== What is this new tax that will affect UCLA’s budget?   Under a plan devised by the UC Office of the President (OP), campuses will retain more non-state revenue, such as tuition and research overhead costs. But, in exchange, UCLA and the other campuses will have to pay a tax to support UC systemwide operations and programs. The bottom line is this: The fee that UCLA will pay this year exceeds the new revenue the campus would receive by $50 million. It’s a tax on our operations. Source: http://today.ucla.edu/portal/ut/cfo-explains-budget-237352.aspx