Author: uclafaculty

Government by (Hot) Checks and (Im)Balances: California’s State Budget from the May 2009 Voter Rejection to the October 2010 Budget Deal

The sad tale of the California state budget over the past year and a half – as told by yours truly – is available at http://www.anderson.ucla.edu/documents/areas/fac/hrob/mitchell_2011budgetchapter.pdf At over 60 pages, it may be more than you want to know. This item is a forthcoming chapter in California Policy Options 2011, an annual volume of the UCLA School of Public Affairs. The volume will appear in paper format in late December or early January. It will be webified towards the end of winter quarter. Earlier volumes – including chapters on the state budget – can be found at http://www.anderson.ucla.edu/x2195.xml (Scroll down…

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CalSTRS May Lower Expected Investment Return to UC Level

The large CalSTRS pension fund has used an expected investment return of 8% per annum. That figure is higher than the 7.5% assumption in the UC pension system. Apparently, CalSTRS may soon go to the UC level. Excerpt from the Sacramento Bee: CalSTRS faces prospect of lowering forecast Nov. 2, 2010, Dale Kasler CalSTRS once again faces the controversial task of cutting its investment return forecast, a move that could put more pressure on the Legislature to increase its annual contribution to the teachers pension fund. At its meeting Friday, the CalSTRS governing board is scheduled to vote on a…

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UC Regents Join Stanford in Lawsuit Over Patent Rights

Inside Higher Ed reports on a lawsuit over patent rights to an invention of a Stanford medical researcher. The case is on appeal and will be heard by the US Supreme Court. The Regents of UC have filed a friend-of-the-court brief in support of Stanford. Stanford lost at a lower level and the case is reported to be significant for patent rights more generally of US univerities. Excerpt from the report: In a ruling last October, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit had directed a lower court to dismiss a lawsuit Stanford had brought accusing the pharmaceutical…

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Further Adventures in Invasion of Privacy & Encouragement of Identity Theft: OC Register Database of UC Salaries

The Orange County Register joins the Sacramento Bee and San Francisco Chronicle in making available an online database of UC salaries. Although the headline reads “Find out who makes more than $200,000 at UC,” in fact it appears all salaries are in the database, including those below $200,000. See http://www.ocregister.com/articles/-273430–.html?data=1&appSession=90482558695490#article-data

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Plan for UC Employer Contribution to Pensions: 2011-2037

Above is a chart, which I am told is not confidential, showing UCOP’s plan for the employer share of the contributions to go into the pension plans (existing plus lower tier) until 2037. The image may not be clear; the lower line is the plan with STIP borrowing which maxes at 18.5%. The higher line is what would happen without STIP borrowing and it maxes at 20%. The note on the bottom of the chart reads: “Assumes new tier with 15.% (sic) total normal cost in place by FYB2013, 8% contribution for employees that stay in the current UCRP plan….

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All in the Same Boat on New Pension Plan?

One of the elements of the Academic Senate’s reaction to the two-tier pension proposals has been that faculty and staff should remain in the same plan. (See earlier posts.) President Yudof rejected Options A and B and went along with a version of C. It was unclear (to me) what staff unions were going to say about the proposal. At least on the issue of “all in the same boat,” AFSCME appears to agree with the Senate. From a recent article in the Santa Cruz Sentinal: “The proposal is not good enough,” said Lakesha Harrison, president of AFSCME Local 3299,…

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UC Med Schools Poppin’ Out All Over!

The article below deals mainly with cutbacks at an adjunct Palm Desert campus of UC-Riverside. But note the last sentence. Merced ain’t alone in grand plans. Local UCR campus slashes budget by 40 percent: Executive director, five administrators laid off (excerpt) Michelle Mitchell • The Desert Sun • October 30, 2010 Full article at http://www.mydesert.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=201010300321 The executive director of the University of California, Riverside, Palm Desert campus, and five other employees were laid off effective Monday, the school reported Friday. The cutbacks, which represented 40 percent of the graduate center’s budget, should not impact academic programs and were caused by…

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Take a Hike (in tuition) at CSU – and Eventually at UC

CSU considers spring fee hike (excerpt) Capitol Alert, October 29, 2010, Laurel Rosenhall California State University trustees will vote on a mid-year fee increase on Nov. 9 that would raise tuition by 5 percent for the spring term. If the action is approved, tuition for a semester at a CSU campus would rise to $2,220, not including fees that specific campuses charge or books, housing and living expenses. The proposal is not unexpected. When CSU trustees voted in June to raise fees for the current semester they said they would consider another fee increase after a state budget was approved….