UC's False Claims of Crisis: Why Cuts and Furloughs are Unnecesary

June 23, 2009

Dear UPTE Local 1 Members,

Last week, memos by Chancellor Birgeneau and President Yudof caused many to believe we are facing certain pay reductions. This is far from true and we wanted to let you know what this means for researchers and techs bargaining for our contract, and also about a much broader campaign by Yudof against UC workers and students. Some of our plans to fight back follow.

UC has publicly announced that at the next Regents meeting, on July 15th, the Regents plan to give President Yudof unprecedented "emergency powers" to enact substantial wage cuts, furloughs, or a combination of these. While UC says these cuts will affect ''all workers,'' it is illegal for UC to impose these measures on UPTE-represented employees—we are protected against furloughs and wage cuts by our union contracts. Implementation of any wage change is subject to collective bargaining. Now that techs and researchers are negotiating for new contracts, we will not go backwards on pay.

UC is still an extremely wealthy institution, and the vast majority of UC workers are not funded by the state. This is even more true for UPTE workers. We are committed to protecting the pay of unrepresented employees—those in the administrative professional titles, as well.

Yudof’s memo both exaggerates the severity of the crisis and proposes outrageous alternatives to cover a relatively small shortfall in UC's $19 billion annual budget.  Moreover, the UC retains billions in reserves.

This type of fiscal deception has led state legislators to call for independent audits and increased oversight of UC’s finances. UPTE continues to work with these legislators to bring transparency to UC’s finances and accountability to the regents.

Unfortunately, UC management has always been quick to violate labor law, impose financial burdens on staff and students, and spend lavishly as it sees fit—such as on the ten executives who were hired by the regents or given raises last month or the $80 million recently spent in purchasing overpriced property in Berkeley.

We need your support to stop Yudof's power grab and prevent him from attempting to override our contracts! A coalition of unions, students, staff and faculty is planning for a large turnout at the Regents meeting on July 15th.

We are asking all members to join us at this meeting on July 15th. To reserve your seat on the bus contact (510) 848-UPTE or send an email to uptemike@pacbell.net.

Last Thursday more than thirty UPTE members met to discuss upcoming actions. These members formed committees:  media, signmaking, student outreach, faculty outreach, etc. Let us know if you would like to join one of these committees or contribute in other ways to this campaign.

Reserve your seat on the bus today.

In solidarity,

Tanya Smith, editor, President
Dave Graham-Squire, staff research associate, Vice President
Mike Friedrich, Leadership Development Coordinator

The flyer can be found below in the attachment or at: http://upte.org/UPTEonbudgetflyer.pdf

Comments

$3 Million extravagant spending by UCB Birgeneau

$3 Million Extravagant, Arrogant Spending by UC President Yudof for UCBerkeley Chancellor Birgeneau to Hire Consultants - When Work Can Be Done Internally
These days, every dollar counts. Contact Senate (Ms. Romero 916.651.4105) & Assembly (Ms. Brownley 916.319.2044) Chairperson’s Education Committees or your representatives.
Do the work internally at no additional costs with UCB Academic Senate Leadership (C. Kutz/F. Doyle), the world – class UCB faculty/ staff, & the UCB Chancellor’s bloated staff (G. Breslauer, N. Brostrom, F. Yeary, P. Hoffman, C. Holmes etc) & President Yudof.
President Yudof’s UCB Chancellor should do the high paid work he is paid for instead of hiring expensive East Coast consults to do the work of his job. ‘World class’ smart executives like Chancellor Birgeneau need to do the hard work analysis, and make the tough-minded difficult, decisions to identify inefficiencies.
Where do the $3,000,000 consultants get their recommendations?
From interviewing the UCB senior management that hired them and approves their monthly consultant fees and expense reports. Remember the nationally known auditing firm who said the right things and submitted recommendations that senior management wanted to hear and fooled the public, state, federal agencies?
$3 million impartial consultants never bite the hands (Birgeneau/Yeary) that feed them!
Mr. Birgeneau's accountabilities include "inspiring innovation, leading change." This involves "defining outcomes, energizing others at all levels and ensuring continuing commitment." Instead of deploying his leadership and setting a good example by doing the work of his Chancellor’s job, Mr. Birgeneau outsourced his work to the $3,000,000 consultants. Doesn't he engage UC and UC Berkeley people at all levels to examine inefficiencies and recommend $150 million of trims? Hasn't he talked to Cornell and the University of North Carolina - which also hired the consultants -- about best practices and recommendations that will eliminate inefficiencies?
No wonder the faculty, staff, students, Senate & Assembly are angry and suspicious.
In today’s economy three million dollars is a irresponsible price to pay when a knowledgeable ‘world-class’ UCB Chancellor and his bloated staff do not do the work of their jobs.
Together, we will make a difference