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Issue date: 4/14/09 Section: Opinions
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Upper administrators aim to ease Univ. budget crisis

Constructive criticism is always useful. However, in her letter of April 9, Professor Bethany Moreton makes several misstatements.

First, she is wrong that, if furloughs come to the University, administrators at any level will be exempted. Everyone will be furloughed, from President Michael Adams down.

Second, she is wrong to compare the salaries of University administrators to those of the executives of large corporations - the comparison is inaccurate, and surely she does not mean to suggest their salaries are somehow to blame for the University's current financial plight. Our administrators earn their salaries, as do our faculty, and the University could not survive without them.

Third, the University's investment in construction projects is not responsible for the decline in faculty numbers. We all have benefited from these projects, funding for which is not linked to funds that support faculty and staff positions. (Declining faculty numbers are a serious problem that concerns us all.)

Finally, Professor Moreton seems unaware that the higher administration has repeatedly and significantly over the past several years managed to shelter the University from the worst of the budget crisis. Last year, when other state employees received no salary increase, we received a 3 percent raise plus additional amounts provided by upper administration.

In a year when the state budget was cut by more than 10 percent, our cut in the Franklin College was 4 percent less. Upper administration has provided extra support for teaching funds, operating budgets, travel and research. The University is now suffering the most severe budget crisis in years, and everyone in the upper administration is working aggressively to minimize its impact.

Hugh Ruppersburg
Senior Associate Dean
Franklin College of Arts and Sciences

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Viewing Comments 1 - 4 of 4

juicy jones

posted 4/14/09 @ 11:03 AM EST

Associate Dean Ruppersburg makes some interesting points, though I don't think Professor Moreton was that off the mark. Mostly I'm glad this conversation is out in the open. (Continued…)

Lie Detector

posted 4/14/09 @ 2:45 PM EST

ding ding ding ding....

I'm going off now!

The high salaries and the overbuilding of the campus are... D I R E C T L Y RESPONSIBLE FOR THE BUDGET SHORTFALLS. (Continued…)

bs

posted 4/14/09 @ 5:04 PM EST

"surely she does not mean to suggest their salaries are somehow to blame for the University's current financial plight."

Perhaps the salaries aren't to blame, but surely, Hugh, the actions of the administration and regents are to blame. (Continued…)

Moreton on the Mark

posted 4/21/09 @ 4:16 PM EST

Wow! Professor Moreton, an award-winning scholar of the past 30 years of United States history, calls for furloughs to start at the top and the administration responds by misconstruing the few comments she made in her short letter? Associate Dean Ruppersburgh noted that the administration was indeed willing to furlough itself. (Continued…)

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