Showing posts with label audio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label audio. Show all posts

Tuesday, 9 July 2013

Listen to the Regents Meeting of March 14, 2013

We continue our archiving of Regents meetings since the Regents themselves indicate they will preserve the recordings for only one year.  This is the March 14 meeting (the final session of the March 2013 meetings).
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This session was mainly taken up with public comments and reviews of various programs including the nuclear labs which UC co-manages.  At the public comments, there were complaints by students of limits on the student health plan.
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Agenda: Thursday, March 14, 2013
8:30 am Committee of the Whole - Public Comment (open session)
8:50 am Committee on Compensation (open session)
9:00 am Committee on Finance (open session)
9:40 am Committee on Oversight of the DOE Laboratories (open session)
10:00 am Committee on Compliance and Audit (open session)
10:30 am Board (open session)
Concurrent : Special Meeting: Board (open session)
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Note: Breaks in the soundtrack occurred and have been partially edited out.  The sound distorts at one point but can be understood..  Click below to hear the session:


Sunday, 7 July 2013

Listen to the Regents: March 13, 2013 - afternoon session

We continue our efforts at "permanently" archiving the audio of Regents meetings since the Regents' office apparently will preserve it for only one year.

Below is the afternoon session of March 13.  We posted the morning session yesterday.  Since there is no download option on the temporary archive provided by the Regents, we have to record the audio in real time, i.e., an hour of a Regents session takes one hour to record.

Regents Afternoon Agenda – March 13, 2013

1:00 pm Committee on Compensation (closed session)
1:15 pm Committee on Compliance and Audit (closed session)
1:40 pm Committee on Governance (Regents only session)
1:45 pm Committee on Finance (Regents only session)
2:10 pm Board (Regents only session)
2:15 pm Joint Meeting: Board and Special Committee to Consider the Selection of a President (Regents only session)
3:00 pm Special Meeting: Special Committee to Consider the Selection of a President (Regents only session)
3:00 pm Committee on Compliance and Audit (Regents only session)
3:15 pm Committee on Compliance and Audit (open session)

Note: The soundtrack at the beginning of the open session contained interference from the soundtrack of an earlier meeting.  We provide the audio after the soundtrack problem was cleared up (a few minutes into the session).  There is no audio of closed sessions available.

Click on the link below to hear the session:

Saturday, 6 July 2013

Listen to the Regents: March 13, 2013 - morning session

Our efforts to archive Regents meetings (since the Regents' policy is currently to preserve them only for one year) continues.  Below is the agenda for the morning meeting of March 13, 2013.  Included was approval of a UCLA medical building about which cost concerns had been raised at an earlier meeting.  Eventually, the Regents seem to approve any construction project - even if concerns are raised - particularly when they are assured that it won't cost them anything.

Agenda for Wednesday, March 13, 2013 - morning
8:30 am Committee of the Whole (open session - includes public comment session)
9:30 am Committee on Grounds and Buildings (open session)
11:00 am Committee on Finance (open session)
11:15 am Committee on Educational Policy (open session)
12:00 Lunch


You can hear the audio of this meeting at the link below:
 

Tuesday, 2 July 2013

Listen to the Regents Meeting of Jan. 17, 2013

This post completes our archiving of the Regents meetings of January 15-17, 2013.  Check our posting of June 30 for an explanation as to why we are archiving these meetings (and why it should not be necessary).  Below is the agenda of the Jan. 17 meeting:

Agenda: Thursday, January 17, 2013

8:30 am Committee of the Whole - Public Comment (open session)

8:50 am Committee on Finance (open session)

11:00 am Committee on Governance (open session)

11:15 am Board (open session)

Click on the link below to hear the meeting:

Monday, 1 July 2013

Listen to the Jan. 16, 2013 Afternoon Meeting of the Regents

Don't worry.  Gas mask not needed to listen to Regents..
We have been posting past (2013) meetings of the Regents because of their current archiving policy.  For more details on why this is necessary to preserve the record of these sessions, scroll down to our June 30, 2013 posts.

Much of the afternoon of Jan. 16 was taken up with closed sessions which are not available.  Included in the open discussions was a proposed medical building at UCLA (about which we have previously blogged) which is controversial because of the costs involved.

Below is the agenda:
  • 1:15 pm Committee on Compensation (closed session)
  • 1:30 pm Committee on Health Services (Regents only session)
  • 2:00 pm Committee on Finance (Regents only session)
  • 2:45 pm Board (Regents only session)
  • 3:00 pm Committee on Grounds and Buildings(open session) – Includes discussion of proposed UCLA medical building (with controversy over costs)
Click on the link below to listen:

Sunday, 30 June 2013

Listen to the Meeting of the Regents Jan. 16, 2013 - morning (online education)

Our previous post noted that we are going back through 2013 to post and archive audio of Regents' meetings.  See the previous post for why it is necessary to do this (and why it shouldn't be).

The morning session of January 16, 2013 was devoted largely to online higher education, essentially at the "request" of Governor Brown.

Agenda: Wednesday, January 16

8:30 am Committee of the Whole (open session - includes public comment session)
9:30 am Committee on Educational Policy (open session)
12:00: Lunch


You can hear the session at the link below:


Listen to the Regents Meeting of Jan. 15, 2013

Why are we going back in time to last January?  The Regents had been live-streaming audio of their meetings prior to January 2013 but not archiving the audio files.  So we would request the files and - once they were received on CDs sent by postal mail - archive them.  Of course, this process took some time to accomplish so the files were not immediately available after the meetings.  Unless you listened live, you had to wait, even with our eventual archiving.

Finally, the Regents - who keep pushing for high techy online ed - were embarrassed by their own primitive IT service and the fact that someone else was doing their archiving.  So they moved to both an audio and video live streaming of their meetings and archived the video.  That is all well and good except that current regental policy is to preserve the "archive" only for one year.  When we requested the audio files so that an indefinite archiving could occur, we were told that since the files were now online, they wouldn't be provided (even though they will disappear after a year).

If that sounds improper to you, it probably is - and we will pursue it.  In the meantime, we will painfully record the meetings from the "archives" before they disappear and archive them indefinitely.  You can't download the actual files; only record them.  So a four-hour session takes four hours to record.  You might note the contrast between the Regents and the Calchannel [http://www.calchannel.com/] which archives legislative hearings and other Sacramento official activities.  If you go to the Calchannel website, you have the option of downloading files or streaming them.  And there is no one year evaporation.  The Regents could use Calchannel or at least mimic its policy.  But right now, they don't for whatever reason.

If you follow California politics, you know that quite recently there was a big brouhaha in Sacramento when legislation was proposed as part of the state budget that would have ended the mandate that local governments make public documents available.  (The state must reimburse local governments for costs of mandates so dropping the requirement saved some budget money.)  When the dropping of the mandate became known, a firestorm erupted and the mandate was continued.  That episode should make the Regents and UC sensitive to the public documents issue.

Anyway, for now, below is a link to the January 15, 2013 session of the Regents. We will be posting later sessions as time permits. 

University of California Regents Meeting Jan. 15, 2013 (Compliance and Audit): Agenda

Public Comment Period
 
Action Approval of the Minutes of the Meeting of October 31, 2012

A3  Discussion Plan for External Audit Request for Proposal

A4  Discussion Continuous Monitoring and Continuous Auditing – Internal Audit Partnering with Management

A5  Discussion Information Technology Expertise for Internal Audit

A6  Discussion Information Technology Model and Interim Leadership

Click below to hear the session:

Sunday, 19 May 2013

The Complete Regents Meeting for Your Listening Enjoyment AND a Note About the Governor's Legitimate Question and the Absurd UC Response

We have given you sections of last week's Regents meeting in various postings.  And we have noted that the archiving policy of the Regents is a problem.  According to the Regents website, "Video files for past open session meetings of The University of California Regents and its Committees are available for one year after the dates of the meetings."  So the files apparently vanish.  Prior to 2013, the Regents provided no archiving at all, just a live stream of the audio.  We would then request the audio files and archive them elsewhere.  Since it appears that files will eventually vanish, we have preserved audios of the most recent meeting as follows:

Morning of May 15 prior to demonstration which caused the meeting to be suspended:


Morning of May 15 after the demonstration ended and the session resumed:


Afternoon of May 15 including comments and questions by Gov. Brown:


And by the way, in the session above, the governor asked the right question and got the wrong answer.  He had been given data and charts on time to graduation across campuses.  There was considerable variation, both over time and cross-sectionally.  The governor essentially asked whether a multivariate analysis might be undertaken that would illuminate the factors behind the variation.  The right answer from UC officials should have been, "yes, but we haven't done it - and now that you have pointed it out, we will do it."  Instead, there was an evasive answer that came down to saying that it is all very complicated, maybe we should ask the local officials for anecdotal evidence, and despite all of our data you can't get any insights from an analytical statistical approach."  That response, my friends, is totally absurd There are plenty of faculty at UC who could conduct a meaningful statistical analysis, given the data and necessary support.  To the extent that additional data are needed, they could be collected.  If we don't like the governor and legislature coming in and micro-managing (which is what is happening with regard to online education), we need to do the micro-management in-house!  [To hear the back-and-forth with the governor, start at about minute 38.]

Session of May 16:


A link to the agenda for the sessions is at:
http://regents.universityofcalifornia.edu/regmeet/may13.html

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Note that there is an upcoming meeting of the Committee on Investments of the Regents on Tuesday, May 21.  A link to the agenda can be found at:
http://regents.universityofcalifornia.edu/regmeet/may13/invest.pdf

UPDATE: President Yudof's State of the University report to the Regents is at:
http://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/news/documents/yudof_white_paper_0513.pdf

Wednesday, 15 May 2013

Listen to (Part of) Morning Session of UC Regents

I had some trouble with recording this morning’s meeting of the Regents.  It began with a statement by UC President Yudof which included reference to the impending strike at UC hospitals (which UC is trying to enjoin).  During the public comment period, however, various union spokespersons said a strike would take place next week and the public comment session ended in a demonstration which led to a halt in the meeting (and transmission) while the room was cleared.  I did record the later meeting of the Committee on Finance.  Below is a summary and a link to a recording.

Before that, however, you might ask why I recorded the session when the Regents are now providing online video and audio transmission online plus archives.  When I tried to access the archives this morning of the January and March meetings, the page on which they were supposed to be didn’t have them.  Instead, clicking on the past meetings just linked me to the current meeting.  Moreover,  a statement on the page indicates that the archived recordings (which I couldn’t find) would be available only for one year.  It was unclear whether the archives would be available in any form after one year.  I have inquired about all this to the Secretary of the Regents.  More news on the archive issue when it becomes available.
Lenz & Brostrom

In any event, here is an outline of discussion of the part I did record and the link:

  • Discussion of the governor's May Revise budget as it pertains to the University. 
  • Discussion of lack of state pension contributions to UC which would match CSU
  • Discussion of UC debt restructuring to enhance cash flow. 
  • Discussion of lack of state funding for UC-Riverside medical school. 
  • Discussion of possible funds from Prop 39 of Nov. 2012 for energy efficiency. 
  • Discussion of legislative performance standards hooked to budget and relation to Regental autonomy. 
  • Discussion of setting up a 501c3 entity at UCLA to enhance revenue from technology transfer.
  • Dorr & Economou
  • Discussion by UC President Yudof follows Committee session on his state of the university report.  Note: The report itself was not included with other online materials.  President Yudof did express some concern about loss of UCLA faculty to USC.  (See earlier posts.) However, his remarks were largely a suggestion to read the report – which we don’t have.

Yudof
Click below to listen:

Saturday, 2 February 2013

Listen to Radio Interview with President Yudof on UC Future

Yesterday, KPCC's Airtalk with Larry Mantle featured an interview with the heads of the three segments of higher ed in California: President Mark Yudof of UC, Chancellor Timothy White of CSU (and until recently Chancellor of UC-Riverside), and Brice Harris, Chancellor of the community colleges. The full broadcast ran about three quarters of an hour.  I have pulled out just the Yudof excerpts which run about one third as long.

As blog readers will know, Yudof has resigned as UC president, effective August.  So he may now be a bit freer to say what he wants - but, of course, not totally free since he continues to serve and will have to deal with the governor for several more months. He discusses tuition (frozen for now), pensions (which he cites as the major rising cost factor for UC), the rising student-to-teacher ratio (which he says is why other costs have not risen), and faculty pay (which he says is below what private institutions pay but faculty at UC do it for the social good).  He stresses that the state doesn't pay for research which brings in outside funding.  Also discussed are elitism, the $10,000 degree pushed by various governors, state support, online education and larger classes.  Since the state won't pay and tuition can't rise, the only solution is some mix of larger classes, online ed, transfers from community colleges, credits for work experience.  Will this hurt quality? He hedges but says that's what is coming.  Yudof is annoyed, and says so, about media complaints concerning high executive pay.  UC pays less than the privates, you have to pay attention to the labor market, and that there is the social good argument. (Administrators, like faculty, work for less than market due to the social good.)  He would like to see UC take 30,000-50,000 students more than it does due to population increases and the rising Latino population.  And he would like to see regular faculty do more undergraduate teaching.

You can hear Yudof's comments at the link below:

Friday, 11 January 2013

Listen to What the Governor Said About the Higher Ed Budget

In an earlier post, we described the elements of the state budget for 2013-14 proposed by the governor and noted that his remarks at the news conference where the budget was presented largely mirrored prior statements he made at the Regents.

Below is a link to an audio of his remarks on higher education (UC and CSU).  Although most of the time at the news conference was devoted to other aspects of the budget, higher education came up several times including once at the portion of the event with Budget Director Ana Matosantos.

You can hear his remarks - and hers - at the link below:

UPDATE: UC is now saying tuition won't go up next year:
http://blogs.sacbee.com/capitolalertlatest/2013/01/university-of-california-official-browns-budget-likely-enough-to-avert-tuit.html

Wednesday, 9 January 2013

Listen to Gov. Brown Say He is President of UC at Nov. 27, 2012 Special Regents Meeting

The Regents held a special meeting to approve the new UC-Berkeley Chancellor and the interim UC-Riverside Chancellor on Nov. 27, 2012.  You can hear that meeting at the link below.  Governor Brown , Lt. Governor Newsom, and one Regent (Zettel) voted against the pay package for the new Berkeley chancellor Nicholas Dirks which paid $50,000 in sslary more than the previous chancellor.  (The increment was from private funds.)  All three voted for the appointment but against the pay.

Brown's comments are particularly interesting and occur roughly between minute 5:50 and 10:50 on the recording.  He says that the state funding and tuition expectations of UC are "unacceptable."  There is an allusion to Joseph advising prudence to the Pharoah.  He talks about a need for more efficiency, modesty, and lower cost at UC.  At one point the governor said he was president of the university - which must have surprised Mark Yudof.

Yudof indicated later that one should not make too much of the governor's disagreement with the salary proposal and that on most matters he and the governor see eye to eye.  Their eyes may be close but they seem to be looking in different directions.

You can hear the recording of the full meeting below:

You can hear just the governor's remarks at the link below:

UPDATE: A couple of sources tell me that the governor is president of the regents (although not of the university).

Tuesday, 1 January 2013

The Local Equivalent of Dropping the Ball in Times Square on New Years

LAObserved and KCRW seem to have discovered the Westwood equivalent of watching the ball descend in Times Square at midnight, New Years.  The smoking deaths sign resets to zero, apparently attracting a crowd.  Of course, if you are reading about this ritual today, you will have to wait until next year to partake.  But you don't have to go far from UCLA to be a participant.

The LAObserved article is at:
http://www.laobserved.com/archive/2012/12/new_years_eve_at_the_smok.php

The KCRW program can be heard at:

Friday, 14 December 2012

Radio Interview About David Geffen

Susan Lacy and David Geffen
PBS recently ran an "American Masters" episode about David Geffen who just donated $100 million to the UCLA med school.  [See yesterday's post.]  Yours truly did not see the PBS program but there was a radio interview with the program's director, Susan Lacy, aired on KPCC on Nov. 20.  One amusing anecdote is that Geffen got his first (mailroom) job by stating (apparently falsely) that he was a UCLA grad.  I'm sure he could have an honorary UCLA degree at this point if he wanted one.  The interview can be heard at the link below.


Wednesday, 12 December 2012

Missing the Point on the UC Logo

I thought we could put the UC redesigned logo story to bed - at least for awhile.  (See the previous and earlier posts.)  But, alas, KPCC this morning aired an interview with a "brand developer" who totally missed the point.  She rattled on and on in a British accent (so who could doubt what she said?) about how the whole problem was the "process" by which the new design was introduced.  If only there had been more participation in the logo design.  Etc. Etc.

Here are the problems and they have zero to do with process.

1) UC has bigger issues to deal with.  Why was anyone spending any time on redesigning the logo?  Could it be that someone thought it was important?  Why would anyone think that, if so?  What kind of priorities would such a person have?

2) What will the redesign bring about?  Will it raise the budget allocation from the state for UC?  Will donors give more money to UC thanks to the redesign?  Will more research grants be obtained by faculty?  Will courses become less crowded?  What?

You can say there is a UC "brand" if you like, but that brand has nothing to do with a new logo.  For that matter, it had nothing to do with the old logo.  UC's brand is its reputation. 

There is an old saying: A job not worth doing is not worth doing well.  Too bad that simple notion escaped the brand developer KPCC interviewed.  Let's hope no one at UC headquarters heard the program or took it seriously. Otherwise, we will all be involved in a time-wasting "process." 

You can hear the radio interview at the link below:


Wednesday, 28 November 2012

Listen to Regents Meeting of Nov. 15, 2012

Now that the audio file has arrived, we are catching up with the parts of the mid-November Regents meeting not previously posted (not to be confused with the special meeting held yesterday).  Below is a link to the final day of the mid-November meeting.

During the public comment period, there were complaints about tuition increases and budget cuts.  There was more about the swap deals - see earlier posts on this matter - in which UC swapped a variable interest rate for a fixed one.  As it turned out, interest rates fell so that the "insurance" against a rise in rates provided by the fixed rate swap would have been better in hindsight not to have taken out.  But - as we have pointed out and the university pointed out in response to the student report - insurance is often a bad deal in the sense that the contingency insured against does not occur.  (My life insurance over the years has been costly and - as it turned out - a bad deal for me since I am here typing this message.)  The lasting effect of the student swap report is that it has disappeared from the media (as of this writing) except from the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn. website (see the screenshot below):
There is some irony in the report ultimately appealing only to those on the political right.

My sense is that by Nov. 15, the authors realized the report had a "problem" so the complaint during the public comment period was mainly that the Regents should litigate to try and recover some of the lost money.  It would be nice if the university did respond to the litigation issue, although it may be that legal counsel doesn't think there would be a case.  (I would have little chance through litigation in getting my life insurance premiums refunded because I am still here.)  But why not say so, if that is the reason?

There were also complaints about an actuarial report on the pension indicating that the expected return should be raised to 8% from the current 7.5% (which would lower the unfunded liability).  It was noted in subsequent regental discussion that pension funds presently are dropping their expected future returns if they are above 7.5% and that the governor and others think 7.5% may be too high. Since the report was done for AFSCME, the university reps said they would look at it in the context of collective bargaining on the pension.

In any event, some time after the public comment period ended (about an hour and ten minutes into the meeting), a demonstration over the various complaints erupted and the room was cleared. 

There were reports on student health centers and a proposed Davis med center partnership with a local nonprofit hospital which was said to be a way to lower costs.  A DOE lab report featured a presentation with a video on the Mars landing.  (It was after we landed on Mars that the demonstration reported above erupted.  The timing was unclear to yours truly; such demonstrations usually occur after the public comment period. Regents are from Mars; demonstrators are from Venus?)

The Haas management school at Berkeley asked for approval of a plan to spin off its extension-style (non-credit) executive ed programs into a separate entity which would be more flexible than allowed under university rules, make a profit, and contribute its profits to the academic side of the school.  Apparently, the Berkeley academic senate approved the plan.  There were some questions by regents as to what exactly the flexibility (in hiring and pay, apparently) entailed but the plan was approved.

Reports on the retirement program followed.  The pension was reported to be 77% funded on a market basis.  The totally-unfunded retiree health program's unfunded liability was reported to be unchanged from last year.  Finally, there appears to be a push at the Regents to get more money out of technology transfers.  A regental committee is being set up to pursue that goal.

A link to the the audio is below:

Monday, 26 November 2012

Listen to Regents Meeting of Nov. 13, 2012

The UC Board of Regents, Committee on Grounds and Building met on the afternoon of Nov. 13, 2012.  On the agenda were public comments, approval of the UC capital budget plan, discussion of a long term plan for student housing at UC-Santa Barbara, and design approval of a $118.6 million faculty office building project at UC-San Francisco.

Two speakers in the public comments session referred to out-of-state students although exactly what was being suggested was unclear.

The capital budget is a wishlist of projects that it would be nice if the state funded through general obligation bonds.  However, given the governor's concern about the state's "wall of debt," that seems unlikely for the most part.  There is some receptivity toward seismic upgrades.

There was discussion of a long-term housing plan for students at Santa Barbara.  One regents suggested that housing might be handled more efficiently through a public-private partnership of some kind.  Campus reps from Santa Barbara said that the housing the campus provides is 40% cheaper than in the private market for students.  This discussion was followed by design approval the UC-SF office building.

We note, as we have before, that the Regents typically approve large projects - such as the UC-SF building - without having the capability of independent auditing or of verification that what was promised is what was delivered after the fact. 

You can hear the meeting (under one hour) at the link below:

Sunday, 18 November 2012

Gov. Brown on UC online education & budget

Last Wednesday, we posted the audio of the UC Regents meeting of that day which Governor Brown attended as an ex officio Regent.  We noted in that posting that he pushed for UC to move into online education.  And he indicated that without such a shift in the "paradigm," UC could not receive enough funding from the state to prevent continued increases in tuition.  For the convenience of blog readers, below is an excerpt from that meeting in which these views are expressed by Governor Brown:

Wednesday, 14 November 2012

Listen to Morning Session of UC Regents: 11-14-12

Yours truly was not able to record yesterday’s Regents’ session (Building and Grounds committee).  However, I did listen and record this morning.  [The live stream seemed to start a few minutes after the meeting began.  The recording begins in the midst of Regents chair Lansing celebrating the passage of Prop 30.]  A recording by yours truly won’t be possible of the session tomorrow due to other commitments.  But as usual, we will request the audios as public documents and post them when received.

At today’s meeting, Governor Brown attended and raised questions at various points.  Some of the questions were what might be termed “insistent.”  That is, the quick answers received were followed by more questions.

The public comment session included complaints about lack of affirmative action at UC.  Note that Prop 209 is a constraint.  The issue of the losses on “swaps” (see our earlier post) was raised by one of the Berkeley report’s authors.  He raised the litigation issue; why isn’t UC trying to litigate to get back some losses?  (More on this matter below.)  As our prior post noted, the Regents took professional tuition increases off the agenda at the governor’s request, but there was a statement opposing the increases (which might be brought back in the future).  Note also the material below on the budget proposal.
Academic Council chair Powell was pleased that Prop 30 passed but hopes we can now have a multiyear agreement with the state which won’t vanish if another budget squeeze occurs.  He stressed the need to recruit just to replace faculty who leave and noted that aging of the existing faculty.

During the Committee on Finance session, Peter Taylor replied to the Berkeley swap report.  He termed it inaccurate.  He wasn’t here when those agreements were made but says a due diligence review of those agreements suggests that compared with the alternatives at the time (essentially a fixed rate bond flotation vs. a variable rate with swap “insurance”), the swap approach was legitimately seen as best.  If you listen carefully, he does say that given what actually happened subsequently (a big drop in interest rates), it would have worked out better to not have swapped the variable interest rate for the fixed rate.  He pointed to the insurance aspect of swaps that yours truly noted in our earlier post on this issue.  (Again, see our earlier post.)  It was not clear whether the argument that the decision to use swaps was correct viewed from the perspective of what was known at the time was his answer as to why litigation is not being pursued.  Presumably, defendants in such litigation would make the argument that both sides of the deal made legitimate calculations from the viewpoint of what risks they were prepared to carry.

Governor Brown was less interested in the swap issue and more interested in the general growth in debt described in the Berkeley report.  He kept raising the issue until more detail was provided.  Basically, the answer given was that the state used to provide financing (state bonds, etc.) for UC capital projects but now it doesn’t.  Taylor noted that many capital projects such as dorms have revenue streams to cover costs.  He mentioned seismic upgrades (at least some of which presumably) are in buildings that don’t have revenue streams.  Nineteen percent of the debt was said to be repayable by the UC general fund (some of which is paid by research overhead).  Brown seemed not to be entirely assuaged by the response.  

[Readers of this blog will note that we have questioned the UCLA hotel project – which officially won’t cost UCLA anything in terms of debt service based on projected revenue from the building.  We have noted that the projections may be unrealistic for various reasons and, in any case, the ultimate back-up for the risk being taken is in fact other campus resources in some form.  In short, simply making an argument that debt service will be covered by project revenues is not the same thing as actually having the needed revenues when the time comes.  Just as the swaps, in retrospect, turned out differently than expected when originally made, so – too – can any capital project that depends on revenue streams.  And ultimately, the campus carries some risk.]

When the discussion began to turn to the UC budget plan, the governor questioned a pie chart that outlined a series of efficiency initiatives.  He was unsure as to exactly what it represented.  It was noted in the presentation that UC would like help from the governor and legislature on pension funding.

A variety of possible ideas that go back to the retreat session at the September meeting of the Regents were mentioned such as turning the parking service over to the pension fund as an asset (to help cover the unfunded liability).  Another was investing in companies that used UC-generated technology.  Regents chair Lansing pushed for more progress on online education.  Others, including Lt. Gov. Newsom, were also impatient about UC progress on online education.  One of the student reps was not so convinced that online education was quite the panacea that some Regents seemed to think.  

Lansing wanted to hear about possibly raising faculty teaching load.  (“Teachers teaching more,” was her quote.)

Governor Brownreflected on the discussion of online education.  Tradition is a Good Thing but UC might be going the way of the Post Office and print newspapers in the face of digital developments.  The proposed UC budget would increase by 9% and unless there are tuition increases the state can’t afford such projections.  UC has to assume budget squeezes and find new ways to deliver services.  Maybe this is more threatening than when the Regents faced Angela Davis teaching on a campus.  Why can’t the Regents have experts come and talk about such matters at the next meeting?  Lansing agreed to that idea and it was ordered.  Lt. Gov. Newsom (if I recognized his voice) seemed to want to help design the session.  Provost Dorr was criticized for not moving the online matter along faster.  Chancellor Birgeneau of Berkeley said that in fact we are well engaged in online education and that the Regents seem unaware of it.  (“We are leading the world.”)  Gov. Brown pointed out that the Berkeley examples are not for credit.  There was back and forth about what was for credit and what wasn’t.  It was decided that the presentation for the next meeting will also include what UC is doing now on online education.

A report on fundraising followed the online discussion.  Some kind of Facebook strategy was mentioned but not described in detail.  Somehow students will be part of this program which will raise scholarship money.  There was reference to a business partnership program, apparently focused on scholarships, too.

The budget proposal included the tuition increases in professional schools that supposedly were taken off the agenda at the request of the governor.  Exactly how that might be reconciled was not explained.  The UC-Riverside med school would be funded.  President Yudof more or less said the proposal was essentially a wish-list that won’t happen.  Merced needs buildings and we have to find a way – although Yudof also said that he is under no illusion that the state will provide capital resources.  Lt. Gov. Newsom fretted that when a realistic budget finally appears, it will have big tuition increases.  Governor Brown seemed to agree with Newsom.  Brown calculated that the multiyear equivalent of the budget would require 12% per annum increases from the state which he viewed as unrealistic.  If it doesn’t come from tuition, the money would have to be some kind of “restructuring” and “creative change.”  President Yudof said if there is to be a tuition hike, it would have to be announced by May.  He seemed surprised that there was push-back against coming up with a wish-list, admittedly unrealistic budget.

A question was raised by the Regents as to what would be cut when the wish-list doesn’t materialize.  The answer was essentially that UCOP will come back with a realistic budget when that happens.  But what would be cut was not specified.  Reference was made to having a multiyear plan being discussed with the powers-that-be in the state.  But there would be “metrics” of performance that would have to be part of such a plan.

When the budget approval was requested, the issue came up about the professional tuition increases that supposedly were removed from the agenda.  How can you approve a budget with those increases?  Lansing looked for language that would somehow smooth over the problem.  She said it is just a plan.  Lt. Gov. Newsom was opposed.  Gov. Brown said it’s always a wish-list.  He understands that.  So he l abstained.
The Regents then broke for lunch.

You can hear the audio at the link below.  There is a lot of background noise from the live feed.  The quality of the audio improves as the meeting continues.