by Joe Kiskis
COUNCIL OF UC FACULTY ASSOCIATIONS' STATEMENT ON UC BUDGET DEAL
COUNCIL OF UC FACULTY ASSOCIATIONS' STATEMENT ON UC BUDGET DEAL
As the Legislature and Governor
enter the end game for the 2015-2016 budget, here is a review of provisions
related to UC in the Governor’s latest budget proposal—the May revise, which is
now being considered by the Legislature.
It appears likely that the final UC
budget will have provisions that address access and affordability. What is
missing are resources to ensure that the university can maintain quality. It is
the hardest to quantify, the weakest politically, and is now the most seriously
threatened.
This budget is another demonstration
of the truism that the only way to restore access, affordability, and quality
is through adequate State investment in public higher education. In spite of
strong revenues to the State, the Governor’s budget falls well short of what is
needed to reverse the negative trends in recent years. As it happens, it is
well within the means of the citizens of the State to restore all of California public higher education to the levels of access, affordability, and quality
enjoyed in 2000-2001.
The May revise budget summary starts the UC overview on page 28.
Many aspects of the May revise as
they relate to UC are contained in the agreement of the “Committee of Two” now endorsed by the Regents.
1) Systemwide tuition and fees for
California resident students are to remain constant for two more years.
Following that, modest increases comparable to the rate of inflation are
allowed. On the other hand for non-resident students, tuition will increase by
8% in each of the next two years.
2) Increases in the UC base budget
are to be the same as the Governor originally proposed, i.e. 4% per year
($119.5M for 2015-16) but are now continued through 2018-2019. This is much
less than what the State should contribute to replace cuts since 2007 and is
also substantially less than the needs identified in the UC proposed budget for
2015-2016. (Further detail is here).
The May revise also proposes one
time funds of $25M for deferred maintenance and $25M for energy efficiency
projects.
3) The May revise contains a tepid
and ambiguous recognition of a State obligation to UC pensions. One-time funds
of $436M spread over three years (with $96M for 2015-16) are proposed. However,
this is Proposition 2 money, which can be used only to reduce the UCRP unfunded
liability (about $7.6B in the last annual report). The one-time payment is only
modestly significant in the long run and has negligible impact on the
University’s operating budget in the near term. This is because the University
has not planned to increase the UCRP contribution rate above 8% for most
employees and 14% for the employer. Contributions at this rate cover only the
current year additional liability and some of the interest on the unfunded
liability. i.e. at this point, the regular employer and employee payments are
making no contribution to retiring the unfunded liability. Thus in near term
years, the Proposition 2 money does not reduce the large negative impact on the
UC operating budget from regular UCRP contributions. The Proposition 2 money
could be framed as a replacement for or enhancement to UC’s own occasional ad
hoc payments to reduce the unfunded liability, but these have been very
controversial, and UC has not revealed any plans to make another such payment.
Unfortunately this modest one time
contribution comes with permanent strings. In return UC is required to
introduce yet another tier to UCRP that would apply to new employees. The new
tier will mirror state law for other state employees. In this tier, UCRP
eligible salaries are to be capped at the inflation indexed PEPRA/Social
Security limit ($117k for the current year) rather than with the IRS limit of
$265k currently used by UC. Employees in the new tier will have the option of
either a defined benefit plan with the new cap and an add-on defined
contribution plan to supplement the defined benefits or a fully defined
contribution plan. It is this second option that is particularly troubling.
The relative merits of defined
contribution and defined benefit plans were thoroughly evaluated and debated
during the extended review that led to the 2010 reforms of the UCRP. The
conclusion was that a defined benefit plan is the more advantageous option for
both the University as an employer and for its employees.
The main concern is not so much that
UC has cut a deal on this issue but rather that it has made such a poor deal.
For very modest one-time money, it has agreed to make permanent changes to UCRP
including offering a completely defined contribution option that will put at
risk the whole of the defined benefit plan. (Chris Newfield has previously made
similar comments.) In addition the closed process by which
this agreement between the Governor and the President was reached has
undermined shared governance and collective bargaining.
4) UCOP has stated that the Governor
has agreed not to veto additional appropriations for UC that come out of the
legislative process. The University is asking legislators for additional funds
to increase California resident enrollment.
5) There are several areas in which
the President has committed UC to the implementation of additional
efficiencies. These include transfers, time-to-degree, advising, and use of
technology. Some of these Presidential promises relate to topics that are
squarely within the authority of the Academic Senate, and all of them would
normally be addressed through shared governance.
Under the Committee of Two deal, the Regents are supposed to put in place a third tier pension plan starting in 2016 which is yet to be designed. If the recently proposed pension initiative were enacted in 2016, however, there would need to be a fourth tier starting in 2019.
ReplyDeleteWell, only tine will tell.
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