[Vision2020] Internal Pick is Best for New UI President

nickgier at roadrunner.com nickgier at roadrunner.com
Wed Mar 18 13:44:23 PDT 2009


Greetings:

This is my radio commentary/column for this week.  The endorsement of Burnett is personal.  The faculty union has not voted on the presidential candidates.

Nick Gier


INTERNAL PICK BEST FOR UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO PRESIDENT


The University of Idaho may find it difficult to hire a new president if the salary demands of the external candidates are as excessive as the one who just turned us down.

According to an Associated Press story, Duane Nellis wanted to start at $370,354.  This may not appear excessive when you consider that fact that last year's median salary for public university executives across the country was $427,400.

When former UI president Tim White left to be chancellor at the University of California at Riverside, he was making $291,912, and the Idaho State Board of Education has communicated that the new person would be offered a salary in the same range.

Tim White’s salary was over seven times entry level assistant professors salaries and was a 411 percent raise on President Gibb’s 1981 salary. UI full professor salaries have increased only 198 percent during the same period.  With the consumer price index at 215, this means that White was way ahead of inflation while our professors are still behind. 

A study done by the American Association of University Professors showed that from 1995-2006 university executive salaries, adjusted for inflation, increased 35 percent while faculty salaries gained only 5 percent. 

Defenders of these high salaries always say that we cannot get good people without paying competitive salaries.  White's salary is 32 percent behind the national median, but full professors in five UI departments are 32-35 percent lower than the national averages for their disciplines.

During his four years at the UI, five years shorter than the national average, White did provide a modest increase in faculty salaries, primarily by robbing other campus budgets.  As a result we moved up a bit on the peer institution list.  While White's salary placed him sixth on the list of 12 institutions, the UI faculty now stands at ninth. 

During the past 12 years, 76 former UI professors in 20 disciplines have moved on to greener pastures. Plant, Soil, and Entomological Sciences reports a 20 percent attribution rate, and about a dozen faculty are actively looking for jobs elsewhere.  Biological sciences has lost at least eight faculty in ten years and they report many failed searches because of noncompetitive salaries. 

Obviously, these faculty do not agree with education board spokesman Mark Browning, who made the incredible claim that the UI is the "Harvard of the West."  Browning says that "a good president pays for him or herself," but these top faculty who left would rather have the competitive salaries and institutional support up front so they can do their jobs properly.

The UI has not been well served by previous external candidates.  Top management shuffling by Zinser, Hoover, and White caused unnecessary confusion and expense, and a new financial management plan was a disaster.

Recent deans of science, liberal arts, and engineering were hired at high salaries and at great expense, but each lasted only three years.  They will, much to the distress of their colleagues, continue to draw huge salaries as ordinary faculty members.

After being burned in our enthusiastic support for Elizabeth Zinser in 1993, my faculty union is no longer recommending presidential candidates.  My personal favorite, however, is Donald Burnett, currently dean of the UI law school.  

Burnett has the all the makings of a great president: solid integrity, eloquent speaker, politically astute, and excellent interpersonal skills.  He knows Idaho and the university and we know him well.

I hope that Burnett would accept the salary that the state board is offering. He would also meet the board's requirement that he have "a long-term successful voyage" with UI faculty and staff.

Nick Gier taught philosophy at the University of Idaho for 31 years.  He is president of the Higher Education Council of the Idaho Federation of Teachers, AFT/AFL-CIO with chapters on six Idaho campuses. The union's annual UI faculty salary survey can be read at <www.home.roadrunner.com/~nickgier/salaries.htm>
 



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