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Category: Higher Education/System

Aide says Governor’s office was involved in open records discussions

Channel3000.com

Noted: Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald called the measure a “broader issue” and said “other governmental entities have issues” with law as it is currently written, including the UW System.

“It came from a number of different sources,” Fitzgerald said. “Some of them were related to certainly the lawsuit that Sen. Erpenbach was involved in. There was some suggestion from UW System on open records request related to some of their research and some issues related to the legislature and executive branch on dealing with open records requests.”

Highlights of Wisconsin budget passed by Senate

Madison.com

Associated Press summary. UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN— The university system’s budget would be cut by $250 million, it would be easier to fire tenured faculty, and faculty would have less of a role in making decisions under a weakening of the shared governance principle that national higher education experts say would make Wisconsin unique. In-state tuition would be frozen over the next two years.

UW-Madison facing $58.9M cut in state aid

Wisconsin State Journal

The cut to the Madison campus was reduced slightly when lawmakers restored $50 million in state funding to the System as part of changes to Gov. Scott Walker’s executive budget. The budget now calls for cutting System funding by $250 million over two years. UW-Madison will receive $4 million of that restored funding in the 2015-16 fiscal year.

UW shouldn’t hide finalist names

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

A provision sneaked into the state budget bill by the Legislature’s Joint Finance Committee would deal a significant blow to open government in Wisconsin.

The provision, part of an omnibus motion of changes affecting the University of Wisconsin System, would exempt universities from the rule in place for all other state agencies regarding the naming of finalists for key positions. No longer would they need to identify the five most qualified applicants, or each applicant if there are fewer than five.

Walker office operating as if proposed open records exemptions are law

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Noted: Two months ago, Walker declined to make public records related to his proposal to rewrite the University of Wisconsin System’s mission statement and release the Wisconsin Idea from state law. He argued he didn’t have to release those records to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and others because they were part of his office’s internal deliberations.

College law enforcement administrators hear approach to make Title IX more effective

Inside Higher Education

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The intersection of campus police investigations and college disciplinary investigations into sexual assault is still a confusing mix at many institutions, but Susan Riseling, the chief of police and associate vice chancellor at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, has a few ideas about how make the relationship work.

Senator McCaskill suggests ‘removing’ campus crime disclosure law

Inside Higher Education

During a presentation about the role of the Clery Act and Title IX in sex crime investigations, Susan Riseling, chief of police and associate vice chancellor of the University of Wisconsin at Madison, said the Clery Act was a “cluster.” Riseling said McCaskill would like to see the Clery Act repealed or at least stripped down to simply requiring colleges to provide timely information and warnings about ongoing crimes. “That information is what might prevent someone else from becoming a victim, and timely warnings are really the point of Clery,” Riseling said. “Some of the best news I’ve heard was Sen. McCaskill saying ‘maybe we’d better throw out Clery.’ ”

Ad targeting Scott Walker says college graduates are ‘drowning’ in student debt

Capital Times

The online ad, from liberal advocacy groups One Wisconsin Now, Wisconsin Jobs Now and the Agenda Project Action Fund, depicts a person drowning in open water while “Pomp and Circumstance” plays, an image the groups say is meant to symbolize the plight of student loan borrowers. At the end of the ad, a mortarboard washes ashore.”Americans are drowning in student debt,” the ad says.

UW grad speaks out on proposed tenure changes

The Lakeland Times

As someone who graduated with a degree in Computer Science from UW in 2011, I am deeply concerned by the proposed cuts and alterations to the legislative protections that have been granted to the University of Wisconsin-Madison in this year’s proposed budget. In particular, I am distressed at the potential alteration of tenure protections. While it is true that Wisconsin is unique in that the state actually places tenure protections into state law, I fear the language of the proposed change to tenure will actually put our state’s universities behind other institutions in terms of faculty retention, and will potentially damage the quality of our state’s world-class academic research, scientific or otherwise.

Seven projects could receive funding through Ideadvance Seed Fund

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

The Ideadvance Seed Fund has identified seven projects that could receive a total of as much as $200,000. The $2 million Ideadvance fund was established in 2014 by the UW System and the Wisconsin Economic Development Corp amd provides grant recipients up to $25,000 for the first stage of determining the marketability of an idea or technology, and up to $50,000 for developing a business model. Faculty, staff, students and companies licensing technology from all UW campuses but UW-Madison may participate.

Miller: Reform regent selection process

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

The issues in the debate over proposed changes to the University of Wisconsin System are fundamental and important. I do not to wish undercut this discussion but to expand it to include the ways that members of the UW System’s Board of Regents are selected. The current process is archaic and needs extensive reorganization.

Reform regent selection process

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

The issues in the debate over proposed changes to the University of Wisconsin System are fundamental and important. I do not to wish undercut this discussion but to expand it to include the ways that members of the UW Systems Board of Regents are selected. The current process is archaic and needs extensive reorganization.

Scott Walker’s test of academic freedom

Chicago Tribune

One hundred years ago this month, the Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin dedicated a bronze plaque commemorating a historic victory for academic freedom. When a distinguished faculty member, economist Richard T. Ely, had been accused of promoting socialism and fomenting disorder through his pro-labor speeches and writings, the regents had cleared him of wrongdoing, even though he had spoken out at a time of violent nationwide industrial conflict. In the words of the tablet:

Regent: UW-Madison unlikely to benefit from restored funding

Capital Times

Regent Farrow: “Madison has money. Madison is our flagship and should be well supported. I don’t argue with that at all. But they are also in a position to support things with their size and with their foundations and with their various other sources of money.” UW spokesman Lucas: “Our understanding is that no final decisions have yet been made on how the additional $50 million would be allocated across the System. Chancellor (Rebecca) Blank has been in communication with the leadership of System and the Board of Regents to stress the importance of adequate funding for UW-Madison to the extent possible amid the $250 million budget cut.”

Democracy Campaign’s Matt Rothschild: Ray Cross and Rebecca Blank should resign

Capital Times

Rothschild made the remark on For the Record, a public affairs show on WISC-TV hosted by Neil Heinen. Asked for comment from Cross on Monday, a spokesperson offered instead a comment from Board of Regents president Regina Millner: “I completely support President Cross and Chancellor Blank, and my regent colleagues and I appreciate their leadership throughout the budget process and as the UW System moves forward.”

UW budget cut proposals spark protests as bill continues through Legislature

Daily Cardinal

Playing host to so many political protests in recent years, the Capitol rotunda saw another June 11, as a coalition of activist groups known as Another Budget is Possible rallied against Gov. Scott Walker’s proposed biennial budget. More than 10 speakers challenged the budget cuts, including Sergio González, a doctoral candidate in the UW-Madison history department and a member of the Teachers Assistant Association.

AAUP censures four institutions, calls out others

Inside Higher Education

WASHINGTON — The American Association of University Professors voted Saturday to censure the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and three other institutions, while protesting planned changes — pushed by Republican lawmakers — to tenure and shared governance within the University of Wisconsin System. Members also discussed at their annual meeting here how the association might better respond to administrative moves to close troubled colleges in light of the shocking Sweet Briar College announcement earlier this year. They called that decision the first of many coming threats to similar institutions in financially and politically turbulent times.

Rebecca Blank: UW should have same or better tenure as peers

Wisconsin State Journal

“Recent action by the Legislature’s Joint Finance Committee has the potential to threaten that longstanding commitment to fearless inquiry. I am worried about the risk this creates for UW-Madison, by alienating and demoralizing the faculty who have built this into one of the world’s finest education and research institutions. Abrupt changes to tenure and shared governance — another historic underpinning of UW-Madison — could drive away the people we most need to attract and retain. That these changes are being recommended without public discussion or consultation from those who will be most affected adds to our collective concern.”