Topics Map > Academic Staff Assembly > 2020-2021 > 4. December
Academic Staff Assembly Minutes 12-14-20
Approved 02-08-21
ACADEMIC STAFF
ASSEMBLY MEETING MINUTES
https://us.bbcollab.com/guest/9a352e992162409a9eadcfd572a07fc6
Monday, December
14, 2020
3:30 to 5:00 p.m.
Provost
Karl Scholz called the meeting to order at 3:31 p.m.
Memorial
Resolution for Diana Girdley (ASA #744)
Susan
Zahner read the memorial resolution for Diana Girdley.
Guests:
Laurent Heller, Vice Chancellor for Finance and Administration; and Mark
Walters, Chief Human Resources Officer
Vice
Chancellor Heller reported on the budget impact due to the pandemic. The
pandemic is projected to cost UW-Madison approximately $319 million. This is a
little worse than our best-case scenario, but there could have been a much
worse outcome. The impacts of this cost are uneven across campus. Auxiliaries
have been severely impacted. Budget reductions are unfortunately unavoidable.
It is important to remember that the campus budget is not monolithic but is
largely delegated and works in different areas. Looking at it in three large
categories, there are $124 million total impacts to GPR, $135 million to
auxiliaries, and then $60 million in other unit impacts. Research and gifts haven’t been as impacted as expected, which is good news.
Regarding budget reductions, travel pauses and the
hiring freeze are continuing. Furloughs have also been renewed through June
2021, though with a 2-month delay to the start date thanks to recommendations
from shared governance. Auxiliaries are coming up with their own plans for
addressing their budget issues. Campus will help where possible but will not
subsidize auxiliary operations. Units that rely on 101 funding will face
reductions of $35 million, which is a 4-8% cut, with administrative units
taking a larger percentage of the cut. The financial position that UW-Madison
was in at the beginning of the pandemic means that campus is in a better
position to handle the impacts of these budget cuts. Working through the
crisis, we will move ahead on major priorities, such as the $15 minimum wage
and implementation of the pay plan.
Chief
HR Officer Walters reported that we are proceeding with the 2% pay increase,
which will be effective in January. Employees will receive letters detailing
the pay plan, provided that they met the eligibility
requirements. UW-Madison proposed a 2% increase for FY22 and a 2.5% increase
for FY23. The Board of Regents approved this proposal last week, and now those
recommendations will be going to the legislature and the governor with the
biennial budget process in the spring. Round 2 of campus-wide furloughs is the
same as round 1 with one change: limited appointees can take a temporary pay
reduction equivalent to the furlough reductions they would take. The 2% pay
plan buffers the implementation of furloughs. For our lowest paid employees,
the pay plan offsets most of the impacts of the furloughs. Employees will
receive letters detailing their furlough obligations. It has also been
identified that we are proceeding across UW System with a biweekly pay cycle
for all employees. This was identified by UW System as a way
to streamline administrative processes across the System. Benefits
include more frequent paychecks and a single payroll cycle which simplifies
processes and procedures. Implementation will begin on July 18, 2021. This was
originally set to begin in January, but we successfully advocated for more time
with UW System. OHR is in the process of building a project plan and partnering
with stakeholders to work on the plan and change management strategies. With
this change, UW employees will be paid every other Thursday, and there will be
no change in annual salary. With this change, employees will need to review
their personal budgeting, direct deposit deductions, and other areas. OHR will
be developing resources for employees to address these things in the spring.
Guest: McKinney Austin, Office of Data Management and Analytics
(Institutional Data Policy)
An
update to ASEC on the new Institutional Data Policy was provided in October, and
the group wanted to bring the update to the Assembly as well. The Institutional
Data Policy is the foundational institution-level policy on institutional data
management and use. This is the first policy in the institutional data space
and represents a big step in the maturity of our data management and policies.
It has been in development for a couple of years. The policy formalizes roles
and responsibilities, makes us better in alignment with the UW System data
policy, and provides structure as we modernize the data environment. The scope
of the policy is around institutional data, but academic research data is out
of scope. The policy has 12 high-level policy statements that formally
establish principles, expectations, and rules in areas such as access and
authorization, documentation, sharing, quality, system/application/product
development, and more. Employees have a responsibility to protect the privacy
and security of the institutional data that they use. There will be a phased
implementation for the policy. Starting January 1, 2021, all new institutional
data will be subject to the policy. There will be a one-year grace period for
existing data. Individuals should look at https://data.wisc.edu/institutional-data-policy for more
information.
Automatic Consent
Business
The
Academic Staff Assembly minutes of Monday, November 9, 2020, were approved.
Reports
ASEC
Chair Jenny Dahlberg thanked everyone in ASEC, the Secretary of the Academic
Staff Office, and the Assembly for their work over the last 6 months. Tim Dalby
will be taking on the ASEC Chair role as of January 1. The call for Academic
Staff Excellence Awards is out, and Jenny encouraged nominations for these
annual awards. For more information on the testing plans for Spring 2021,
please look at the COVID website https://covidresponse.wisc.edu/spring-semester-2021-overview/. More information
about the single payroll process will be coming. If there are any questions or
concerns, please reach out to ASEC or the Secretary’s Office.
Jenny
Dahlberg provided the ASPRO report. ASPRO worked with PROFS to send a letter to
Interim UW System President Thompson requesting a delay in implementation,
which helped contribute to the new July timeframe. This letter is an example of
the important work that ASPRO does. December is the last chance to get a
discounted membership in the organization.
Standing
committees of the Assembly provided their annual reports (ASA #745). Eileen
Ewing, Chair of the Districting and Representation Committee, reported on the
committee’s work focusing on building the new districting software. Future plans include testing the new software, as well as
potential changes to districting rules based on TTC data. Christy Lowney, Co-chair
of the Mentoring Committee, discussed the committee’s work on the Mentor Match
Program. Last year saw 194 mentees and 104 mentors in the program, with three
events throughout the year. Alissa Oleck, Chair of the Nominating Committee,
reported that the committee forwarded 93 academic staff for consideration for
appointments or nominations to various shared governance committees. The
committee is working on improving its own documentation and tracking systems,
communication to candidates, and creating a more diverse and inclusive
candidate pool. Caitlin Cleary, Co-chair of the Personnel Policies and
Procedures Committee, reported on changes to ASPP Chapters 6, 9 and 14 that
were passed in the previous year, as well as the removal of gendered pronouns
from the document. The committee has reviewed a new disability accommodation
policy, Title IX changes, and other areas.
Resolution in
Support of Instruction and Training on Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Social
Justice (ASA #743)
Discussion
resumed on the resolution from the previous meeting.
Tim
Markle, District 463 Representative, proposed an amendment to add, “Whereas the need for Diversity, Equity,
Inclusion and Social Justice includes groups not specifically mentioned in the
resolution, and we have just celebrated the 30th anniversary of the Americans
with Disabilities Act, and physical, digital, systematic, and cultural barriers
still exist on and off the UW Madison campus for individuals with disabilities,
the Committee on Disability Access and Inclusion supports Faculty Document
2911, but amends it further to call on the administration of the University of
Wisconsin- Madison to continue actively supporting and fostering training and
programs that will help build a climate and culture of anti-ableism.” Seconded.
After discussion, the amendment was withdrawn.
Vote
on the resolution. Approved.
January
Assembly Meeting
The
Assembly voted to cancel the January Assembly meeting.
Provost
Report
Provost
Scholz reported on how challenging a year 2020 has been and thanked academic
staff colleagues for all of their work throughout the
year. A virtual graduation was held on Sunday, with Rose Lavelle and John
Felder as the speakers. The Provost reported on UW-Madison’s testing regime for
Spring 2021. Students will be tested twice a week, and faculty and staff
members who are coming to campus will be tested once every 8 days. Further
communication on the protocols will be coming soon. The COVID vaccine will also
arrive on the UW-Madison campus very soon, and we’ll
be following federal and state protocols for the distribution of the vaccine.
Frontline healthcare providers will be first in line for the vaccine. Provost
Scholz encouraged people to follow recommended protocols and utilize campus
testing if they need to travel during the holidays. He thanked Jenny Dahlberg
for her service as ASEC Chair from July through December, welcomed Tim Dalby as
incoming ASEC Chair in January, and thanked Mallory Musolf
for her ongoing service as Vice Chair. Provost Scholz concluded his remarks by
thanking everyone for their work over the past nine months and encouraging
everyone to take some time to recharge before the spring semester.
Meeting
adjourned at 5:06 pm.
Minutes submitted
by Jake Smith, Secretary of the Academic Staff