their fields who have brought large chunks of funding to the college.
“In the case of two of them, there’s been significant disenchantment about the state of salaries,” Elde said.
According to National Research Council rankings for 1996-97, the University ranked 28th for salaried full professors among the top 30 research institutions.
This summer, the University approved a plan for an average 8.5 percent faculty pay increase for the next three years as part of the school’s operating budget. This is not necessarily contingent on legislative funding school officials are trying to secure this session.
Tenured professors at the University earn an average of $62,000 per year.
In some fields such as the health sciences, losing top faculty also means parting with entire research teams.
Frank Cerra, senior vice president for the University’s Health Sciences, told the committee he has witnessed such losses in his field — and the threat continues.
“We’re under attack now in the cancer-epidemiology and the cancer center,” Cerra said. He said weakening such innovative areas in the health sciences would not only affect the quality of research but funding by the National Institutes of Health that these faculty members can lure.
Committee chairman Sen. LeRoy Stumpf, DFL-Thief River Falls, questioned whether the faculty raises from the supplemental request would be as broad as the University’s last distribution.
“I assume you’re going to do that in some type of a selective, discrete way tied to performance,” Stumpf said.
Faculty raises from the request would be allotted to only some colleges and departments. Officials from these areas would have the jurisdiction to decide which faculty they were in danger of losing and what fields they want to prioritize.
“Raises would all be awarded on the basis of merit. We would not have it across the board,” Yudof said.
Cerra said he is attempting to retain a faculty member who has helped secure $4.5 million in NIH funding. Cerra said part of the faculty member’s final decision will depend on the University’s ability to pay for his research equipment and recruit four team members with him.
The University wants to appease such requests through additional state help and by rerouting existing funds, Yudof told senators. Part of that redistribution will come from administration cuts.
The University is slated to cut $6 million in administrative costs by the end of the 1998-99 academic year. The money will come from downsizing central administration and not replacing retiring employees.
But factors other than just financial incentives play a role into professor’s decisions to stay at a school .
Hiring blue-chip faculty is just as important as merit-based faculty raises to keep disciplines strong, said Victor Bloomfield, chairman of the Faculty Consultative Committee.
“In many cases, the concern of faculty is about the long-term viability of their disciplines at the University,” Elde said.
their fields who ha…
Published February 4, 1998
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