CU Boulder Chancellor Philip DiStefano on Thursday opened the February meeting of the Boulder Faculty Assemblyâs general assembly with assurances that the campus would review how it partnered with the Boulder Police Department and communicated to the campus during the Feb. 1arrest of a UCLA lecturer wanted for threatening to commit acts of public violence.Ěý
DiStefano and members of his team also gave updates on campus financial issues and ongoing efforts to contain the omicron variant of the COVID-19 virus.Ěý
Arrest adjacent to campus
The chancellor told the assemblyââmeeting for the first time since last semesterââthat Boulder police, as âincident managers,â had control of the tactics and communications related to the arrest of Matthew Harris, formerly a post-doctoral student at UCLA and living in an apartment building directly across Broadway from the CU Boulder campus.Ěý
DiStefano said the BPD had good intelligence that Harris âwas likely alone and unarmedâ and the chancellor thanked the campus community for responding to police instructions and making âaccommodations for students who were affected by shelter-in-place orders.âĚý
Some students and other members of the campus community have criticized the universityâs communications as being unclear and not sent to the campus early enough in the crisis.Ěý
DiStefano told the BFA that communications to the campus were controlled and approved by Boulder police as the incident commanders managing the arrest of Harris.Ěý
He pledged a full review of the procedures and communications around the incidentââcommunications that one BFA member said were vague.Ěý
âWe were told to avoid the area . . . are there any more plans to get more specific on âavoid the area?ââ said Zach Herz of Classics.Ěý
CU Boulder Chief Operating Officer Patrick OâRourke, to whom the CUPD reports, responded to Herz, saying the shelter in place order âwas to keep people from going into the area around the apartment building (where Harris lived) itself.âĚý
OâRourke said the universityâs challenge is that it must communicate to large numbers of people using the campusâs RAVE system, while the city can use an Everbridge system that targets much smaller numbers of people with safety instructions.
âThat creates anxiety and confusion,â OâRourke said.Ěý
He echoed DiStefano in telling the group that there would be a debrief with the city to address our concerns and try to improve how we can communicate when incidents impact our community.ĚýĚý
Marshall Fire impacts
In other safety matters, DiStefano said that 70 CU Boulder community members lost their homes in the Marshall Fire and that even more family members, âmore like in the two-hundreds,â were impacted by those total losses, including, he said, Provost Russell Moore, who issued a thank-you letter to the campus Thursday that encouraged building a culture of gratitude.
DiStefano said the decision to delay the January opening of in-person activity on the campus was justified by the campus having to consider âthe combined effects of both crises on our operations.âĚý
âAt the time, we knew that about 1,300 faculty, staff and students were in the fire evacuation zones,â DiStefano said. âThe goal of delaying in-person instruction was to minimize the burden on our impacted faculty and staff, and to open in person at a time when we could provide maximum support and continuity to our students.âĚý
Financial picture
DiStefano also gave a brief overview of financial matters, saying the campusâs financial picture is improving and thanking faculty for having âshowed up strong during COVIDâ and staying âclose to students.âĚý
He reviewed the campusâs implementation of the Equal Pay for Equal Work Act, saying âour priority as a leadership team has been to get the campus into compliance with the law.â
âI know that some of you have questions about this process. What I want you to know is that this was a dedicated effort, involving experts from our HR, legal and Faculty Affairs and Academic Affairs teams, working closely with our deans,â he said.Ěý
He said the process demanded âdifficult legal parameters to observe, issues of privacy to maintain and a very complicated set of analytics to work out.â
âWe made the conscious decision to keep the working group small in this phase of analysis, knowing that we would do an even more comprehensive salary analysisââwhich we are now beginning.â
Regarding budget issues, the chancellor said the campus had, during the initial COVID-19 wave, endured âover $200 million in revenue lossesâ with federal backfill funds being âfar less than our losses.â
He expressed gratitude for âone-time funding that enabled us to get a one-time, one percent salary enhancementâ and said that due to current revenues from this yearâs enrollment âwe were able to enact the three percent raise we have been notifying employees about.â
âWe are proposing another three percent merit pool for the upcoming budget that will be presented to the Board of Regents next week,â he said.ĚýĚý
He also indicated, âI know this up-and-down, boom-and-near-bust cycle has been frustrating for you. . . I completely empathize with your frustrations.âĚýĚý
In other meeting news
- OâRourke gave an update on the campusâs ongoing efforts to contain the omicron variant of the COVID-19 virus, telling the group the infection rate was falling dramatically, with a positivity rate as determined by PCR tests of 16%, down from 26% two weeks ago, and hospitalizations in Boulder County are down 30% over the last week. He said CU Anschutzâs School of Public Health is predicting that perhaps as soon as the end of this month, about 80 percent of the stateâs population will have immunity against COVID-19 infection.
- Chief Financial Officer Carla Hoâa, whose retirement from CU Boulder in November was announced Thursday, and Executive Vice Provost for Academic Resource Management Ann Schmiesing gave an update on the campusâs Budget Model Redesign project, which is in the second phase of a three-phase process. OâRourke called Hoâa âa great CFO and an extraordinary leaderâ and pledged to seek faculty and other stakeholder input in the search for a new CFO.
- Two academic matters were introduced for a vote of endorsement by the assembly:
- Revision to the 2019 BFA approved grade replacement policy: The revision would automate the process of grade replacement, making it an opt-out choice by the student rather than an opt-in choice, and would lift the credit limit on theĚý number of classes that can be replaced. Other provisions of the policy would remain in place, including a maximum grade of C- for undergraduate students and C+ for graduate students to invoke the grade change, and grade replacement not being available if the original grade was the result of academic dishonesty.
- Change the status of about 200 courses currently designated as being graded only Pass/Fail, to a designation as being graded Satisfactory (S) or Unsatisfactory (U). The move is part of a call by students to create a special designation for the courses â mainly experiential classes and thesis hours â to prevent a âpassâ grade in one of those classes from being lumped into the âlow passâ category of the pass+/pass/fail grading option that students may choose for most graded courses.
- Two resolutions were introduced for discussion at the next BFA meeting (March 3):Ěý
- One by the BFAâs Intercollegiate Athletics Committee that recommends campus create a policy to restrict CU Boulder faculty, staff and students from wagering on CU games (a policy similar to those adopted by Purdue, Villanova and St. Johnâs).
- A second measure by the Grievances Advisory Committee that would update the current committee charge, notably to include a roster of neutral advisors on process with training in both mediation and the newly updated PRR.Ěý