THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

Reduction in Force Committee Must Remain Confidential

Reduction in Force Committee Must Remain Confidential

By Ryan Simonovich

Author: Bodine, James/Wednesday, February 7, 2018/Categories: Home, Campus

Rate this article:
No rating

The Fort Lewis College Faculty Senate voted on Jan. 18 to require confidentiality, at the provost’s request, among members of an advisory committee to the provost.

 

The vote for confidentiality won 9-7 with two senators abstaining from the vote.  

 

A concern is that the confidentiality agreement violates Colorado’s open meetings laws.

 

Personnel matters, such as the committee talking about a specific faculty member, are typically exempt from open meetings laws, meaning that the meeting can be closed to the public for the purpose of that specific discussion.

 

The purpose of the reduction-in-force committee is to advise and provide feedback to the provost about potential budget cuts within Academic Affairs, Faculty Senate President David Blake said.

 

Earlier in January, the FLC chapter of the American Association of University Professors recommended that the administration should not force faculty members to sign confidentiality agreements as a condition to discussing budgetary matters.

 

“By signing confidentiality agreements, it gives the impression of trying to hide something,” Janine Fitzgerald, FLC AAUP chapter leadership member, said. “Although they argue that, for budgetary decisions, they need to have confidentiality to move forward, we disagree.”

 

Provost Barbara Morris said that confidentiality is important because the committee will discuss sensitive issues.

 

“Since the majority of our budget in Academic Affairs is personnel, and people’s jobs may be impacted, it is important to maintain confidentiality,” Morris said in an email.

 

The confidentiality requirement was recommended by the Colorado Attorney General’s office, Fitzgerald said.

 

The language of the recommendation has not been made public, but Morris said in the email that the Attorney General’s office is preparing a statement.  

 

The Independent requested a copy of the confidentiality agreement from Morris, which she supplied. The agreement can be viewed at the bottom of this article.

 

The committee has already met multiple times with the provost, Blake said.

 

The committee is made up of nine Faculty Senate members:

 

  • David Blake - Biology
  • Paul Clay - Management   
  • Betty Door - Psychology
  • Lee Frazer - Adventure Education
  • Michael Fry - History
  • Melissa Knight-Maloney - Exercise Science
  • Astrid Oliver - Library
  • Michael Valdez - Management
  • Jillian Wenburg - Composition

 

 
Print

Number of views (2629)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

A Community Builds a Bookstore

Tiana Padilla

Maria’s Bookshop celebrates 40 years in Durango

 

People forming a line at the front entrance of Maria’s Bookshop for their 40th anniversary celebration Sept. 19.   Kealey Meyer, a Fort Lewis College student, and a bookseller at Maria’s reading off numbers for one of many book raffles happening throughout the night. Meyer has been going to Maria’s since childhood, she said. “As a college student,...

Vibrant Voices

Kiiyahno Edgewater

The past, present and future of representing diversity on campus.

Nearly half of Fort Lewis Colleges’s student population is Native American and Alaska Native, and students of color make up 59%. With such a large percentage of students with diverse voices from all corners of the world, how does FLC manage to represent every unique voice while maintaining all else?  Vice president of Diversity Affairs, Heather Shotton, came to FLC because of the...

The Hidden Cost

Story by: Matthew Claeson and Zara Tucker

Investigating Meal Swipes and the New Food Provider at Fort Lewis College

Fort Lewis College announced on Apr. 9 that Fresh Ideas will be taking over Fort Lewis College’s food service and dining contract, a place that has been filled by Sodexo for the past 15 years. This article takes a look into Sodexo’s food service system for students.  Skycards and Meal Swipes When it comes to skycards here at Fort Lewis College, they are a student’s...

The Coming Storm

Scout Edmondson

Lessons learned from the ‘22/‘23 winter and what could come with the looming El Niño.

  At the end of the 2023 winter, the San Juan Mountains, just north of Durango saw a record-breaking snowpack.  According to the National Resource Conservation Service, a branch of the US Department of Agriculture that tracks historical snowpack data, the snowpack in The San Juans topped out at 31.5 inches of snow-water equivalent (SWE) in mid-April. Purgatory Ski Resort,...

Crying Wolf

Scout Edmondson

Colorado's wolf reintroduction has become so emotional, so political, that it's no longer even about the wolves. 

Cover photo courtesy of Colorado Parks and Wildlife. Wolf 2306-OR runs into the wild after being released by CPW on Dec.19, 2023.  Grand County is a land of wide open skies, snowy mountains that hunch against the biting wind blowing off the plains of Wyoming, and miles and miles of prairie, pine forests and meandering trout streams. It’s home to the headwaters of the Colorado...

123468910Last