… in the Minneapolis Star Tribune notes that the most charitable description of what’s been going on at the clubby University of Minnesota medical school would be “bizarre.”
Monday, June 18, 2012
For the first time since ouster...
University of Virgina's President Sullivan Speaks Out
(emphasis mine) 
The NBC29 newsroom received the following statement from University of Virginia President Teresa Sullivan:
In 1816, our 
founder Thomas Jefferson said, "as new discoveries are made, new truth 
discovered and manners and opinions change with the change of 
circumstances institutions must advance also to keep pace with the 
times."  
We are all 
aware that the UVA needs to change and for the past 2 years I have been 
working to do just that.  Apparently, the area of disagreement appears 
to be just how that change should occur and at what pace.  
I certainly 
want to take some time and talk about the many changes that I have made 
because they are significant.  But first, I need to make one thing 
clear.  The current reaction by the faculty, staff, and students on and 
off Grounds, and among the donors and alumni to my impending departure, 
is not something I have stirred up.  I have made no public statement.  I
 have done my best to keep the lowest possible profile. I have fulfilled
 previous commitments at the White House and elsewhere in Washington, 
and I have visited with friends in another state.  I have not even 
responded to the innumerable people who have reached out to me 
personally and demonstrated their love for this great institution.  I 
did not cause this reaction in the last ten days, but perhaps the 
reaction speaks to the depth of the connections I have made in the last 
22 months.  Through all of the last ten days, my overriding concern has 
been the welfare of the University of Virginia.
I have been 
described as an incrementalist. It is true.   Sweeping action may be 
gratifying and may create the aura of strong leadership, but its 
unintended consequences may lead to costs that are too high to bear.  
There has been substantial change on Grounds in the past two years, and 
this change is laying the groundwork for greater
 change. But it has all been carefully planned and executed in 
collaboration with Vice Presidents and Deans and representatives of the 
faculty. This is the best, most constructive, most long lasting, and 
beneficial way to change a university.  Until the last ten days, the 
change at UVA has not been disruptive change, and it has not been 
high-risk change.
Corporate-style,
 top-down leadership does not work in a great university.  Sustained 
change with buy-in does work.  UVA is one of the world's greatest 
universities.
Being an 
incrementalist does not mean that I lack vision. My vision was clearly 
outlined in my strategic vision statement.  It encompasses the thoughts 
developed by me and my team as to what UVA can become in the 21st century and parts of it were incorporated into the budget narrative that you adopted last month .       
FACULTY: 
 One of the great strengths of UVA is our outstanding faculty.  As a 
tenured member of faculty, I have tried to view the campus not only from
 the president's chair, but from the faculty's lectern and it has been 
an amazing and rewarding experience.  Nearly every faculty member here 
has opportunity costs for staying and has attractive options elsewhere. 
The faculty we most need to keep have many
 options elsewhere. Most of the faculty could earn more in some other 
organization, academic or non-academic.  They stay to participate with 
other faculty "of the highest grade" and to interact with students who 
will be the leaders of the next generation.  Their financial sacrifices 
have their limits; of course the faculty must be appropriately 
compensated.  
But at the end of the day, money alone is not enough. The faculty must also believe that they can do their best work here.   They must believe in the future here.
 At any great university, the equilibrium – the pull between the desire 
to stay and the inducements to leave – is delicate.   Rapid change 
rapidly upsets this delicate equilibrium.  
Already in the 
last ten days we have lost faculty to other universities. Fortunately, 
we are well past the usual hiring season in most disciplines. But deans 
and provosts at every peer institution are setting aside funds now to 
raid the University of Virginia next year given the current turmoil on 
our campus. 
Clearly we have
 financial challenges.  Our net financing from the state has been 
steadily cut for two decades, despite the efforts of the Governor and 
General Assembly to modestly reverse that trend.  Both political and 
market forces limit the tuition we can charge.  We are addressing these 
challenges in multiple ways.
The academic 
mission is central and must be protected. Strategic cutting and 
large-scale cost savings have therefore been concentrated in 
non-academic areas, and these areas have become notably leaner and more 
efficient.  
The historic 
practice at UVA was that any necessary budget cuts in the academic areas
 were directed by the central administration, often by a non-academic 
officer. And because that officer often, almost inevitably, lacks 
sufficient information to make detailed choices, these cuts were usually
 applied across-the-board, the most non-strategic approach to cutting.  I
 undertook to change this approach.
In the last two
 years, we have been working to implement a new internal financial 
model. This is no technical accounting matter. The new model would 
empower deans, improve their financial incentives, and hold them 
accountable for the results. Each dean knows his or her own school far 
better than the central administration can ever know it. But the deans 
have had limited financial planning tools, and if they did find a way to
 cut costs, or a creative way to raise revenue without raising tuition, 
there was no assurance that they would keep the savings or the revenue. 
 We expect better financial decisions, new cost savings, and where 
necessary, more strategic program cuts from the new internal financial 
model.  
The budgeting 
changes we have already set in place this year have created transparency
 and accountability and dispelled the perception that politics drives 
the internal allocation of resources.   The budget meetings that we 
initiated this year provide the opportunity for the provost to work with
 deans on priorities for strategic investment. And often he discovers 
that multiple deans have a similar idea, and that a co-investment 
strategy will produce greater gains at lower total cost. We are making a
 portfolio of these "small bets," which cumulatively will build strength
 in important areas of teaching and research. This approach acknowledges
 that we are neither prescient nor omniscient. No single initiative will
 do serious damage if it doesn't work out. 
One example, 
already under way and being expanded, is the Quantitative Collaborative,
 which addresses simulation and predictive statistical models and the 
challenges of massive data sets that exceed the limits of our analytic 
tools.
Others that are well along in the planning and funding stages include:
The 
Contemplative Sciences Center, which has broadened considerably from the
 original donor proposal to an exciting synergy among faculty from the 
Medical School, the College of Nursing, Asian Studies, Religious 
Studies, and other departments. 
Our 
international focus: We are broadening and deepening the connections 
among our international faculty, especially among those who study China 
and Africa.  These are not areas that should be siloed within academic 
units, but there should be ways for scholars across Grounds to interact 
on them.  My recent trip to China was used as a way to integrate these 
scholars' expertise and help us chart a course for the future. 
Environmental 
sustainability is a topic that excites faculty and students from nearly 
every school, including the College, Architecture, Engineering, and 
other. .  A new partnership with the National Fish and Wildlife 
Foundation, together with our widely heralded Bay Game, offer 
opportunities for study in species conservation and clean water, which 
will be one of the most important issues of this century. Many more 
ideas are bubbling up both from faculty and from students.  These 
projects require new funding, typically from interested private donors, 
but they are also
 force multipliers. They enable our existing faculty to expand the reach
 of their teaching and research through structured collaboration with 
colleagues in other departments and other schools.  They do not tear 
down departments, but instead they provide ways for faculty from 
different departments to interact, enriching the departments but also 
allowing new activities.
We have taken 
similar initiative with respect to faculty compensation. We found funds 
for a 2% faculty pay raise last year — not enough, but the first raise 
of any kind in four years. Equally important, we instructed deans not to
 give a 2% raise across the board, but to allocate all raise money on 
the basis of merit. This rewards our most valuable faculty and improves 
the incentive structure for all faculty. 
A dramatic 
top-down reallocation in our general fund, simply to show that we are 
"changing," or that we are not "incremental," seems to me fiscally 
imprudent, highly alarming to faculty, and unfair to students who expect
 to get a broadly inclusive education here. I have chosen a lower-risk 
and more conservative strategy, because I am accountable to the 
taxpayers and the tuition payers.  
If we were to 
embark on a course of deep top-down cuts, there would also be difficult 
questions regarding what to cut. A university that does not teach the 
full range of arts and sciences will no longer be a university. 
Certainly it will no longer be respected as such by its former peers.
Faculty 
collaborate both within disciplines and across disciplines. In the 
nature of things, many of these collaborations are not even known to the
 central administration. If we cut from the top down, without consulting
 the affected faculty, a cut in one department may have wholly 
unintended consequences in another department that we are trying to 
build up.
Nor can we 
always predict which kind of knowledge will be of greatest import in the
 future.  Before September 11, few of us understood just how important 
Arabic and other Middle Eastern and Central Asian languages would become
 — to our students, to the nation, and to national security.  Suppose we
 had eliminated some of those languages because of low enrollment or 
other fiscal considerations before 2001. We would be scrambling to 
recreate them now.
Beyond finances, there are many other innovations I have undertaken and about which you are regularly briefed.  
We conducted 
national searches to fill our two executive vice presidencies with 
talented administrators. No president can act alone; filling these 
positions was essential to further progress.
We have increased the emphasis on the unglamorous but critical task of patient safety in our hospitals.
We are 
undertaking or evaluating strategic alliances with other health care 
providers, to strengthen our position in the face of a changing and more
 complex and difficult market for health care.
We have taken 
initiatives to improve student safety. This is obviously a matter of 
great concern to parents. These initiatives include the Day of Dialogue 
during my first month on Grounds, and the follow up from that day, and a
 new policy on sexual misconduct that is considered a national model. 
We greatly 
expanded our MLK Day celebration, both as an additional educational 
activity for our students but also as a way to link with the community 
of Charlottesville.  We have worked with the Governor, with the Higher 
Education Advisory Commission created by the Governor, and with the 
legislature to implement the Higher Education Opportunity Act. 
We are 
gradually increasing enrollment, preserving the quality of instruction 
with the initiative pre-funded by the General Assembly, and we have 
implemented Early Action in admissions, increasing our ability to 
compete for the best students.
We have created
 the 4VA telepresence consortium with the state, Cisco, Virginia Tech, 
George Mason, and James Madison that uses sophisticated technology to 
share courses and other resources; examples are advanced Mandarin and 
national security policy. I would have become the consortium's chair on 
July 1. There is room for carefully implemented online learning in 
selected fields, but online instruction is no panacea. It is 
surprisingly expensive, has limited revenue potential, and unless 
carefully managed, can undermine the quality of instruction.
We have initiated the Hoos Well program, which in the long run will save money on our employee health care plan.
In this very 
Rotunda in which you are sitting, I initiated and secured funding for 
the critical roof repair.  Much more must be done to complete this, and 
we had a plan in preparation to raise the funds. 
Fundraising 
takes time. A new President first has to meet donors and establish trust
 and rapport. Instability is as alarming to donors as it is to faculty 
and in the last few days you are already seeing the impact. 
Fundraising 
during my tenure has been rebounding from the effects of the recession 
and the presidential transition. Since I came on board in 2010, 
philanthropic cash flow has increased by 15.6%.  New campaign 
commitments to date averaged $17.1 million per month in FY 2010 and 
averaged $24.6 million through April 30th of FY 2012.  A number you may not know yet is that we raised $44 million from our Reunions classes at Reunions Weekend. 
Beyond 
fiduciary matters related to the budget model and fundraising, the 
University's new administrative team has had a considerable human
 impact. If you want to know about the impact on the faculty, on its 
morale and energy and commitment to UVA, go outside and talk to them.
I want to turn 
to the issue of trust.  The community of trust is not merely a term to 
describe a Code that applies to our students. We equally need a 
community of trust between faculty and administration and among our 
leadership teams.  Trust does not mean an absence of disagreement. But 
it requires that disagreements be frankly discussed. No matter how 
accomplished he or she may be, a president cannot read minds.  When you 
choose a new president, tell him or her what you are thinking.
Finally, I 
would like to thank you for the great honor of leading the University of
 Virginia.  In only 22 months, Doug and I have felt warmly embraced by 
the University and by Charlottesville and Albemarle County.  Whatever 
the problems this University may be facing, make no mistake: This is one
 of the world's great universities.  Every day on Grounds, great ideas 
are pursued; outstanding books are written; patients' lives are saved, 
often after despair had set in.  The products and industries of tomorrow
 are being crafted in our laboratories, and the leaders of the 
twenty-first century fill our classrooms and seminar rooms.
One of the 
greater duties of the president is to listen carefully to the needs and 
aspirations of the community. Only with that input have I been able to 
identify and analyze the issues that required action.    I am proud of 
my service here, and I thank you for the opportunity. 
An outstanding leader for another university. Sad
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