for
the football team, that is:
“On Monday, in their third consecutive BCS appearance, the Ducks will
show Wisconsin what they are made of," said Governor Kitzhaber. “I can’t
wait to watch Oregon do what it does best - come together as a team to
get the job done. The Badgers are a quality team, and it is a great Rose
Bowl match up, but I’m looking forward to collecting on Governor
Walker’s generous bet.”
But not a lot of spillover love for the the academic side. The faculty and the students can
go frack themselves, as far as the Governor is concerned:
"First, let me say that the situation involving the Oregon State Board
of Higher Education and Dr. Richard Lariviere has nothing to do with an
‘ongoing difference of opinion over the future of the University of
Oregon,’ as Dr. Lariviere suggested in an email sent out to faculty and
students last Tuesday.
My education strategy includes building a world-class, innovative system
of higher education that delivers better results for students and
serves as an engine for our state’s economic recovery. Achieving these
goals requires all of our university campuses, the Oregon University
System and the State Board of Higher Education to be pulling in the same
direction.
While the timing of the Board’s action on Dr. Richard Lariviere’s
employment contract may come as a surprise to some, the possible
decision to terminate his contract should not, given his record.
There have been a number of well-publicized incidents involving Dr.
Lariviere that have eroded trust and confidence with the Board of Higher
Education. He disregarded Board direction on more than one occasion.
His decision to bypass the Board and lobby for increased independence
for the University of Oregon was a clear violation of policy and made
our larger, collective efforts to advance system-wide reform much more
difficult. Consequently, Dr Lariviere’s employment contract was limited
to one year and included specific performance standards in an attempt
both to alert Dr. Lariviere to the seriousness of these issues and to
create an opportunity to rebuild trust.
But his conduct has not changed.
Most recently, after agreeing face-to-face with the other presidents to
limit compensation increases given the state budget’s severe revenue
constraints, Dr. Lariviere unilaterally granted substantial salary
increases to his administrators and faculty. Unlike every other
university president in the state, he disregarded my specific direction
on holding tight and delaying discussion about retention and equity pay
increases until the next biennium to allow for a consistent, system-wide
policy on salaries.
His decision not only undermined the Board, it undermined my own
directive and the credibility of my administration with the other
campuses that complied with the agreement. I am not saying that
retention increases are not warranted – they are – but the faculty
retention problem is not unique to the University of Oregon. By acting
alone, Dr. Lariviere has created significant difficulty for other
schools. At Portland State University, the increased pressure on the
administration continues to prevent successful conclusion of contract
negotiations with its faculty. His actions show little regard for the
needs of the rest of the university system, other campuses, and the
state.
Dr. Lariviere’s popularity in the University of Oregon community speaks
for itself. But evaluating his performance requires more. His
responsibility to the Board of Higher Education and his contribution to
the larger issues and success of the entire system fall short. Indeed,
Dr. Lariviere’s actions have done damage to our vision for higher
education and other institutions of higher learning; and, ironically,
have served to undercut his own aspirations for the University of
Oregon.
His vision for the U of O ultimately needs the support of the Governor,
the Speaker of the House, the President of the Senate and a majority in
both chambers of the legislature. That does not exist today. I am
personally committed to the concept of local governing boards and
seeking new funding sources for Oregon’s universities, including
consideration of an endowment funding model, but Dr. Lariviere has made
the path to reform much steeper. Indeed, the orchestrated media blitz
over the past few days has made some of those who are not warm to his
ideas even more resistant.
In my opinion, should the Board of Higher Education decide to terminate
Dr. Lariviere’s contract on this basis, it would be fully justified from
an executive management standpoint. Any private sector CEO, faced with a
division manager who was totally dedicated to his or her specific
department but willfully and repeatedly undermined the needs and goals
of the overall company would, I expect, fire the manager – and probably
after the first instance of such behavior; not the second. And few would be sympathetic to a call for special treatment.
The Board of Higher Education is a group of thoughtful and dedicated
Oregonians – many of whom have executive management experience
themselves – and I am confident that their decision will not be arrived
at lightly but only after much deliberation. I intend to fully support
them as we pursue excellence in higher education across the state of
Oregon."
Re-reading Kitzhaber's nasty take-down of RL makes my blood boil all over again. Whatever he may hold out in terms of support for UO autonomy, the Gov. is not to be trusted.
ReplyDeleteIt is difficult to describe the profound loss UO experienced with the departure of Richard Lariviere. His vision and intellect compared to the mediocre and provincial perspective of our governor and chancellor is amazing. Michael Gottfredson is a lightweight by comparison.
ReplyDelete