November 23rd, 2024

U of L faculty group vote deserves response from administration


By Lethbridge Herald on May 12, 2022.

Dear Editor,

Unlike corporations, universities operate via “collegial governance” in which faculty members (the “collegium”) are active participants in academic decision making. They typically work in partnership with an external board of governors whose role is to provide financial expertise to complement the faculty’s academic expertise. In healthy university governance, both fields of expertise are respected. When senior administrators exclude faculty members from academic decision making, the university

as a whole suffers.

On April 12, 286 University of Lethbridge faculty members informed University Board Chair, Kurt Schlachter, that they have no confidence in President Michael Mahon, Vice- President (Academic) Erasmus Okine, and Vice-President (Finance and Administration) Nancy Walker.

Eight days later, Mr. Schlachter informed us that the Board of Governors ‘rejects’ the fact that 286 (now 296) faculty members have no confidence in these three senior administrators. In that letter, Mr. Schlachter attempted to dismiss the votes of 328 faculty members on the ground that these votes were collected by an ad hoc group of professors and instructors. In his May 3rd email to faculty and staff, Mr. Schlachter further implied that the No Confidence vote could be dismissed because it was organized by “a small group of faculty members.”

But Mr. Schlachter is mistaken on both fronts.

We and our strong vote of No Confidence have undeniable standing in the U. of L’s collegial governance, for an integral part of our academic freedom is “the right… to criticize University… administrations” (U. of L. Academic Staff Collective Agreement, Art. 11.01.1), either as individuals or as a group of faculty members. Furthermore, the validity and integrity of our vote are beyond reproach. About 50 senior faculty members contributed to the organization of this grass roots movement, 75% of full-time faculty members voted, and 97.7% of those who took a position on the Motion (i.e., not including abstentions) voted in favour of the No Confidence Motion against President

Mahon, V.P.A. Okine, and V.P.F. Walker.

Why do so many faculty members have no confidence in senior leadership? There are many reasons, but most of them centre around the circumvention of collegial governance. Because of the size and complexity of a university, professors must choose some among their ranks to serve in administrative roles. True collegial governance is the governance of the university by faculty members, some of whom have administrative roles. In this way, faculty members and administrators work 

together to govern all academic facets of the university—from curriculum proposals to faculty hires to administrative hires.

In what ways do faculty members feel that the U. of L.’s senior administration has circumvented collegial governance in recent years?

Two years ago, senior administrators invented 21 Task Forces to investigate ways— many of them involving serious academic matters—to further cut costs at our lean university. These 21 Task Forces should have been established by the principal governing body of the University, the General Faculties Council (GFC), on which sit faculty members, students, administrators, and others. But they were not established by GFC.

Instead, 20 of these Task Forces completely bypassed collegial governance by excluding all faculty members who were not administrators. On many of the Task Forces, non-academic administrators such as the Executive Director of Ancillary Services decided matters of academic import, including Faculty Structures (#14), the Assignment of Duties to Faculty Members (#16), Term Appointees (#6), Sessional Lecturers (#6), and Study Leaves (#9). Academic matters of this nature clearly require the expertise of academics.

Furthermore, it has become increasingly common for senior administrators at the U. of L. to circumvent proper collegial search and appointment procedures for senior leadership roles. Without any consultation, the President or the V.P.A. have repeatedly appointed people to interim/acting appointments for periods as long as 3 or more years, when a 1-year term would have sufficed to conduct a proper 8-month search. Conducting proper collegial searches for senior academic leaders is vitally important to the integrity of a university. The decision to bypass faculty participation has also contributed to the erosion of faculty confidence in senior administration.

For many years now, faculty members at the U. of L. have tried to tell senior administrators that they must govern with us, the faculty members who teach students, who conduct important research, who select peers to be administrators, and who are mandated to help govern the University. For years, these three senior administrators have continued to ignore our pleas and arguments, continuing in the same authoritarian way.

The Board of Governors cannot dismiss this cry of No Confidence. The current terms

of President Mahon and Vice-President (Academic) Okine end June 30, 2023. We, the faculty, are seriously concerned about further erosion of collegial governance in the interim.

It has now been 27 days since senior administrators received our April 12th letter, and their lack of response is typical of how they are disconnected, non-responsive, and disrespectful to the faculty. We deserve an immediate response from President Mahon.

Sincerely yours,

Victor Rodych

Louise Barrett

Olga Kovalchuk

Igor Kovalchuk

David Naylor

Paula Cardozo

Jim Byrne

Pamela Adams

Katherine Haight

Yale Belanger

Peter Henzi

On behalf of the Faculty Members’ Governance Group of the University of Lethbridge

Share this story:

25
-24
8 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Kal Itea

To all the above signatories:
You lost me with your verbosity. .
I don’t know what the heck you are talking about.
Methinks when you write an opinion piece your goal is to enlighten the reader about your point of view.
Maybe to gain support from the “Great Unwashed”. ie the people who hold the right to vote?
Your piece reads like an instruction manual for building a rocket ship.Some of the pieces are missing and maybe there are too many pieces that won’t fit.
Try again?

Fedup Conservative

It was intended for intelligent people and you aren’t included. Anyone who is dumb enough to support a Liberal , turned reformer in Jason Kenney who is promising to destroy this province, while his pal Pierre Poilievre is promising to destroy Canada isn’t smart enough to understand it, we do. Have you noticed only 22% of you want Kenney re-elected? The rest of us want Notley back.

Fedup Conservative

How stupid are you? Beating up on professionals like Kenney has taught you to do certainly proves it doesn’t it. Maybe you should learn to keep your mouth shut, don’t you think?

Fedup Conservative

Make certain all of you read what these phony conservatives have done to us by treating our doctors like dirt. In 2021 we lost 568 , including ones who took early retirement because of how they had been treated by the Kenney government. Some of our seniors friends lost theirs and don’t where they are going to find another one.
So while this stupid seniors hurl their sarcastic comments at those of us for not being as stupid as them they may have put their lives at risk, by not being able to get medical help when they need it. Trouble is they have taken all of us with them.
“Doctors who left Alberta nearly Tripled in 2021”

gs172

I’m not going to comment on your no-confidence vote as I have no knowledge of your concerns. Yes, you’re right you have the right to criticize how the university is run both individually and as a group and with your letter I’m sure the board of governors are well aware of this, but what do you expect them to do? Fire Mahon and Okine? If they did Mahon and Okine would have an excelent case for wrongful dismissal and the U of L probably would have to pay out the remainder of their term. That would be devastating to the university who is dealing with budget cuts as well as coming out of a strike this year. These are facts that can’t be ignored. Fight for your concerns absolutely, work with the board of governors to find suitable replacements. Fight for the long game.

Fedup Conservative

You have nailed it. While Kenney cuts $9.4 billion off corporate taxes to benefit the rich he creates a nightmare for doctors, nurses, teachers with budget cuts and these stupid seniors go right along believing that he had to do it. That’s how stupid they are. Not one single one of these Reformers and their supporters are smart enough to suggest that we should be following what Lougheed created by collecting proper royalties and taxes, like Notley did and Alaska and Norway are doing. She was on the right track by increasing taxes and royalties and ignorant Albertans weren’t smart enough to let her continue to do it.

buckwheat

Speaking of ignorant of the facts bitter old man, Norway is a country, Alaska is a state and share with no one. Alberta does. Simple fact and you regurgitate nonsense in what I am sure is your only reason for staying above the grass. Hate Kenney, hate Klein and “stupid seniors”. I suggest you’re the head of the clown class. Give it a rest and you’ll live longer and happier.

gs172

What is incredibly naive is continuing using oil and gas royalties for a significant portion of Alberta’s operating budget. Doing so leaves us at the mercy of the boom and bust cycle over and over again. Education and health are usually the first victims of this. Something different needs to happen and we lack the leadership to act on it. The NDP mused about it but little was done during their reign. Personally, I don’t care who runs the province as long as they do it well, which hasnt happened in a long long time.