FYI

 

Professor E-K. Daufin, Ph.D.

Department of Communications

Alabama State University

915 South Jackson St.

Montgomery, AL 36101-0271

Lectures, Performances, Workshops, Consultation:

http://home.earthlink.net/~daufin

The Mars & Venus Diet & Exercise Solution: http://ekdaufin.isagenix.com

 

 
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Monday, October 31, 2005

Hurricane-Ravaged Xavier U. to Cut Its Faculty and Staff by More Than
Half

By KATHERINE S. MANGAN

Faced with staggering cleanup costs after Hurricane Katrina and the
likelihood that fewer than half of its 4,000 students will return,
Xavier University of Louisiana laid off more than half of its faculty
and staff members last week as it prepared to reopen a much smaller
campus in January.

In addition to cutting 58 percent of its full-time faculty members and
53 percent of its staff members, the New Orleans institution suspended
all of its intercollegiate athletics programs for the rest of the
academic year, said a university spokesman, Warren A. Bell. All of the
university's graduate classes will be held exclusively online.

"This is a devastating action for a close-knit community such as Xavier,
but the tremendous financial challenges we face post-Katrina forced us
to make difficult decisions," said Calvin S. Tregre, senior vice
president for administration. The layoffs will save $5.8-million this
academic year for Xavier, the nation's only historically black and Roman
Catholic university.

Xavier officials estimated it would cost them more than $90-million to
rebuild the campus, pay additional financial aid to students whose
parents lost homes and jobs in the hurricane, and recover from the loss
of tuition and other revenues for the fall 2005 semester.

Classes, which were abruptly canceled just before Katrina slammed into
the Gulf Coast, on August 29, are scheduled to resume on January 17.
Some will be held on Xavier's 23-acre campus, which suffered extensive
flooding and mold damage. Others will be held at Tulane University,
which has also offered classroom space to another historically black
institution hammered by the hurricane, Dillard University.

Even though Tulane's campus was spared any serious physical damage, it
has also had to lay off hundreds of faculty and staff members in the
wake of Katrina (The Chronicle, October 24). In fact, most of the
colleges and universities hardest hit by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita
have either announced layoffs or are expected to do so by the end of the
year.

Layoffs and program cuts were also being debated over the weekend at the
Southern University System's Baton Rouge headquarters. Southern's New
Orleans campus, located in the city's impoverished Ninth Ward, was
decimated in Hurricane Katrina, with 11 feet of water in many of the
buildings.

It is unclear how many can be rebuilt, but in the meantime, the
university has asked federal authorities for up to 100 trailers to serve
as temporary classrooms in January, and hundreds more to house displaced
faculty members. On Saturday and Sunday, chancellors and vice
chancellors of the system's five campuses met to prepare pared-down
budgets to present today to Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco.

The governor, a Democrat, has asked state agencies to plan for budget
cuts of 5 to 10 percent. A 10-percent reduction would cost the Southern
University System $8.2-million.

Xavier officials had held off as long as possible before announcing
cuts, hoping more hurricane relief would be coming, Mr. Bell said. But
with the end of the year looming and people moving back into ruined
neighborhoods, the university wanted to give them time to find other
jobs or homes.

After determining that the university faced a financial crisis, Xavier's
administration terminated the contracts of all 246 of its faculty
members, many of whom had tenure. It then hired back 103 of them.

The 143 who were terminated will receive medical benefits, but no pay,
through the end of December. They were told that some might be rehired
once the university had a better idea of how many students would be
returning in January. "That's the big question," Mr. Bell said. "On our
campus, we're a beehive of activity, but that isn't necessarily the case
throughout the city. Some parents may decide the city isn't up to
speed."

Both Mr. Bell and the university's president, Norman C. Francis, live a
few blocks from one of the levees that broke, and their homes are gutted
and unlivable. Both have been frustrated by the pace of repairs in much
of New Orleans.

Many of the faculty members who were laid off were in Xavier's
mass-communications program, whose television gear and other electronic
equipment were ruined when their first-floor storage rooms were flooded.
Xavier, which sends more black students to American medical schools than
any other college in the country, will continue to make a priority of
programs in science, Mr. Bell said.

In selecting the professors to rehire, the university retained more than
90 percent of the faculty members in its highly regarded pharmacy
program, which graduates the most black pharmacists of any program in
the country. "We know the retention rate for those students is going to
be high," Mr. Bell said. "Many are second- and third-year students, and
they fought like hell to get into the program, and they aren't about to
drop out."

Overseeing it all will be a man who will have plenty on his plate.
Xavier's president, Mr. Francis, has served as president of Xavier for
38 years, longer than any other sitting college president. In addition
to leading Xavier's resurrection and his own house's reconstruction, the
74-year-old president is heading a 24-member statewide commission
charged with overseeing statewide reconstruction.

The commission, which was appointed by the governor, will work closely
with the 17-member "Bring New Orleans Back" commission appointed by New
Orleans's mayor, Ray Nagin. Tulane University's president, Scott S.
Cowen, is a member of that commission, where he will lead efforts to
revive the city's public-school system.

Copyright (c) 2005 by The Chronicle of Higher Education