Legislature(2005 - 2006)SENATE FINANCE 532

02/03/2005 09:00 AM Senate FINANCE


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09:05:06 AM Start
09:57:16 AM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Teleconference <Listen Only> --
Joint w/(H) Finance
University of Alaska Presentation
                              MINUTES                                                                                         
                               JOINT                                                                                          
                     SENATE FINANCE COMMITTEE                                                                                 
                      HOUSE FINANCE COMMITTEE                                                                                 
                         February 3, 2005                                                                                     
                             9:05 a.m.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                              
CALL TO ORDER                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Green convened the meeting at approximately 9:05:06 AM.                                                              
                                                                                                                                
PRESENT                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Senate Finance Committee:                                                                                                     
Senator Lyda Green, Co-Chair                                                                                                    
Senator Gary Wilken, Co-Chair                                                                                                   
Senator Con Bunde, Vice Chair                                                                                                   
Senator Fred Dyson                                                                                                              
Senator Lyman Hoffman                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
House Finance Committee:                                                                                                      
Representative Kevin Meyer, Co-Chair                                                                                            
Representative Mike Chenault, Co-Chair                                                                                          
Representative Bill Stoltze, Vice-Chair                                                                                         
Representative Mike Kelly                                                                                                       
Representative Richard Foster                                                                                                   
Representative Bruce Weyhrauch                                                                                                  
Representative Mike Hawker                                                                                                      
Representative Jim Holm                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Also Attending: SENATOR GARY STEVENS; SENATOR RALPH SEEKINS;                                                                  
SENATOR CHARLIE HUGGINS; REPRESENTATIVE DAVID GUTTENBERG;                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Attending via Teleconference: There were no teleconference                                                                    
participants.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SUMMARY INFORMATION                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
[Note: The first portion of this meeting, in which Co-Chair Green                                                               
called the meeting to order and introduced President Hamilton, was                                                              
not recorded.]                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     Presentation on the University of Alaska                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MARK HAMILTON, President, University of Alaska, gave the following                                                              
testimony.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     There is a story about  an admiral who got up every morning and                                                            
     he  went to his  safe. He went  to his safe  and he took  out a                                                            
     single  card and he read it and  put it back into the  safe and                                                            
     went about  the business of running  the ship. People  couldn't                                                            
     wait  for him  to get transferred  because  they just  couldn't                                                            
     wait to see  what was in that safe. He did get  transferred and                                                            
     they  took out the  card and  what it said  was "Port is  left.                                                            
      Starboard is right." Now the story refers to something.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     In this  super bowl season you  probably prefer something  that                                                            
     Vince Lombardi said.  He said, "If you can block and tackle you                                                            
     can play  with anybody." Now  we think that's your university.                                                             
     Lots and lots of exciting  things, but nothing that isn't basic                                                            
     in terms of serving the needs of Alaska.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     Our  success has come  and will continue  to come from  getting                                                            
     everyone  in the game. But it all starts here.  The State is in                                                            
     the game.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     This is the seventh  consecutive year that the governor has put                                                            
     into  his budget,  the  full Board  of Regent's  request.  This                                                            
     governor brought his  entire cabinet up to Fairbanks to see how                                                            
     the research  efforts there might  aid and abet the  State, and                                                            
     he's going to bring them back in late spring.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     The legislature has  funded us every year. Now it's maintenance                                                            
     level  funding, but  you've stuck  with us.  You gave me  money                                                            
     when oil was nine  dollars a barrel and you started it here. It                                                            
     all starts here.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     The  federal government  is in the game.  Between '01  and '04,                                                            
     federal  grants  went  up 36  percent  to  now well  over  $100                                                            
     million.  And  this is  not an  accident. My  faculty  averages                                                            
     across the system  - and obliviously not all of them are in the                                                            
     research  business -  but a simple  math of  all the monies  in                                                            
     divided  by faculty,  on  the average  they  raise $100,000  in                                                            
     federal  grants.  The  national average  is  half  of that.  In                                                            
     Fairbanks  where  research is  obviously more  intensive,  they                                                            
     average more than $200,000 per professor.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     Our students  are in the game. We have half of  our high school                                                            
     graduates now going  to college. That's up from 44 percent. And                                                            
     half of those  are coming to the University.  That's up from 40                                                            
     percent.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     Our  retention of baccalaureate-seeking   freshmen is up  to 72                                                            
     percent  moving into their sophomore  year. That's higher  than                                                            
     the   national  average   for  open   admission  universities.                                                             
     Retention  of  Alaska  Scholars is  in  excess of  80  percent.                                                            
     Students are choosing the University of Alaska.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     We are up  35 percent in the high-demand job  programs that you                                                            
     directed us to highlight.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     Alaska Natives first-time  freshmen enrollment is up 53 percent                                                            
     over the last five years.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     And graduates  are choosing Alaska.  Eighty-six percent  of the                                                            
     Alaska  Scholars we have  graduated to  date, according  to the                                                            
     Department  of Labor and Workforce Development,  are at work in                                                            
     Alaska.  And I've  got 1,550  more in that  pipeline coming  to                                                            
     change  this state. Our  best are staying  home and that's  the                                                            
     way  it should be. There's  nothing too  good for the  State of                                                            
     Alaska.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     Their  attendance has meant a  significant increase  in tuition                                                            
     revenue.  Forty-eight  million in  the year  2000; $77  million                                                            
     today.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     And Alaskans,  the citizens,  are in the game. Between  '01 and                                                            
     '04,  private giving to  the University  is up 115 percent  and                                                            
     corporate  giving  [is]  up 35  percent.  Excluded  from  these                                                            
     figures  are  special   projects  like  the  museum,  the  KUAC                                                            
     promotions.  This is just general  giving. What that  has meant                                                            
     to  us is the  UA Foundation,  which had  about $20 million  in                                                            
     1989.  [It]  went to  $40  million  by '96;  [it]  went to  $80                                                            
     million  by  the turn  of  the  millennium  and today  is  $130                                                            
     million, allowing  them to distribute nearly $10 million to the                                                            
     University.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     Besides  their money,  Alaskan citizens  serve on our  advisory                                                            
     boards  and build  programs  with scholarships,  [and]  provide                                                            
     internships. Alaskans are in the game.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     And  the University is  in the game. We  have to be. The  five-                                                            
     percent   we've  averaged   in  increased   State  funding   is                                                            
     maintenance level. We have to generate more.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     In  addition  to  tuition  and  the  Foundation   funding,  the                                                            
     significant   funds  from  Conoco   Phillips  and  BP   compact                                                            
     agreements have allowed  us to establish President's professors                                                            
     in key areas: fish  and ocean sciences, bio informatics, remote                                                            
     data  processing,  global  climate  change,  global  logistics,                                                            
     education  technology, Alaska Native language  and culture. And                                                            
     coming   very  soon:  President's   professor  in  mining   and                                                            
     engineering.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     We  have partnerships  with  K-12 schools,  Denali Commission,                                                             
     tech  centers,  trade  unions, State  virology  lab,  Fairbanks                                                            
     [North  Star] Borough  has initiated  a  tax incentive  program                                                            
     that  looks  very,  very  promising.  In Bethel,  in  Nome  and                                                            
     Fairbanks,  we're working with  communities and schools  in the                                                            
     development  of comprehensive  job training  centers. I  remind                                                            
     people  that  collaboration   doesn't  mean  talking  together,                                                            
     that's convocation. Collaboration means laboring together.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     We've  born a program  with DEED [Department  of Education  and                                                            
     Early Development]  called Teacher Mentoring that addresses the                                                            
     needs  of new teachers,  especially in  rural areas. This  year                                                            
     350  new teachers have  been assigned  a mentor, chosen  by the                                                            
     districts.  Their continued  education being  taken care  of by                                                            
     the University and that program promises enormous success.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     In  the military  you are enjoined  to discover  the center  of                                                            
     gravity. It's that  on offense; it's that portion of an enemy's                                                            
     formation,  the destruction of which will lead  to the collapse                                                            
     of the whole.  And on defense, it says, "If you  have something                                                            
     upon which  everything depends, you better defend  it." Now for                                                            
     Senators  Dyson and Bunde, I'll  give a bit more of  a literary                                                            
     reference. If you  were Achilles, and you knew that that's your                                                            
     heel, you'd buy some armored Nikes.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     Well we  have such a heel. [Indiscernible]  is at least  higher                                                            
     education.  I love  the University,  but  they're inefficient.                                                             
     It's  been the cry across  this country  for decades.  Before I                                                            
     ever  saw  this group,  Senator  Wilken  gave me  a  counseling                                                            
     session.  What he said  was, "If you  can be accountable,  then                                                            
     things will  change." And we have been accountable.  We are out                                                            
     front in so many ways.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     The Board of Regents  has directed that we spend $25 million in                                                            
     maintenance  every year. Now  that's not enough to address  the                                                            
     nearly  $60 million  worth of  depreciation  that has  assessed                                                            
     against  our  facilities,  but it's  way out  in  front of  any                                                            
     organization    except   for   Alaska   Housing   and   Finance                                                            
     [Corporation] for being accountable.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     We  capped our  University pension  plan at  $3,200. The  State                                                            
     currently has a high  cap of about $6,000. Now it's a different                                                            
     workforce,  it's  a  different   circumstance.  This  only  for                                                            
     comparison,  but  we're  saving  $3,000  per  employee  in  our                                                            
     pension fund.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     We've  developed a health care  program called UA Choice,  were                                                            
     individuals  get  to choose  a health  care  program at  lesser                                                            
     costs  that  with meet  their specific  needs  because  they're                                                            
     grownups and they can make their own call.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     We established  an optional retirement program  outside of PERS                                                            
     [Public   Employees  Retirement   System  [and  TRS   [Teachers                                                            
     Retirement  System] [that] doesn't  require you to seek  tenure                                                            
     (or  vestiture). This  works for us because  we have a  kind of                                                            
     transient workforce.  What that means - and you have to wrestle                                                            
     with  these PERS and  TRS bills across  the board, you're  very                                                            
     familiar  with it - what it means  is we have provided  by that                                                            
     program   $87  million  of  state  avoidance   of  an  unfunded                                                            
     liability.  In other words, we  paid about a third of  our PERS                                                            
      and TRS [indiscernible] that is the rest of the state.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     Now  you might note  that in the governor's  budget we're  only                                                            
     funded  for half of the  PERS and TRS  bill for this year.  And                                                            
     frankly,  I think in  light of our initiatives  and efforts  to                                                            
     date,  you can  be  sure I'll  be seeking  the  other half.  It                                                            
     doesn't seem to me that that's quite fair.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     You  did  program   reviews,  probably  referred   to  by  some                                                            
     pejorative  term  by the  campuses because  twice  a year,  for                                                            
     about  a day  and a half,  I sit  down and simply  go over  the                                                            
     books.  This  is part  one  of the  first  of this  year's  two                                                            
     sessions   just   for   UAA   [indicating   a   filled   binder                                                            
     approximately three inches thick.]                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     We   began   a  program   called   ACAS,   Accountability   and                                                            
     Sustainability.  This is a program to find ways  to save money.                                                            
     I think  my first instinct on  this was "let's form  a bunch of                                                            
     committees,  I'll give them some  wonderful guidance,  we'll go                                                            
     out [and]  we'll find the silver bullets. The  only thing I did                                                            
     right was  the committees were very inclusive.  We had lots and                                                            
     lots  of faculty and  lots and lots of  staff to look  over our                                                            
     accounts.  What happened  as you might  already presume  was we                                                            
     found  no silver  bullets. What  we found was  there were  more                                                            
     than 100  golden BBs: $70,000 by stopping the  sending out of a                                                            
     [indiscernible]   that  told  you  we  automatically  put  your                                                            
     paycheck  in the bank - $70,000; $100,000 by  consolidating the                                                            
     need for  off-set printing; $250,00 by not subsidizing  dial-in                                                            
     to  the  Internet,  which we  designed  as  a student-friendly                                                             
     program  and found the  students weren't  using it; $60,000  by                                                            
     using the  Easy Biz airline system, $60,000 worth  of avoidance                                                            
     of tickets. We outsourced  teleconferencing from a 20-cents per                                                            
     hour rate  to four cents. We've reduced accounts  receivable by                                                            
     23 percent. And there's a hundred more.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     The staff,  as it turns out, can do anything.  They're not just                                                            
     great  workers, they care. Forty-nine  percent of my  statewide                                                            
     staff  contributed to  the University  last year. The  national                                                            
     average is  17 percent. But believe me they're  more than three                                                            
     times as good. Our front line is also our foundation.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     In  1862 before  we were  even a  territory,  the Morrill  Land                                                            
     Grant  Act, signed by  President Lincoln,  put forth a  radical                                                            
     vision.  This would  make higher  education  available to  all.                                                            
     Well,  we are an open admission  university. He said,  "Provide                                                            
     both  liberal  and  practical  education   and  training."  Now                                                            
     Morrill probably  did not have in mind community  colleges, but                                                            
     he clearly  referred to what  we know and support as  workforce                                                            
     training.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     The Morrill  Act dealt primarily  with rural Alaska,  primarily                                                            
     with agriculture.  Sixty percent of America was  agriculture in                                                            
     1862.  Today  it's about  two percent.  And  universities  have                                                            
     wandered  off into different  focuses.  But we have embraced  a                                                            
     broader  agenda addressing economic,  social and environmental                                                             
     issues in our rural  areas. In Ketchikan, the marine technology                                                            
     program;  in  Kenai, working  with  local  communities,  mining                                                            
     community  to make preparations for the job training  needs and                                                            
     the expansion that  the industry will demand. We've already had                                                            
     one internal meeting  and have organized a comprehensive mining                                                            
     summit in March. There  are similar programs of cooperation and                                                            
      collaboration in every community campus in our system.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     Morrill  says, "Over  time develop a  research agenda."  And we                                                            
     have   developed  an   agenda  that's   closely  tied   to  our                                                            
     geographical   location   and   deals  with   Alaskan   issues:                                                            
     everything   from  micro   miniaturization   to  horticultural                                                             
     products.  Infrastructure:   working  with  DOT  on  roads  and                                                            
     embankments;  working  with BLM  and  DNR on  tundra ponds  and                                                            
     pumping  for ice  roads; health  and  bioscience, hibernation,                                                             
     biotechnology,  infectious diseases,  [and] behavioral  health.                                                            
     We   have  the   State   seismologist.   We  have   the   State                                                            
     climatologist.  We have the earthquake information  center [and                                                            
     the] Alaska volcano  observatory and tsunami protection, and so                                                            
     forth. Research  in snow and ice, permafrost,  coastal erosion,                                                            
     Alaska ocean observing system.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     Understanding   leads   to   management.   Morrill   continued,                                                            
     "Institutions  should  extend themselves  beyond  the labs  and                                                            
     classrooms  and be engaged  in outreach  and partnerships  with                                                            
     the citizens  in the states they serve." I have  already listed                                                            
     a small portion  of our outreach and partnerships,  but it goes                                                            
     on: cooperative extension  program, working with Yuut Center in                                                            
     Bethel,  marine  advisory program,  Kotz.  Tech. Center,  small                                                            
     business development  center, Hutchison Career Center, business                                                            
     enterprise  institute. All and  all they constitute  80 offices                                                            
     in more than 50 cities and villages in the state.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     I believe  the University of  Alaska is closer to the  original                                                            
     intent of  the Morrill Act than any land grant  college in this                                                            
     country.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     Now  we had challenges.  None of them  [indiscernible.]  Health                                                            
     care costs rising  at a minimum of 15 percent. Facilities cost,                                                            
     predicted tightness  in federal dollars. We are [indiscernible]                                                            
     enrollment of part-time  students. Our student body is changing                                                            
     to more  and more and more and  more of kind of classic  first-                                                            
     time  freshmen:  people coming  in for  full-time experiences.                                                             
     It's  small,  but we're  seeing a  drop  off in  the number  of                                                            
     individuals  who  are  taking  one  course or  two.  And  we're                                                            
     looking into  that. There's a number of factors;  you can think                                                            
     of many of them I'm  sure. It deals with economy, it deals with                                                            
     affordability,  we even think higher gas prices  [have] stopped                                                            
     some of  our commuting students  [from traveling] to  our rural                                                            
     campuses. But we're  looking into that. It's a challenge and if                                                            
     [indiscernible]  open admission,  multi-purpose, you  better be                                                            
     able to take care of the part-time student.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     What we're  asking for [is] another  maintenance level  budget.                                                            
     But  I want you  to consider  more. I want  you to consider  an                                                            
     investment in research.  Research is an industry all by itself.                                                            
     Research  eventually will create other industries.  As a state,                                                            
     we invest  about one-percent  of our  gross State product.  The                                                            
     national  average  is about 2.7  percent. For  Alaska to  reach                                                            
     national  levels,  we'd  have  to increase  our  investment  by                                                            
     almost $500 million. That's ridiculous.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     But I  have a plan for you. I  want you to fund phase  one of a                                                            
     five-year plan. Not  $500 million, not $100 million. I want you                                                            
     to  look at investing  $20 million  over the  next five  years.                                                            
     With two  and a half this year,  I believe we can maintain  our                                                            
     average, currently  seven to one, at about six to one over that                                                            
     period  of time. If  we can do our  share of collaboration  the                                                            
     University  can  expect a  [indiscernible]  investment to  $140                                                            
     million  over five  years. And  that cuts our  gap against  the                                                            
     nation by almost a third.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     I  have  other requests  I  want  you to  consider.  Funding  a                                                            
     portion  of  the  Alaska  Scholars  Program.  Its  success  has                                                            
     outstripped  the primary source of funds, which  is our natural                                                            
     resource fund. Remember  that 86 percent of our graduates today                                                            
     are  currently  at work  in this state.  There  are 1,550  more                                                            
     coming.  Stop the brain  drain. That's  what you told me  to do                                                            
     and it's happening.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     We  are  doing   everything  I  believe  is  possible   at  the                                                            
     University  to  reallocate  funds,  form partnerships,  to  get                                                            
     external  grants, but  it's time  to move to  a new level.  And                                                            
     like everything else  it begins here. The leadership is central                                                            
     you  represent  all  of  Alaska. The  University  is  not  just                                                            
     waiting  for your funding. We  are waiting for your  charge. We                                                            
     are prepared for you to take us all forward.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     For  this great State  and its future,  I believe there  are no                                                            
     silver  bullets. I  don't think  the gas pipeline  is a  silver                                                            
     bullet,  I don't think ANWR is  a silver bullet. It's  going to                                                            
     be  engaged  Alaskans  and it's  the  thousands of  golden  BBs                                                            
     that'll save the day.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     At the University,  we are a part of you. We  admire you and we                                                            
     will serve you. But it all starts here.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
9:27:52 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Senator Bunde  acknowledged that he and President  Hamilton have not                                                            
always  been  in agreement.   They have  however,  agreed  that  the                                                            
University  of Alaska  is an  important State  function.  Therefore,                                                            
Senator  Bunde's   questions  should   be  taken  only  as   seeking                                                            
information.  He appreciated President  Hamilton's "energy  and work                                                            
you have brought to your job."                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Bunde spoke to  President's Hamilton's  comments  regarding                                                            
the  land  grant   status  of  the  University,  noting   that  some                                                            
legislators support a more  traditional land grant management method                                                            
for  the  University.  He  asked  that  status  of  the  efforts  to                                                            
accomplish this.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
President  Hamilton reported  on efforts  to transfer  lands to  the                                                            
University  made by  former US  Senator Frank  Murkowski.  President                                                            
Hamilton emphasized  that the land  grant awarded to the  University                                                            
of Alaska is smaller in  size than the land grant given to the state                                                            
of  Rhode Island.  He  would  continue  efforts  to achieve  a  land                                                            
transfer to the University.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
President  Hamilton  commented  on two  aspects  of the  land  grant                                                            
philosophy,  one  being  that "those  who  give  you land  are  your                                                            
friends. However,  the other aspect  is that once the land  has been                                                            
awarded, there  is an expectation that no additional  funding should                                                            
be necessary.  The previous land grant awarded to  the University of                                                            
Alaska  Last has  been managed  well and  in 20 years  would net  $5                                                            
million  annually.  This is  not insubstantial  and  would fund  the                                                            
Alaska Scholars  program, but would  not fully fund the University.                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Senator Bunde asserted  that if "more traditional university people"                                                            
would support  a land grant  system, the  acquisition of  additional                                                            
land could  occur. Other  funding sources  include capital  projects                                                            
and the earnings reserve account of the Permanent Fund.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Senator Bunde  directed attention  to a chart the witness  posted in                                                            
the Committee room [copy  not provided] relating to retention rates.                                                            
Senator Bunde asked the  retention rate of high school graduates. He                                                            
understood it is higher than the national average.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
President Hamilton  informed that 50 percent of Alaskan  high school                                                            
graduates  are attending college  and 50  percent of those  students                                                            
are attending the University of Alaska.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Bunde asked  if approximately  one-half  of those  students                                                            
graduate from the University of Alaska after four to five years.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
President  Hamilton answered  no, that 72  percent of University  of                                                            
Alaska students  "make it" to their  sophomore year. In "embracing"                                                             
the  community college  mission,  it must  be understood  that  most                                                            
community  college students  are not  seeking a  degree, but  rather                                                            
pursue  a  certificate  or associate  degree.  It  is  difficult  to                                                            
determine  which  students   would  have  intended  to  utilize  the                                                            
University  as a  community college.  This  is inherent  in an  open                                                            
admission system.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Bunde shared  concerns about  funding.  Other schools  have                                                            
instituted  higher  tuition  charges  for "professional   students,"                                                            
those  who do  not  graduate  in five  years.  Tuition  only pays  a                                                            
portion  of   the  cost  of  education,   with  the  State   funding                                                            
approximately 60 to 70 percent.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
President  Hamilton agreed  that the State  contributes at  least 60                                                            
percent to the cost of higher education.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Senator Bunde  asked if  the witness has  considered implementing  a                                                            
similar tuition structure for long-term students.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
President Hamilton responded  that he would speak with Senator Bunde                                                            
on the topic at a later time.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
9:34:53 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Wilken pointed out  that five of  the legislators  present                                                            
have  "had the  benefit of  hearing about  the old  University."  He                                                            
thanked President  Hamilton and the  employees of the University  of                                                            
Alaska for constructive interaction with the legislature.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Wilken asked for additional information on the teacher-                                                                
mentoring program  to address problems in securing  and retaining K-                                                            
12 teachers.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
President Hamilton  relayed that teachers  who leave the  profession                                                            
reported  that  they did  not  have  "a comfort  in  the  classroom,                                                            
support by  my bosses [or] support  by my community". Three  hundred                                                            
fifty new  teachers have  had the benefit  of a mentor through  this                                                            
program  to provide  support and  on-the-job  vocational skills.  If                                                            
teachers were able to become  comfortable more quickly and remain in                                                            
the profession,  he predicted  student achievement  would  increase.                                                            
This would also save money  from "people floating back and forth" Of                                                            
those 350  teachers, none  quit their jobs  at the Christmas  school                                                            
break,  compared  to the  15 to  25 teachers  who  quit during  this                                                            
period  in  previous years.    Two  hundred of  those  teachers  are                                                            
employed in rural communities.  This program in cooperation with the                                                            
Department  of Education  and Early Development  would change  "that                                                            
turnover thing" which costs money and "hurts" students.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Wilken recalled  stories from ten to twelve years ago about                                                            
the challenges  for students to register or check  their records. He                                                            
asked  the  witness  to  speak  to  on-line  class   management  and                                                            
registration.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
President  Hamilton   expressed  that  implementation   of  such  an                                                            
electronic system  has been a "remarkable thing to  watch". Students                                                            
themselves  critiqued the  system and the  majority of students  now                                                            
apply online.  Financial aid applications are also  available online                                                            
and more  applied  online last  year than  applied in  any form  two                                                            
years prior.  This addresses the concern  that University  of Alaska                                                            
students  do not apply for  financial aid  and grants to the  extent                                                            
that  students in  the Lower  48 do.  It is  a matter  of  exposure.                                                            
Students  can now accomplish  every function  they used to  stand in                                                            
line to do.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
9:40:20 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Stoltze  recalled that the chamber of commerce in the                                                            
election district he represents  expressed interest in participating                                                            
in the  selection of the  chancellor for  the University of  Alaska,                                                            
Anchorage  campus. He thanked  President  Hamilton for facilitating                                                             
this.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Stoltze stated that  during the special election  in                                                            
September 1999  to determine whether  to appropriation a  portion of                                                            
the  earnings of  the Permanent  Fund  for government  services,  an                                                            
employee  of the University  provided  information  to the media  in                                                            
support of  the proposal. Concerns  were raised about the  propriety                                                            
and pragmatism  of a research agency  being involved in a  political                                                            
campaign.  He asked  if this  activity  would be  restricted in  the                                                            
future.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
President Hamilton was  unaware of the situation. He stated that the                                                            
University  of  Alaska  is  prohibited   from  getting  involved  in                                                            
political campaigns.  However, research information  prepared by the                                                            
University is available  for use by others as part of public domain.                                                            
The  University   does   not  endorse   candidates   or  appear   in                                                            
advertisements in support of candidates.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Stoltze's  recollections  of  the  situation   were                                                            
different.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Stoltze referenced  a speech made by an employee  of                                                            
another  educational institute  and  asked how the  matter would  be                                                            
addressed  if the  speaker were  an employee  of  the University  of                                                            
Alaska.  How  could  Alaskans  "up in  arms"  over  such  statements                                                            
express complaints and affect changes.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
President  Hamilton  replied,  "Individuals  are  not aware  of  the                                                            
unintended  association of who they  are with the place they  work."                                                            
The  University  of Alaska  encourages  its  employees  to make  the                                                            
distinction between their  personal opinions and any positions taken                                                            
by the  institution.  He remarked  that through  his service  in the                                                            
military he defended  the US Constitution. If an employee  under his                                                            
direction expresses  an opinion in  public that embarrassed  him, he                                                            
would defend the right of the individual.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
9:44:20 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Senator Dyson  applauded the presentation.  He was surprised  at the                                                            
results  of exit  interviews  of teachers  who left  the  profession                                                            
showing the  primary frustrations  as an  "inability to control  the                                                            
classroom"  and that  they "dreamed  about being  a teacher so  they                                                            
could make a difference  in individual student's lives." The various                                                            
factors  that prevented  these  former teachers  from accomplishing                                                             
these objectives  were the reason they resigned. President  Hamilton                                                            
did not  mention this in  his comments and  Senator Dyson asked  the                                                            
witness to address this.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
President  Hamilton  surmised   the teachers   likely  ascribed  the                                                            
failure to  make an impact with the  lack of support they  received.                                                            
The former teachers  may have found their time was  spent performing                                                            
other functions rather than focusing on "making a difference."                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Senator Dyson  recommended  this should be  reviewed further  and an                                                            
investigation  made  to  determine  whether   other  functions  were                                                            
preventing  teachers  from  interacting  with students.  This  could                                                            
include faculty meetings.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
President  Hamilton remarked  that after mentors  work with  student                                                            
teachers  for two years,  feedback should  be collected to  identify                                                            
areas of concern.  He pointed out that other professionals,  such as                                                            
doctors,  are mentored  in some  manner  during the  first years  of                                                            
practice.  For  doctors  this occurs  in  the  form of  a  residency                                                            
assignment.  He  hoped  that  some  mentor  teachers   would  become                                                            
instructors  or  advisors and  implement  experiences  they  learned                                                            
being  teachers  and  mentor  teachers.  If  this  occurred,  issues                                                            
causing other  teachers to leave the profession, could  be resolved.                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Dyson asked  what the  standards  or goals  should be  with                                                            
regard to achieving diversity of faculty.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
President Hamilton  commented this  is a matter of national  debate.                                                            
It was apparent  that the majority  of faculty nationwide  are "very                                                            
aligned with a  single segment of the politics if  the country." The                                                            
profession  is able to deal with this  because of a "reminder"  that                                                            
"the classroom  has to be open to  all opinions" and that  political                                                            
correctness,  party affiliation  or religion  beliefs should  not be                                                            
used as a "bully pulpit".  The profession is founded on this premise                                                            
and if  forgotten, would  benefit  from the publicity  given  to the                                                            
matter   and  would   subsequently   "adjust   itself."   University                                                            
professionals believe that  universities should be a place where all                                                            
opinions could be expressed.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Dyson directed  his  comments to  the importance  that  the                                                            
backgrounds of  teachers in the University of Alaska  are similar to                                                            
that of  students. He  spoke to  the comfort of  students in  having                                                            
teachers  who have also lived  and worked  in rural areas,  etc. The                                                            
University  of Alaska must attempt  to attract as many students  and                                                            
faculty from  small communities  as possible.   If it is  determined                                                            
that  political correctness  toward  diverse groups  is inadequate,                                                             
should the faculty present different philosophical positions.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
President Hamilton  replied it would  be ideal. He told of  the risk                                                            
of faculties  as well as business  professions "choosing  associates                                                            
and choosing  successors who  are a lot like  you". However,  due to                                                            
the  principal  of the  education  profession,  there  is a  greater                                                            
likelihood  of more  diversity  in the  university  setting than  in                                                            
private business.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
9:51:51 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Weyhrauch asked how  items on the Board of  Regents'                                                            
priority list  change their level of importance from  one meeting to                                                            
the next. He was unsure  how the prioritization process operated. He                                                            
also questioned  the ratio of administrative and faculty  positions.                                                            
He asked the reason  for the significant number of  staff positions,                                                            
including  provost,  vice-provost,  chancellors,  vice-chancellors,                                                             
directors, associate directors, etc.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
President  Hamilton addressed  the second  issue, pointing  out that                                                            
the  University  of Alaska  implements  degrees  ranging  from  high                                                            
school equivalency  diplomas to post-doctorate degrees  and operates                                                            
on 14  campuses. Therefore,  a  different ratio  of instructors  and                                                            
administrators  is necessary. This ratio is hampered  by the need to                                                            
have  instructors  in many  locations  in  the State.  However,  the                                                            
University of Alaska compares favorably to the national average.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
President Hamilton  furthered that University of Alaska  staffing to                                                            
student  ratio is similar  to that  of the  national average,  which                                                            
signifies it  is understaffed. By  embracing the "entire  spectrum",                                                            
the University  of Alaska  has more  part time  students than  other                                                            
peer institutions.  This creates a  "huge deficiency challenge".  He                                                            
compared  the  administrative  efforts required  for  one  full-time                                                            
student   versus   four  students   enrolled   in   three   classes.                                                            
Registration,   counseling  and  other   university  administration                                                             
functions  are required  for  each of  the students,  regardless  of                                                            
their class load. Many  University of Alaska students work full-time                                                            
and therefore  the  University must  maintain  offerings in  several                                                            
locations to be available  in the areas of the students' employment.                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative Weyhrauch asked about prioritization.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
President Hamilton  explained that the Board of Regents  "puts forth                                                            
a series  of principals  upon which  to rate  all capital  projects"                                                            
that include  such factors  as external  funding  and the number  of                                                            
students served.  Once a list is compiled, the Board  reviews and in                                                            
some instances determines  that the priorities "didn't quite develop                                                            
what  they  had  hoped  to  do for  other,  frankly,  opportunistic                                                             
reasons." He exampled a  project eligible to receive federal funding                                                            
as a project that could become a higher priority.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
9:57:16 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Senator Bunde  understood the difficulties in administering  an open                                                            
admissions  policy; however, "to your  great credit, I think  you've                                                            
embraced  that and I  that the  University of  Alaska never  changes                                                            
that" despite the increased  costs. He told of recent graduates with                                                            
$40,000  of  debt  working  lower  paying  jobs.  He  asked  if  the                                                            
University  is  continuing  its efforts  to  "work back  toward  the                                                            
community college program."  He also expressed concern regarding the                                                            
"high  level of remediation"  the  University has  been required  to                                                            
provide for Alaskan high school graduates.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
President   Hamilton  stressed   that  adult   basic  education   is                                                            
fundamental  for people  to  obtain jobs.  If Alaska  could  provide                                                            
proficient adult  education, more Alaskans would fill  the jobs that                                                            
would be created  with the opening  of the Alaska National  Wildlife                                                            
Refuge (ANWR) for oil development  and the construction of a natural                                                            
gas pipeline.  The problem  is larger than  that experienced  at the                                                            
University.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
President  Hamilton  spoke of  the missions  and  measures that  are                                                            
facilitating  the University  to tailor programs  to train  Alaskans                                                            
for "high  demand jobs".  This has  provided incentive  for some  to                                                            
seek vocational training.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Green  announced that President Hamilton  and University of                                                            
Alaska  staff  could  answer  any  additional  questions  after  the                                                            
meeting concluded.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Green adjourned the meeting at 10:01 AM                                                                                

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