2018 State of the University address
President Harvey Stenger addresses state of the University
President Harvey Stenger came onto the stage to present his 2018 State of the University Sept. 25, but not until the audience heard two book passages read as the words appeared on the big screen.
âLast year, I came out to the sounds of âMississippi Queen,â Stenger said. âBut this year Iâm taking a different approach.
âFirst â a quiz. What was the second passage from?â he asked. Anne of Green Gables was the answer, and the first person to respond got a T-shirt.
âNow, hereâs the tough one. What was the first passage from?â No answer. Stenger then explained it was from Professor of English Liz Rosenbergâs new book, House of Dreams: The Life of L.M. Montgomery, about the author of the Anne of Green Gables books. (Rosenberg, Stenger said, had been disqualified from answering.)
âI read all of Lizâs books â and we know what reading means for me â I listen to them on tape while riding back and forth to New York! But, now I have to at least listen to Anne of Green Gables and Iâve learned so much about Montgomery and why she wrote about the life she wanted but didnât have. It gave me a new perspective. Maude Montgomery actually suffered from depression and died a difficult death, but Anne is always happy and everything is always great, so itâs about perspective.
âItâs not always exactly what we see,â he said. âA perspective can be brought by understanding what is behind something. And now, Iâll try to tie together why perspective is important to the State of the University this year.â
Since Stenger arrived at Binghamton, faculty have been hired at twice the rate of student enrollment and staff growth, giving faculty more time to develop and offer courses, balance their time between teaching and research, build critical mass in areas of strength, and help the community.
âIn 2006, when I came back to New York after being away since 1979, I looked around and said, âWhat happened?â and realized the loss of manufacturing jobs had devastated the area. The Universityâs growth can and has helped that,â he said.
âAnd thanks to state support of our capital projects we couldnât be where we are today,â he said. The new Health Sciences campus will help revive Johnson City, but will also relieve pressure on the Vestal campus.
The new School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences building is a beautiful one, but whatâs inside is what makes a difference. âIâm pretty sure weâre the only school of pharmacy with a true, sterile compounding room,â Stenger said.
He highlighted future additions to the Health Science Campus. A $30 million renovation to an Endicott Johnson box factory will create a new home for the Decker School of Nursing and its expanded programs by 2020, and a $15.9 million, three-story, research and development building currently in design will also open that year, able to accommodate company partners. With the state and Upstate Revitalization Initiative investments backing the new campus, âwe will see significant improvements in Johnson City,â Stenger said.
Stenger also highlighted the opening of the Smart Energy Building and the Koffman Southern Tier Incubator, as well as renovations to Science 4, and upgrades in safety measures and emergency communications as important initiatives brought to fruition.
A review of hiring for the campus showed that, even though the campus isnât growing faculty at the rate it did for the five years of NYSUNY 2020 funding, there were 61 faculty searches this fall. Stenger highlighted a number of the new faculty. âThese are great new people and we have many more,â he said, âas well as 160 new full-time staff. The staff turnover rate is very high, especially in residence halls, so we hired significant numbers of staff.â
Research expenditures are up, along with proposals written, Stenger said. âAnd almost one in four proposals is awarded, so we have a great success rate. The School of Pharmacy has also received $3.3 m in external funding in its first two years.â
Stenger recognized a number of faculty in the humanities and management before turning to the Transdisciplinary Areas of Excellence (TAEs). âWe always talk about them, but the fear that weâll be consumed by the TAEs couldnât be further from the truth,â he said. âThey enhance departments. Of our 650 full-time faculty, 180 â not a majority â are affiliated with a TAE and itâs all voluntary participation. Weâve brought on 96 TAE faculty of the more than 300 weâve hired.
âWe asked TAE faculty to self-report some of their results,â Stenger said. âAnd theyâve brought in $17 million in funding and distributed $950,000 in seed grants to faculty to get ready to make proposals. We also have a new TAE â after a long process we selected Data Science as our sixth and probably final TAE.â
The biggest challenge currently facing the University, however, is also a great opportunity, Stenger said. âThereâs a sense of urgency at our door right now. We have not had a raise for our faculty and staff for almost five years and then theyâve been without a contract for two years,â he said. âGetting the contract signed with healthy, strong components will help us retain and attract new faculty in the future, but our job now is to find the money to pay those raises.
âWe have to work harder to find the funds,â he said. âThe cost to the campus is $10 million now to catch up for the two years we did not give raises, and after this year we will need a $4 million increase in our revenues to maintain the raises.â
Stenger said reserves will carry the University through the $10 million for the retroactive raises, but the opportunity arises in how the University will find $4 million a year in revenues moving forward. âGrowing our graduate students, thatâs a big opportunity, and international student growth is an opportunity at the graduate level especially,â he said. âKnowing how will we find $4 million a year in new revenue doesnât sound hard, but weâll have to work on it. Weâre going to grow our way out of this, not cut our way back.â
Stenger also reviewed the four University Initiatives that came out of the Road Map Renewal:
- Presidential Diversity Postdoctoral Fellowships â the first two are on campus this semester
- Data Science Initiative â the Data Science TAE is established
- Health Sciences Campus â the School of Pharmacy is complete and construction will begin on the expanded Decker School of Nursing and research and development buildings
- Health Sciences Core â the University will partner with local healthcare providers to share functional magnetic resonance imaging equipment once it has been purchased
âWe try to come up with new ideas, we donât sit in a small room with a few people,â he said. âThese initiatives came through a very inclusive process.
âAll of these will take a small investment, but there are investment plans in place and they will make us better as we get bigger,â Stenger said.
Stenger spoke of the $150 million comprehensive gifts campaign the University has underway. âThatâs a lot of money for us, but I think we can reach it,â he said. The University is in the second year of the campaignâs silent phase, and has raised $32 million of the goal.
âAnd finally, what did the book have to do with the State of the University?âStenger asked. âHow do I explain this?
âThe student speaker at TEDx last March talked about a glass half full or half empty,â Stenger said. âHe said if that your life is the part thatâs empty, think of all the opportunities you have to fill that glass. The half empty is the exciting part. And that takes me back to perspective. Having financial problems to solve? From my perspective, itâs an opportunity.â