The Vista, March 8, 2022

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VISTA

vistanews1903 @thevista1903 @thevista1903 The Vista ucentralmedia.com

the Closed door policy Volume 119, Issue 21

“Our Words, Your Voice.”

Tuesday, March 8, 2022

UCO president rejects seat for faculty senate on cabinet Ainsley Martinez Managing Editor

UCO President Patti Neuhold-Ravikumar rejected the faculty senate’s proposal to place one of their representatives on the President’s Cabinet. Led by the president, UCO provost and the vice presidents for the departments of advancement, information technology, finance and operations, public affairs, student affairs and university communications sit at the cabinet’s table, the President’s Cabinet has discussions on executive information and decision-making. According to the UCO website, the cabinet’s mission is to “bring perspective from each facet of campus to one table at their weekly meetings. In a spirit of creativity and collaboration, the Cabinet works together to advance the University of Central Oklahoma.” This idea of encouraging “creativity

and collaboration” from “each facet of campus” is why the proposal seemed beneficial and necessary to members of the faculty senate. However, President Neuhold-Ravikumar said faculty senate and administration “do not currently appear to share expectations about what constitutes university governance, trust and transparency,” in her letter on Feb. 28. “We have received Faculty Senate proposal FSP 2021/2022-002 in the matter of Faculty Senate Representative added to UCO President’s Cabinet. Having conducted with the members of Cabinet, reviewed practices of other institutions, and thoughtfully considered our current university environment, I cannot accept this proposal. I’m concerned about the disruptive nature of introducing a new and unvetted cabinet member every year, and its effect on business continuity, team dynamics, and the quality

Neuhold-Ravikumar’s stated issue with having dissimilar expectations from faculty senators comes after months of discussion over the university’s proposed budget cuts. (The Vista/Michaela Todd)

of executive decision-making; all of which have extensive impact on our university community and direction. Faculty Senate and administration do not currently appear to share expectations about what constitutes university governance, trust and transparency. Without shared expectations of the

issues at the core of this proposal, we lack a foundation for even considering it. There is much work to do among us ahead of movement such as what is being proposed.” Continued on Pg. 3

State regents review regional universities’ leadership Ainsley Martinez Managing Editor

The Regional University System of Oklahoma held a special meeting Monday at Rose State College to discuss higher education programs, financial benchmark reports and the future employment of regional universities’ presidents. According to the agenda for Monday’s meeting, state regents were to decide whether or not to recommend President Patti Neuhold-Ravikumar for next year’s presidency. As the faculty handbook notes, “evaluations will generally be done every other year.” The meeting was held in executive session, meaning the public was not allowed to attend. Regents and university presidents traveled to Tinker Air Force Base to recruit engineering majors at 11 a.m., but Regent Susan Winchester said they were able to get through every agenda topic. President Patti Neuhold-Ravikumar attended the state regents meeting on Monday at “We were supposed to have a speRose State College. (The Vista/ Manuela Soldi) cial presentation, but they didn’t show

up,” Winchester said. She said nothing on the agenda was out of the ordinary, but basketball teams across the state were a big topic on the floor. “A lot of the schools won their conference and are going to the next level,” Winchester said. “It’s an opportunity for the universities to brag.” In addition to discussions over Neuhold-Ravikumar’s contract, regents discussed the upcoming need to replace presidents at both Northwestern Oklahoma State University in Alva and East Central University in Ada. Janet Cunningham of NWOSU announced her retirement in January; former East Central University President Katricia Pierson became president of Crowder College in Neosho, Missouri at the beginning of 2022. As attendees of the meeting, inside and out, repeatedly said, “What goes on in executive session stays in executive session,” more details of agenda topics are unknown. The formal agenda for the RUSO meeting is available online at ruso.edu.


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