
Tex. Boards Abolish Faculty Senates, Create Toothless Councils
Some university systems are letting their existing faculty senates lapse while others are reshaping them to comply with SBĀ 37.
Photo illustration by Justin Morrison/Inside Higher Ed | BraunS, malerapaso and vi73777/iStock/Getty Images
The University of Texas System Board of Regents voted Thursday to disband the systemās long-standing faculty senates in compliance with Senate Bill 37, the sweeping Texas higher education law that gives university boards and presidents control over faculty governing bodies.
The UT board also voted Thursday to create faculty advisory groups, which will āperform the work of faculty governance bodiesāāsuch as reviewing degree requirements, suggesting curricular changes, coordinating campus events and revising the faculty handbookāwhile keeping all decision-making power in the hands of the administration.
The University of Houston system Board of Regents did the same Thursday, voting to create faculty councils that will āprovide structured, meaningful avenues for faculty to help shape academic priorities, strengthen excellence and contribute to decisions that guide our future,ā a university spokesperson said in a statement.
But the groups wonāt give the faculty independent representation or any real power. In accordance with SBĀ 37, the board bylaws now state, āa faculty council is advisory only and may not be delegated the final decision-making authority on any matter.ā
As of June 20, any faculty governing body in Texasāwhether itās a senate, council or advisory groupāmay not exceed 60 members unless otherwise decided by the board, and every college or school within the university must be represented by at least two members, SBĀ 37 dictates. The university president will appoint at least one of the representatives from each college or school within the institution, while the faculty elects the others, meaning that as many as 30 members could be chosen by the president.
The president will also choose the presiding officer, associate presiding officer and secretary for each group. Appointees may serve for six years before taking a mandatory two-year break from the group, while faculty-elected representatives may only serve for two years before the two-year break.
While the new groups are still faculty bodies, they wonāt āauthentically speak with the faculty voice,ā said Mark Criley, a senior program officer in the department of academic freedom, tenure and governance at the American Association of University Professors. āNo matter who is selected, the process by which theyāre selected matters. We learned when weāre in elementary schoolāthe teacher didnāt appoint the class president, the principal didnāt appoint them, this was one of our first exercises in representation. You choose the people who will speak for you in an institutional body.ā
Across the state, college and university system boards are taking different approaches to scrapping and reshaping their faculty senates. The Alamo Colleges District Board of Trustees voted earlier this month to consolidate the faculty senates at each of the five campuses into one group of up to 35Ā members. Previously, the five senates comprised 114Ā voting members.
While the Texas State University system board gave presidents the ability to create new faculty groups, it did not approve a new faculty governing body at its Aug.Ā 14 meeting and will let the existing senate lapse on Sept.Ā 1, the deadline set by SBĀ 37. Texas A&M University regents are expected to vote on their approach to the new law at their Aug.Ā 27 board meeting, The Austin American-Statesman reported.
Even as university governing boards design their toothless, SBĀ 37ācompliant groups, two professors at the University of Houston on Monday unveiled what theyāre calling the Faux Faculty Senate. āI know that people feel that faculty senates are kind of arcane ⦠but itās a part of civil society,ā said David Mazella, an associate professor in the English Department at the University of Houston and president-elect of the faux senate. ā[SBĀ 37] is an antidemocratic bill that essentially eliminates the faculty voice in order for the state to directly control what we do.ā
The faux senate is largely symbolic; it wonāt replicate any of the governing functions of the now-defunct 100-member senate, Mazella said. Instead, it will serve as an off-campus meet-up for faculty to socialize and talk about ongoing issues in Texas higher education. āEven getting to a faculty cafe is really difficult, so giving people an opportunity [to talk] that is not in a university space feels really important to us,ā Mazella said.
He and his co-creator, MarĆa GonzĆ”lez, also an associate professor of English at Houston, plan to start hosting events in October, though nothing concrete has been scheduled. Without support from the university, the money to host these events will come from Mazellaās and GonzĆ”lezās own pockets. Theyāre looking for a space in the Houston area thatās ānot too gross, but not too expensive,ā said Mazella, for their first faux senate convening.
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