Saturday, April 12, 2008

Committee on Undergraduate Recruitment, Admissions, and Financial Aid

(I couldn't make it this meeting, but the info below is from the minutes.)

Committee on Undergraduate Recruitment, Admissions, and Financial Aid
April 2, 2008

1. Reps from ASM’s Book Swap program came to talk about the program. CURAFA is going to write a letter of support.

2. Rob Seltzer (D/O Admissions), briefed the committee:
• The admissions process has worked very well. There were 605 more total applicants this year, but 109 fewer from in-state.
• There were a total of 3,088 paid deposits and the trend seems to point to a 2008 class size of expected numbers (a target of <5,700). style="font-weight: bold;">For the first time UW-Madison admit rate may be just below 50%.

3. Susan Fischer briefed the committee:
• 2008-09 Awards are being made
• CSA (Common Scholarship Application) is being worked on with plenty of effort from various offices. The goal was to make it student friendly.
• The home mortgage/financial crisis, which has affected several campuses, has not affected the UW. The UW Credit Union is solid financially.

4. Changes were suggested to letter to Chancellor Wiley. Gunasekaran will send an updated version to Wiley on behalf of the Committee.

5. Gunasekaran will also draft an annual report for the Faculty Senate. He will distribute it for comments.

Monday, April 7, 2008

Labor Licensing Policy Committee Special Meeting

Well, on Friday we had our special meeting with Gregg Nebel (adidas) and Scott Nova (Workers' Rights Consortium). Wiley came to the beginning 15 minutes of the meeting, and although he acknowledged that the entire garment industry is intentionally designed to exploit workers, he also undermined the committee by pretty much stating that we would not cut the contract because we would not field a naked football team. Gregg Nebel pretty much said he was going to do absolutely nothing to ensure that the workers get their jobs back. There is a job fair coming up that will hopefully get some of the workers new jobs, after a 6 week training session, but adidas is not going to urge factories to hire the blacklisted workers. I don't remember if I mentioned this before, but it seems like the blacklist is still in place. There is an ombudsman hired by the Fail Labor Association helping these former workers out, and one day 21 of them applied at a nearby factory, Chi Fung, and 16 were not even allowed to apply, of the 5 that were allowed to apply, only one was hired (supposedly the others failed the test even though they have worked in the apparel industry for years. Their skills might have atrophied in the 3 years that they were unable to find employment, but it is Chi Fung's own fault since they refused to hire the workers, and there is no reason to believe that these skills would not come back pretty much right away), and the one that was hired was fired the very next day. The ombudsman intervened and she was given her job back, but then fired again almost immediately. Over all, it was a very frustrating 5 hours. I guess that is all the important stuff. Scott Nova talked to us a bit about the WRC and the Designated Suppliers Program and some other stuff that probably isn't very interesting to anybody who isn't on the committee. Let me know if there are any questions!

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Interviews Begin for 2008-2009 Appointments


Monday, April 7 marks the beginning of the interview process for student appointments to standing committees for the 2008-2009 academic year. Interviews will take place on four separate nights (April 7, 9, 15, 17) over the next two weeks. We've received roughly 70 applications, which is on par with the numbers from last fall. The most contested committees, as per usual, include the Dean of Students Advisory Board and Campus Planning Committee.

Please note that ASM Shared Governance will be appointing students to new committees next fall. I'm particularly excited about the International Studies Advisory Board--a committee of students that will advise the dean of IS on programming, curricula and study abroad opportunities. Stay tuned...

The Associated Students of Madison Shared Governance Committee Blog serves as a space for shared governance appointees and the UW-Madison student body to communicate on issues relating to shared governance. As part of their responsibilities as student representatives, appointees will post a report following each meeting attended.