In the wake of a faculty report criticizing the lack of faculty involvement in the University-wide benefits review process, professors spoke in favor of creating a standing committee on benefits at yesterday's packed meeting of the full Faculty.
Faculty members asked, however, whether the committee would investigate benefits changes which have already been suggested by the University-wide benefits task force.
Gund Professor of Economics Richard E. Caves and McKay Professor of Mechanical Engineering Frederick H. Abernathy presented a report released to the faculty last week stating that the professors were not adequately consulted in last year's University-wide benefits review process.
The proceedings of the benefits task force "flew in the face of a tradi- President Neil L. Rudenstine acknowledged his responsibility for the faculty's unhappiness. "This process from beginning to end was my responsibility," Rudenstine said yesterday. "To the extent that there are errors, flaws or problems, I see it at my door. I agree there were flaws. The degree of consultation was much less than it should have been." At times during the meeting, Rudenstine appeared visibly upset. The faculty's report recommends establishing a standing benefits review committee to "provide an official avenue of communication for the Faculty of Arts and Sciences in any future situation where major changes in benefits must be considered by the central administration." But one faculty member at the meeting wondered if the committee would address changes to faculty benefits already announced, such as cutting faculty pensions by one percent and tying Harvard's health care premium contribution to salary level. "There is no mention made or review of the changes that have been announced," said Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures Mary M. Gaylord. "Would this committee only look to the future?" Caves replied that he and Abernathy did not feel it was their place in the report to decide what the committee's actions should be. Other faculty members shared Gaylord's concerns about the committee's function. "Many of us would feel quite clearly that if there are unresolved issues concerning the benefits proposal, that the committee would certainly take on those issues," said Professor of the History of Science Everett I. Mendelsohn. The Faculty of Arts and Sciences committee has not yet been created; the full Faculty is slated to vote on it at December's meeting. But Knowles has already appointed three professors to continue to advise him on benefits--perhaps forming the core of such a committee. President Rudenstine also urged the creation of a university-wide benefits standing committee that would be "representative of all the schools" and have "significant faculty representation. One of the "unresolved issues" raised at the meeting was Mallinckrodt Professor of Applied Physics William Paul's assertion that the benefits task force greatly overestimated the amount faculty members would have in their pension funds upon retirement. When inflation is taken into account, Paul said, "there is no predicted overachievement of the [pension] plan's goal." Read more in News