Stipends
Administrative Staff
Administrative staff members almost always have 12-month, salaried
positions where the expectation is that, while the minimum work-week
is 40 hours, they will work more than that if the job requires it.
They use their judgment on this, and there is no “comp time.” Salaried
administrators have latitude within broad constraints (e.g., support
of supervisor, need to work closely or not with others, need for their
office to be open and available during specified hours) regarding exactly
when they will be in the office and when not.
In this model, twelve-month administrative staff members,
and “less-than-12-month” administrators during their scheduled
working months, do not receive stipends for taking on extra duties
related to their jobs because the extra duties would, in consultation
with a supervisor, necessarily either replace existing duties or would
be duties the staff member would normally assume. When the extra duties
represent activities that are clearly beyond the current scope of the
job and when the new duties represent work that is normally compensated
at a level greater than the salary of the administrator, our approach,
on a case by case basis, has been to consider building the new duties
into the job description and adjusting salary permanently to reflect
expanded responsibility, not pay a special stipend. We have done this
in several such cases.
In the case where the administrative staff person is asked by another
department to perform duties that are unrelated to their job description
but for which that person is particularly well-suited, and where, if
the staff person is unable to perform the duty a person outside the
University would be hired to do it, a stipend may be available. In
this case, the staff person who is asked to perform the special duty
must consult with his or her supervising divisional vice president
who will ultimately decide if a stipend can be paid. The divisional
vice president responsible for the department paying the stipend must
also formally approve it, in advance.
Faculty
The situation for faculty brings with it some different dynamics.
First of all, while faculty are paid their salaries over a period of
12 months, their assigned duties are limited to the academic year,
including time before and after the semester to prepare for classes
and complete grading. Non-term time is “unscheduled” time.
Administrative staff members on twelve-month appointments have no equivalent “unscheduled” time.
So, when we ask faculty members to take on a project outside of term
time, it is appropriate that we offer a stipend and in most cases we
do.
Within term time we offer faculty stipends only under some well-defined
circumstances. Faculty members have a clearly defined (by department
and discipline) “teaching load.” When we ask a faculty
member to take on additional teaching responsibilities beyond the normal
teaching load, because it is impossible (or at least very difficult)
to reduce other duties associated with advising students, engaging
in scholarship, and being involved in University service, we provide
an overload stipend. This is a long-standing policy, and one that is
in effect at other colleges and universities. We also provide extra
compensation, and/or appropriate course load reduction, for faculty
members serving in such roles as department or program chairs or grant
administrators. This is equivalent to the administrative case, defined
above. We do not provide stipends for other shifts in a faculty member’s
duties during term time, except in cases where it would be necessary
to hire someone external to the University to perform the specific
duties that a faculty member may be willing to perform for extra compensation,
but that are not part of their central responsibilities. The Dean of
Academic Affairs must be consulted and approve in advance faculty proposals
to accept opportunities such as this if they occur during term time.
More complicated are the cases of staff members who serve in direct
support of teaching, or staff members who regularly, as part of their
normal loads, engage in teaching. In some of these cases, where appropriate,
the faculty grants faculty by exception status. Under these circumstances,
the stipend issue is governed by the faculty rather than the administrative
policy. Librarians, as faculty members, are covered by the faculty
stipend policy. Academic support personnel are covered by the administrative
stipend policy.
We recognize, even with the above clarification, that there will still
be ambiguities that we will have to resolve on a case-by-case basis.
But these principles provide the policy framework for the way in which
we will resolve those cases