S00059 Summary:

BILL NOS00059A
 
SAME ASNo same as
 
SPONSORDIAZ
 
COSPNSRSAMPSON
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Amd S352, Ed L
 
Establishes the office for diversity and educational equity within the state university of New York administration.
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S00059 Actions:

BILL NOS00059A
 
01/05/2011REFERRED TO HIGHER EDUCATION
02/22/2011NOTICE OF COMMITTEE CONSIDERATION - REQUESTED
04/06/2011REPORTED AND COMMITTED TO FINANCE
01/04/2012REFERRED TO HIGHER EDUCATION
01/05/2012AMEND AND RECOMMIT TO HIGHER EDUCATION
01/05/2012PRINT NUMBER 59A
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S00059 Floor Votes:

There are no votes for this bill in this legislative session.
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S00059 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                          59--A
 
                               2011-2012 Regular Sessions
 
                    IN SENATE
 
                                       (Prefiled)
 
                                     January 5, 2011
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced by Sens. DIAZ, SAMPSON -- read twice and ordered printed, and
          when  printed  to be committed to the Committee on Higher Education --
          recommitted to the Committee on Higher Education  in  accordance  with
          Senate  Rule  6, sec. 8 -- committee discharged, bill amended, ordered

          reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee
 
        AN ACT to amend the education  law,  in  relation  to  establishing  the
          office for diversity and educational equity
 
          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section 1. Short title. This act shall be known and may  be  cited  as
     2  the "Increasing Diversity in Higher Education Act of 2012".
     3    §  2.  Legislative intent. The legislature hereby finds that the state
     4  university of New York has not fully met the growing  demand  placed  on
     5  the  university  system  to  train  the next generation workforce of our
     6  state.  Simultaneously,  the  university  system  is   faced   with   an
     7  unprecedented  rate  of minority and low-income student enrollment, high
     8  rates of student dropouts, larger numbers of students completing college

     9  after six years or more, and a situation where only 32 out of 100  white
    10  students and only 11 of every 100 Hispanic and African-American students
    11  are  graduating  from  college. The economic impact on our state and the
    12  nation of these dynamics are  tremendously  negative  and  threaten  the
    13  fabric of our civil society and national security.
    14    Over the past decade, the state university of New York has experienced
    15  a  steady rise in the number of traditionally underrepresented students.
    16  By the year 2015, figures from the United States census and  other  data
    17  indicate  that  the  majority  of New York high school graduates will be
    18  from groups that have been historically underrepresented in  SUNY.  This
    19  demographic  shift  and a need to train a competitive New York workforce
    20  present public higher education policy makers with a  challenge.  It  is

    21  clear that New York must reduce educational inequities faced by minority
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD00027-02-1

        S. 59--A                            2
 
     1  and  low-income  students  from  historically  marginalized groups while
     2  simultaneously maintaining the highest of  educational  standards.  This
     3  huge  demographic change must be addressed by policy makers as the state
     4  university of New York is not prepared to increase the academic achieve-
     5  ment and educational attainment of historically marginalized groups.
     6    Data  compiled  on  college  access  and success show that New York is
     7  doing better than most states for those 25 years of age  and  older  but

     8  not  for  younger, low-income and fastest growing populations. According
     9  to 2009 data compiled by the Education Trust, New York's four-year grad-
    10  uation rate for African-Americans is  22  percent  and  17  percent  for
    11  Hispanics.    The  six-year  graduation rate more than doubles, however,
    12  most of these students will have compromised their academic  achievement
    13  and  dramatically  reduced  their opportunities to pursue post-secondary
    14  education based on their low grades.
    15    The percentage  of  individuals  from  traditionally  underrepresented
    16  groups  who are attending SUNY is lower given their numbers in the state
    17  population. Consequently, any initiatives designed to maximize access to
    18  affordable, quality education should make  special  efforts  to  recruit
    19  students  from  these  underserved sectors of the state's population. In

    20  its official publications SUNY recognizes its responsibility to employ a
    21  workforce and educate a student  body  that  is  representative  of  the
    22  state's  population.  However,  SUNY  has  not  been able to recruit and
    23  retain  senior  administrators,  faculty,  graduate  and   undergraduate
    24  students  in  sufficient numbers to overcome the long-standing under-re-
    25  presentation of people of color.
    26    For example, the Hispanic population of New York grew by 33.1  percent
    27  between  1990  and  2000,  and made up 15.1 percent of the state's popu-
    28  lation. By 2006, Hispanics made up 16.1 percent  of  the  state's  popu-
    29  lation.  Yet,  Hispanics  accounted for only five percent of the student
    30  population in the state-operated/funded campuses of SUNY.  African-Amer-
    31  icans are also underrepresented in SUNY, although their percentages  are

    32  better  than  those  for  Hispanics.  In  2006, 14,737 African-Americans
    33  attended SUNY state-operated/funded campuses, and  accounted  for  seven
    34  percent  of  the  student  population.  African-Americans comprised 17.4
    35  percent of the state's population in 2006. As is the case  with  Hispan-
    36  ics, Blacks are also seriously underrepresented in the SUNY campuses.
    37    The  figures  on African-Americans and Hispanic student enrollments in
    38  SUNY  universities  and  colleges  are  consistent  with  the   findings
    39  published  in  an  Education Trust study of public flagship universities
    40  that documents disproportionate under-representation of  low-income  and
    41  minority students. The report observes that flagship public universities
    42  are  failing to make progress "in better serving the vast breadth of our
    43  citizenry." New York state should provide SUNY  with  the  resources  to

    44  implement  effective strategies and best practices, so that it can stand
    45  as an exception to this discouraging national  trend  in  public  higher
    46  education.
    47    The  problem  is  just  as  acute within African-American and Hispanic
    48  representation in the faculty ranks of the state-operated/funded campus-
    49  es which also fail to reflect the composition of the state's population.
    50  In the doctoral institutions the percentages for  full  time  Black  and
    51  Hispanic  employees  are 14.9 percent and 2.7 percent, respectively. For
    52  the research university centers the figures are 6.8 percent  African-Am-
    53  erican  and  2.4 percent Latino. An analysis of Hispanic faculty employ-
    54  ment by a member of the New York state assembly recently  revealed  that
    55  SUNY  lags substantially behind the state's private universities and the

        S. 59--A                            3
 

     1  city university of New York in the number of Hispanics in its full  time
     2  professional ranks.
     3    It  is  the  finding  of  this legislature that in order for the state
     4  university of New York to address the problems cited above, the  univer-
     5  sity  system must engage in a system-wide effort to increase faculty and
     6  student diversity and improve its student success  rates.  In  order  to
     7  begin such work, SUNY must put in place a vice chancellor for the office
     8  of  diversity  and  educational  equity  who will report directly to the
     9  chancellor. Just as major public and private university  systems  across
    10  the  United  States  have  hired  and provided substantial resources and
    11  authority to a chief diversity officer, SUNY must  follow  the  lead  of
    12  these  successful  university  and  college  programs in order to remain
    13  competitive and fulfill its mission of training New York's future  work-

    14  force, while also improving the economic outlook for all the communities
    15  it is entrusted to serve.
    16    §  3.  The  opening  paragraph  of subdivision 1 of section 352 of the
    17  education law is designated paragraph a and a new paragraph b  is  added
    18  to read as follows:
    19    b.  (1) There is hereby established an office for diversity and educa-
    20  tional equity in the administration of the state university. Such office
    21  shall be established by the state university trustees and  shall  advise
    22  the trustees and the chancellor on issues related to increasing faculty,
    23  staff  and student diversity in the state university system and ensuring
    24  educational equity in the state university system.    The  head  of  the
    25  office  for  diversity and educational equity shall be a vice chancellor

    26  who shall report directly to the chancellor  of  the  state  university.
    27  Furthermore, there shall be included in the state university of New York
    28  budget  proposal  to  the  governor and to the division of the budget an
    29  appropriation for each state fiscal year to fund and support the  opera-
    30  tion of the office for diversity and educational equity.
    31    (2)  The  vice  chancellor of the office for diversity and educational
    32  equity shall annually, on or before January first, submit  a  report  to
    33  the  governor  and  the  legislature  detailing  the  current efforts to
    34  increase diversity as they relate to the hiring and employment of facul-
    35  ty and student enrollment at all campuses of the colleges and  universi-

    36  ties of the state university of New York. Such report shall include, but
    37  not be limited to:
    38    (i) minority enrollment at each campus;
    39    (ii) minority withdrawals and dismissals at each campus;
    40    (iii) the size of the minority freshman class at each campus;
    41    (iv)  the  numbers  of  minorities who graduate after four years, five
    42  years and six years at each campus;
    43    (v) the number of faculty  positions  filled  by  minorities  at  each
    44  campus; and
    45    (vi)  the  number  of minority faculty hired by each campus, and their
    46  salary rate and title.
    47    All information shall be further broken down  by  campus,  gender  and
    48  ethnicity.
    49    § 4. This act shall take effect immediately.
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