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CANTON Despite their reticence to share a presidency, SUNY Canton and SUNY Potsdam are taking strides toward combined back-office operations.
A July 15 report by the SUNY Canton and SUNY Potsdam Shared Services Committee cites examples in the schools hiring practices, libraries and information technology.
The report is a terrific step forward in achieving and even exceeding the goals set forth by SUNY and the SUNY board of trustees, said Randy B. Sieminski, SUNY Canton assistant vice president for advancement. We are pleased to be working closely with SUNY Potsdam and SUNY on a number of shared services opportunities to ensure future success of both colleges.
The schools established a unified executive team composed of the presidents and executive officers of both institutions to oversee shared services. The report delivered a list of the teams accomplishments.
In May, the schools hired their first joint staff person, Veterans Affairs Officer Patrick S. Massaro, followed by the addition of shared Chief Financial Officer Natalie L. Higley.
Though those hires are the most visible examples of the schools efforts to share services, the report showed their work has not stopped there. SUNY Canton President Joseph L. Kennedy said joint hires are far easier than making the campuses operations mesh.
I think we are making some progress but were discovering this isnt as easy and it wont happen as quickly as we all hope, he said.I hope the report reflects that these things are well under way.
The schools plan to hire a joint interlibrary loan specialist and have taken steps to share resources in their library services, information technology, human resources, university police, campus life, payroll, purchasing and institutional research and effectiveness departments.
Weve started working on all levels on that, Mr. Kennedy said. The IT effort is well under way; they are meeting probably weekly working on that, and they are committed to hiring a shared person working on IT. Wrapped up in all of this is the library. Theyve committed to sharing a person between the two libraries.
I think within a year our administrative services will be pretty close to fully integrated, he said.
That optimism is shared at SUNY Potsdam.
Potsdam is very aggressively pursuing everything that is in this report, said Vicki Templeton-Cornell, SUNY Potsdam vice president for college advancement. We plan to meet with Canton regularly and were starting with the leadership of both institutions meeting on a very regular basis to make sure everybody is meeting on all possibilities.
In 2011, the board of trustees and Chancellor Nancy L. Zimpher required SUNY campuses to explore shared services to divert more money from the administration to student services, a goal both campuses have already met.
The report found each school exceeded the boards requirement that they spend a minimum of 52 percent of their operating budget on instruction, academic support, clinical instruction, libraries, scholarships, fellowships and student services.
This is just the first draft of a study at the outset of a long process to evaluate and implement shared services between SUNY Potsdam, SUNY Canton and other campuses, said SUNY Potsdam spokeswoman Alexandra M. Jacobs. The report certainly shows how much we have accomplished together already, but this effort is still very much a work in progress.
In the 2010-11 school year, SUNY Canton reported spending 64 percent of its budget in those areas. The school expects additional faculty hires to meet SUNY Central standards for increasing that proportion.
In the same period, SUNY Potsdam calculated 65 percent of its budget was spent on services directly affecting students, a figure it believes is underreported.
Despite the favorable numbers, the SUNY board of trustees and the chancellors office continue to push the schools to share more services.