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2010 Meeting Agenda

Ann Mtg 2010

Register now for this free event.  Program below.

8:30: Registration and Continental Breakfast

9:00: Welcome

Ruth Copans, Skidmore College

9:15: New York’s Commitment to Innovation and Information.

Assembly Member Dennis Gabryszak (D-Erie), Chair of the Assembly Task Force on University-Industry Cooperation

10:00: Winding Down Nylink Operations

W. David Penniman, Executive Director, Nylink

10:45: Break

11:00: NYSHEI Advocacy & Activities

Jason Kramer, NYSHEI

11:30: NYSHEI Business Meeting

Pamela McLaughlin, Syracuse University and NYSHEI Board Chair

12:00: Lunch and Keynote Address: The Challenge of NY in the Information Age

Martin Babinec, Founder and Chairman, Upstate Venture Connect

1:00: Facilitated Networking & Vendor Demonstrations

Vendor demonstrations:

Elsevier, Room 3

Thomson Reuters, Room 4

Networking Conversations:

CIRA Outreach and Program Development, Cristina Pope, SUNY Upstate

Statewide Licensing and Procurement Options (?), Loretta Ebert, NYSL

SUNY Libraries and Strategic Plan, Carey Hatch, SUNY System Administration

2:00: Panel Discussion: Non-traditional partnerships and the economic growth agenda

Brian McMahon, NYS Economic Development Council

Maggie Moree, Business Council of NYS

Barbara Drago, SUNY System Administration

3:00: Conference Address: Reaching out from the library

Janet McCue, Cornell University, AUL for Teaching, Research, Outreach and Learning Services

4:00: Farewell

Charling Fagan, Sarah Lawrence College and NYSHEI Board Chair

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ARIA Passes Senate Hurdle

StachowskiEllicottSquare-thumb-500x332-1932 Under the leadership of sponsor and committee chair Senator William Stachowski the Academic Research Information Access (ARIA) act won the unanimous bipartisan support of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Economic Development, and Small Business.

With his staff working diligently to ameliorate concerns left by the 2009 Governor Paterson veto of ARIA, Senator Stachowski (D-Buffalo) again secured great support for ARIA and reported the bill to the Senate Committee on Finance.  The sponsor and his supporters are optimistic that ARIA will again win passage before the full Senate and – this time – be enacted by the Governor.

The Senate version of ARIA is keeping pace with its Assembly companion which recently won unanimous bipartisan support of the Assembly Committee on Economic Development, Job Creation, Commerce and Industry under the guidance of Assemblyman Robin Schimminger (D-Kenmore).

“ARIA is very fortunate to have such committed boosters as Senator Stachowski and Assemblyman Schimminger.  Both recognize the need for this legislation to promote and advance the innovation economy in New York.  Both are working hard to secure full enactment.  I offer my heartfelt thanks to both men on behalf of the academic and research library community,” said NYSHEI Executive Director Jason Kramer.

A vote on ARIA by the full Assembly and Senate is expected to occur before years end.

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Bing Introduces CCDA Bill

bingAssembly Jonathan Bing (D-Manhattan), Chair of the Assembly Committee on Libraries and Educational Technology has introduced legislation (A.10884) to adjust the formula that sets coordinated collection development aid for academic libraries.

Mr. Bing said, “I am proud to introduce legislation to update the funding formula for state aid to public and private academic research libraries.  The formula has not been adjusted for over 25 years and, during this time, prices of some published materials have outpaced inflation by 300 percent.  This legislation is needed to ensure that our higher education sector is able to stay competitive in a rapidly changing world.”

NYSHEI Executive Director Jason Kramer applauded the action. “NYSHEI is extremely grateful to Mr. Bing for recognizing and addressing this issue.  From the moment of our first conversation on the matter, Mr. Bing showed a clear understanding of the importance – to quality of higher education institutions and to their role in supporting the state economy – of CCDA.  Clearly, he values the academic library community and is committed to doing everything he can to ensure their success.”

Established in the state Education Law, CCDA provides some state support to public and non-profit institutions of higher education in securing valuable information collections in a cost-effective manner.  Driven by a funding formula set in statute in 1984, CCDA has not been updated or indexed to the Consumer Price Index.

“This legislation,” said Kramer “addresses the neglect of a long overlooked CCD aid formula.  During these difficult economic times modernizing aid apportionment is  more important than ever before.  I am thankful for Mr. Bing’s leadership and look forward to working with him towards passage of this bill.”

Assembly bill 10884 would increase the CCDA formula by 25 percent in the first year, and provide for the formula to be indexed to the CPI by 2014.  Currently the total state appropriation toward CCDA is under $2 million for the 270 eligible academic libraries of New York.  In recent years the 1984 formula has been underfunded by state budgets.

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McCue to address NYSHEI Annual Meeting

JanetMcCuepicJanet McCue will offer the conference address at the June 8, 2010 Annual Meeting of NYSHEI at Skidmore College.  Ms. McCue is the Associate University Librarian for Teaching, Research, Outreach, and Learning Services at Cornell University and will reflect on her work to achieve the greatest extension of the libraries value.

Early in her career, McCue headed a technical services unit, hired the first Metadata Librarian at Cornell, and led the development of technical services workstations for staff.  More recently, McCue was in charge of the Albert R. Mann Library and directed a variety of projects, including a major renovation and a fund development campaign.  In her new role as AUL, she is responsible for all the campus libraries in the Cornell system.

McCue is on the Board of the Cornell-Sathguru Foundation and The History Center, and is a PI on several digital library projects. She is the recipient of the SUNY Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Librarianship (1996) and more recently, the SUNY Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Professional Service (2009)  Like the 19th century librarian and naturalist, McCue believes that “librarianship offers a better field for mental gymnastics than any other profession.”

Registration for the event is still open, and free to all staff of NYSHEI member institutions.

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ARIA In The Spitzer Book

Spitzer_book_DV_20100308141435It is unusual for a state lobbying effort to gain a passing reference in a book that garnered national attention – especially if that effort is hardly the stuff of political debate and breathless editorials.  But ARIA did it.

In his book on the abbreviated administration of Eliot Spitzer, longtime friend and Spitzer confidante Lloyd Constantine references NYSHEI’s Academic Research Information Access (ARIA) act.  In the book, Journal of the Plague Year: An Insider’s Chronicle of Eliot Spitzer’s Short and Tragic Reign, Constantine writes of his frustration to advance particular policy concerns:

“I thought I was so tricky and smart – inserting promises into the State of the State speech during that chaotic last-minute drafting session, thinking that this would guarantee at least some modest delivery on the rhetoric.  In other areas, however, such as a $15 million promise to the state’s academic libraries, which I stuck into Eliot’s speech, but the budget division veterans ignored.

I also argued directly to Eliot for more funding for public higher education.  He pointed to his State of the State promise to convene a Commission on Higher Education.  The Commission would propose vastly increased funding and how it should be used.  Increased resources for higher education would begin in the 2008-2009 budget.  The next year and the next budget would be the time and place for higher ed. to become a major pillar of New York State’s bright future.”

That Commission, which was managed by Mr. Constantine, would directly recommend ARIA as the “academic library pooling of electronic information,” and that the State “invest $15 million to facilitate college and university libraries moving from individual library licenses to state-wide shared licenses.”

You will find no review of the Plague Year here (but you can read about it from the NY Times and Newsweek among others).  Instead, I only offer the sincere gratitude of NYSHEI to Mr. Constantine for doing every thing he could to adopt our issue and work toward its fulfillment.  Although the end of the Spitzer administration was  – among many other things to many other people – a setback for the ARIA initiative, the life breathed into that proposal by Mr. Constantine laid the foundation for the mounting successes of our advocacy.

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Rise of the Two-Years

Business ReviewThe continuum of higher education that begins at two-years colleges is more important than ever.  Not only is there a need for the library to play a vital role in supporting workforce development, but it must also strive to support learners who move from two-year, to four-year, to graduate programs.

All of this points to the need for an information infrastructure as envisioned by NYSHEI, and supported by such initiatives as ARIA.

The following article is from the Business Review.

High-demand two-year degree programs attract career changers and four-year grads
The Business Review (Albany) – by Robin K. Cooper

Andrew Falkenstein knew the job market for a recent graduate with a bachelor’s degree in marketing was grim.

So he wasn’t about to wait until he graduated from the University at Albany in May 2009 to do something about it.

Falkenstein, 23, enrolled in the culinary program at Schenectady County Community College in the summer after his junior year at UAlbany to prepare for a career as a chef and restaurant owner.

He is part of a growing number of students who are seeking an associate degree as an affordable, fast-track to a well-paying job.

“People are becoming really good consumers in a tough economy,” said Penny Hayes, dean of academic affairs at SCCC.

Falkenstein, who had considered attending the Culinary Institute of America, decided that SCCC was a better value at $3,150 a year versus $24,000 a year at CIA.

“This isn’t the biggest school. But once you get here, you realize how good it is,” Falkenstein said. “It’s more of a cost-benefit analysis.”

“We pride ourselves on the reputation of our culinary program,” Hayes said.

The college also has been working more with area employers such as General Electric and GlobalFoundries to ensure that the school prepares students to satisfy the work force needs of the business community.

A recent study by Demos, a New York City-based public policy research organization, found that 31 percent of associate degree holders earn more than someone holding a bachelor’s degree.

That finding reiterated an earlier study by a researcher at Georgetown University.

Since the recession began, enrollments have increased at most two-year and four-year schools.

SCCC in Schenectady has seen enrollment spikes in its semiconductor or nanoscale technology program as well as in math and science. Humanities, business and human services classes also are attracting more students.

Similar growth has occurred at Hudson Valley Community College in Troy, where its three-year-old semiconductor program prepares technicians to work at the $4.2 billion computer-chip fabrication plant GlobalFoundries is building nearby in Saratoga County.

HVCC’s nursing, electrical construction maintenance and architectural technology program have seen steady growth in the past few years.

The college also has generated interest in its programs in wind, solar and semiconductor technology by constructing a new $15 million Tec-Smart satellite campus in Malta, about a mile from the GlobalFoundries chip plant, which is expected to employ 1,400 workers.

Tec-Smart opened in January and has an enrollment of 150 students. That number is expected to grow this fall.

“Most community colleges have seen an enrollment increase because of the economy,” said Carolyn Curtis, HVCC’s vice president for academic affairs.

Two-year schools that are focusing on training students for well-paying jobs in technical fields and other high-demand areas are positioned well to help rebuild the economy, Curtis said.

Community colleges offer a lot more than a solid education and good value for students who are finishing high school, said SCCC President Quintin Bullock.

“We are seeing people who are looking to be retrained or who are looking to make a career change,” he said.

That’s what Valerie Inman was looking for.

The 40-year-old Watervliet resident spent 10 years as a clerical worker for the state Department of Taxation and Finance before deciding to enroll into SCCC’s culinary program.

When the state’s fiscal problems escalated, Inman said opportunities for promotions became limited.

“With all the talk about [hiring freezes] there wasn’t a lot of room for growth,” she said.

That’s when she decided to attend SCCC, which has given her an opportunity to work with well-known area chefs including Dale Miller, owner and executive chef at Dale Miller restaurant in Albany.

Miller, a graduate and board member at CIA, said he has worked with or hired 25 to 30 students and graduates of SCCC’s culinary program over the years.

“It’s a great training ground,” said Miller, who currently has two interns from SCCC and two from CIA.

He worked with Inman and several master chefs during the grand opening of his restaurant last year.

Inman, who expects to graduate in May, will move to Florida, where she plans to open her own bakery.

Classmate Andrew Falkenstein, who grew up in Manhattan, has no immediate plans to leave.

He’s hoping to find a job working in the kitchen at a local fine dining restaurant for the next five years as he prepares to open his own restaurant.

Once he opens his own place, Falkenstein said, his marketing and business degree also could come in handy.

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Assembly Member Set for NYSHEI Meeting

Gabryszak New York State Assembly Member Dennis Gabryszak (D-Erie) will speak at the upcoming NYSHEI Annual Meeting.

Mr. Gabryszak chairs the Assembly Task Force on University-Industry Cooperation.  He will offer his thoughts and insights on the role of the state in fostering that collaboration for the benefit of both parties, and reflect on specific proposals, such as ARIA, that will advance the level of cooperation.

The NYSHEI Annual Meeting will be held at Skidmore College on June 7th, 2010.  Register online.

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Video Analytics for Libraries Webinar

Vitracom Considering a renovation of your library? Desire an accurate patron count?

Join a free webinar offered by Nylink to all NYSHEI members on April 21 at 11:00 a.m. Find out which areas of your collection and your library space are the most popular.  Explore the brave new world of video analytics with Vitracom USA.  | http://Nylink.org/education/vitraDemo.cfm

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SUNY Releases Draft of Strategic Plan

SUNY Strat PlanSUNY Chancellor Nancy Zimpher is conducting one of the most expansive strategic planning processes in higher education. SUNY’s statewide collaborative planning process includes gathering observations, suggestions, ideas and comments, and engaging many stakeholders through campus visits, town hall meetings, social media, and other outreach.

A draft of the strategic plan is available online.  Learn more about the plan and the process at the SUNY website.

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Upstate Venture Connect Founder to Keynote Annual Meeting

upstate-venture-connectThe 2010 NYSHEI Annual Meeting will feature Martin Babinec, Founder and Chairman of Upstate Venture Connect, as the keynote speaker.

Upstate Venture Connect (UVC) is a newly launched not-for-profit corporation that is designed to make New York an

martin-babinec

“innovation powerhouse,” by connecting entrepreneurs and innovators with the talent and resources they need create and grow innovative businesses.  Mr. Babinec, as the visionary and prime-mover behind UVC, is working to cultivate the “entrepreneurial ecosystem” needed.

Jason Kramer, NYSHEI Executive Director, said, “Mr. Babinec and UVC are getting attention.  When I first learned of their efforts I knew immediately that the NYSHEI vision of an information infrastructure supporting teaching, research and economic growth found an ally in UVC.”

Upstate Venture Connect is rapidly advancing and the media is taking note (see here, here).

“I am very gratified that Mr. Babinec will join us in Saratoga Springs on June 8th.  For the past few years NYSHEI has worked to connect its member libraries to resources and voices in the policy making and economic growth worlds.  The program assembled for our Annual Meeting and featuring Babinec maintain that tradition and keep us moving forward,” said Kramer.

The NYSHEI Annual Meeting is offered at no cost to all librarians and staff of NYSHEI member institutions.  Register today online.

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