#RF03-216
Resolved That the San Francisco State University
Academic Senate endorse the attached Statement on Proposition 54, Classification
by Race, Ethnicity, Color, or National Origin, Initiative Constitutional
Amendment; and further be it
Resolved That
the Academic Senate declare its strong opposition to Proposition 54,
Classification by Race, Ethnicity, Color, or National Origin, Initiative
Constitutional Amendment; and further be it
Resolved That the SFSU Academic Senate
communicate immediately to the ASCSU, Chancellor Charles B. Reed, the Board of
Trustees of the CSU, and the press that it opposes this initiative.
Since the
1960's, energized in part by the Master Plan for Higher Education, the
The SFSU
Academic Senate strongly opposes Proposition 54 for a number of reasons.
Proposition 54
would inhibit the ability of agencies such as the California Post-Secondary
Education Commission (CPEC) to carry out their work, thereby reducing the
ability of the CSU to make informed decisions or reach reasoned judgments about
matters of policy. Lacking data
collected by the state, CPEC would have no factual basis on which to determine
success of publicly-funded colleges and universities in providing access to all
ethnic/racial groups, or to ascertain whether some lack equal opportunity in
the high schools to complete the a-g admissions requirements.
By prohibiting
the State from collecting data on ethnicity, Proposition 54 would restrict the
ability of faculty and students to analyze such data to the benefit of the
State and its citizens. It would deprive faculty and students of data compiled
by the State that is used for scholarly research, for analysis of trends in
Proposition 54 is,
therefore, at its very heart, anti-intellectual and anti-empirical.
Proposition 54
would significantly inhibit the ability of the CSU to realize its goals of
making higher education available to historically under-represented students, many
of them from ethnic or cultural minorities, and the goal of expanding the
cultural and gender diversity of its faculty.
By prohibiting all agencies of the State of California from collecting
or maintaining data on race or ethnicity of employees and other individuals
(e.g., students and staff), Proposition 54 would prevent the CSU from measuring
the extent to which it is succeeding in providing access to all ethnic and
racial groups and in diversifying its faculty and staff positions. If the state of
Proposition 54
would similarly obstruct the CSU's efforts to gauge
the success of efforts to recruit and retain a diverse faculty. The ways that the University addresses its
goals of opportunity and diversity will change as the racial and ethnic
composition of California changes--a group that is underrepresented today may
not be in ten or twenty years. But it is, and will be, possible to know
who is underrepresented only if data are available. Proposition 54, if passed, would deprive CSU
of these data. Proposition 54 would
therefore weaken efforts to expand educational opportunity for prospective
students from under-represented groups and to increase diversity of the faculty
and staff.
These effects
make Proposition 54 antithetical to the policy document entitled “The Mission
of the
The Academic Senate SFSU shares the concerns of CPEC, which
strongly opposes this initiative, and those of the many non-partisan
organizations that oppose it, including the League of Women Voters. And it shares the concerns of the citizens
who see it as harmful to their children, their communities, and the future of
this state, blocking the
efforts of the University to realize in full its commitment to the
***APPROVED Unanimously by the Academic Senate at its meeting on