Maxwell Dean David Van Slyke concluded from his office’s independent study that salary inequities were only present at the full professor level, while the university report found inequities at each level. The independent study also concluded that inequities in the Maxwell School were much smaller than the university report suggested, said Elisabeth Lasch-Quinn, a professor of history in Maxwell.
After Van Slyke’s announcement last spring, the Maxwell Faculty Council created the Maxwell Faculty Council Salary Equity Subcommittee to review the independent analysis. When asked why he disregarded the report’s algorithm and used his own data to evaluate Maxwell’s pay disparities, Van Slyke said, in an emailed statement to The D.O., it was “to fully understand the landscape in the Maxwell School.” The internal study’s analysis was taken into consideration when making salary adjustments, he said.
Lasch-Quinn, who was on the subcommittee, said the group analyzed the internal study, raised concerns and presented those concerns to the faculty council at the end of the spring semester, where members of the dean’s office were present. The subcommittee recommended that the dean’s office use the university’s data provided in the December report to distribute the equity adjustment instead of the internal analysis. This was because the subcommittee felt the independent analysis had minimized the inequities and was not considering the historical impact of the pay gap, among other things, Lasch-Quinn said.
After the presentation, the council voted to accept the subcommittee’s suggestion that the dean’s office forgo its internal analysis, she added. The dean’s office continued to use its independent study and data analysis.
“Admitting that you’ve underpaid people is a great first step but wouldn’t the next step be ‘how am I going to fix that seriously?’,” Lasch-Quinn said.
According to Lasch-Quinn and the subcommittee, one of the ways to fix the inequities seriously would be to address the long-term effects of the pay gap for professors who have been at the university for an extended period of the time.
“I was operating for 28 years here with a feeling of good faith,” Lasch-Quinn said. “I love Syracuse University, I always will, but I thought things were different.”
Deborah Pellow, a professor of anthropology at Maxwell, said the communication between the Maxwell dean’s office has not been sufficient. When she’s requested presentation slides with information on the independent analysis, she’s either been told the office can’t share them or that she can view them with members of the dean’s office, Pellow said.
“At this point, I’d like to see clear process,” Pellow said. “I’d like to have our questions answered. I’d like to know what value system are we talking about when we do this.”
Pellow questioned why SU would leave the issue in the hands of the same offices that allowed the gap to form in the first place.
Taped to Pellow’s office door is the advertisement with 207 faculty signatures. Pellow said administrators at Maxwell never addressed her or anyone about the advertisement, although Chancellor Kent Syverud told her he thought it was “terrific.”