budget, operational excellence report to the campusoperational excellence: findings operational...
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Budget, Operational Excellence Report to the Campus
Susan Desmond-Hellmann, M.D., M.P.H.Chancellor UCSFChancellor, UCSF
May 18, 2010

Agenda
AGENDA
Agenda
• Reminder: Priorities• Report on UCSF’s FY 2010-11 budget status• Recommendations of the Administrative
and Operational Efficiencies Work Group• Feedback received from small group
sessionssessions• Next steps
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Priorities
PRIORITIES
Priorities
• Patients/Health• Discovery• Education• People• Business
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Where We Started
WHERE WE STARTED
Where We Started• Work Group formed February 2010• Charge: identify options for addressing ongoing
cuts in state funds, rising employee costs– Improve FY 2011 operating margin $28M– Improve FY 2011 operating margin $28M
to $40M• administrative efficiencies• new or increased revenue• net cost reductions
E d i l– Ensure we spend our money wisely– Create a culture that continually asks,
“Is there a better way?”
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Is there a better way?

Budget Status
BUDGET STATUS
Budget Status• The problem, FY 2011
Projected state/general fund shortfall = $28MProjected state/general fund shortfall $28MLess: Allocation of educational fees = $10MTotal net state/general fund shortfall = $18Mg
• Solving the problem– Central Administration: to shoulder largest share ofCentral Administration: to shoulder largest share of
reductions; 50%, if possible – Medical Center: to provide about one-third of the
solution by relinquishing all state fundssolution by relinquishing all state funds– Schools: to shoulder remaining burden
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Goal: reduce direct hit on schools

Operational Excellence: Findings
OPERATIONAL EXCELLENCE FINDINGS
Operational Excellence: Findings
• UCSF has amazing staff faculty• UCSF has amazing staff, faculty (there’s a good reason we’re in the top 10 in every category)F lt t ff k t l h d h• Faculty, staff work extremely hard; have suffered years of cutbacks, unfunded mandates
• But years of inadequate infrastructure, complex processes and a Lego-like structure (e.g., shadow systems, heavy paper use and ( g y y p playered processes) increasingly challenge our ability to function effectively
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Current Administrative StructureADMINISTRATIVE STRUCTURE
Department ManagerChair
CentralCentralAdministration
HR
FacultyPre
AwardIT
P t
HR
Finance
Post Award
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• Department administrative structure varies across departments• Fragmentation offers little opportunity to develop professionally

Operational Excellence: Findings
OPERATIONAL EXCELLENCE FINDINGS
Operational Excellence: Findings• Human Resources (example)
– Support for nearly 22,000 people (including UCSF paid/unpaid, UCOP, excluding Medical Center)
– 515 departmental HR head count• 190+ people dedicated to delivering services (50%+
time dedicated to HR)• Remaining 320+ people have significant overlap with g p p g p
other admin. functions (e.g., pre-award, post-award, finance)
– 90+ additional people in multiple, central HR functions– Data* suggests a 127:1 ratio (employees to HR staff);
UCSF’s ratio = 81:1
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* College and University Professional Association for Human Resources (CUPA)

Operational Excellence:
OPERATIONAL EXCELLENCE RECOMMENDATIONS
pRecommendations• Over three years, beginning in FY 2011y , g g
– Focus on administrators’
k th i j bwork, their jobs and the technology
• Excellence
that supports UCSFRegionalize core
• Accountability
• Cost reduction– Regionalize core
services (HR, IT, Finance, Research Ad i i t ti )
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Administration)

Moving Toward Operational ExcellenceOPERATIONAL EXCELLENCE
HRIT
Finance
Subject MatterE t
Faculty FacultyExpertsPre awardPost award ChairChair Department
ManagerDepartment
Manager
• All departments have equal access to expert services, tools and systems
• Staff can develop expertise and a career path while working
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Staff can develop expertise and a career path, while working closely with a department and being part of a community of colleagues
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Operational Excellence
OPERATIONAL EXCELLENCE
Operational Excellence
• Two things are different compared to my initial statements to the campus:
Feb. 2010
Budget issue: $28M $40M
May 2010
Budget issue: $18MBudget issue: $28M - $40M
Operational ExcellenceTimeline: 1 year
Budget issue: $18M
Operational ExcellenceTimeline: 3 yearsTimeline: 1 year Timeline: 3 years
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Long-Term Issues
LONG-TERM ISSUES
Long Term Issues• Financial unknowns loom
S b d– State budget• “Hopes for budget compromise dim amid Calif deficit”
Associated Press, May 15, 2010
– NIH budget• “Lawmakers Renew Commitment to Science
Spending Despite Budget-Deficit Fears”Spending, Despite Budget-Deficit FearsChronicle of Higher Education, April 29, 2010
– Health care reform• “Jobs affected by Health Care Reform”
San Francisco Chronicle, April 26, 2010
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Long-Term Issues
LONG-TERM ISSUES
Long Term Issues
• Daunting increases in employee costs projected
– Employee, retiree health care costs:health care costs:
FY 2011: $17M*
FY 2013: $52M*
– Campus retirement contributions :
FY 2011: $60M+*
FY 2013: $120M+** All funds
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Operational Excellence: Process
OPERATIONAL EXCELLENCE PROCESS
Operational Excellence: Process
• Work Group Process– Included more than 380 individuals campus-wide and
from all schools– Campus-wide email updatesCampus wide email updates
• Sharing Work Group’s Recommendations– Focus Group meetings with department chairs and
faculty from all four schools– Information posted on budget web side
(budget.ucsf.edu)– Campus-wide informational emails, updates– Campus Town Hall meeting
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Operational Excellence: Feedback
OPERATIONAL EXCELLENCE FEEDBACK
Operational Excellence: Feedback• More detail requested to fully
comprehend proposed changescomprehend proposed changes• Need for better infrastructure,
especially information technology• Lack of confidence given prior
experiences– Concerns about losing services
needed to get the job done, especially specialized services within certain areas
– Concerns about losing good employees
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employees

Next Steps: Central Administration
NEXT STEPS
Next Steps: Central Administration• HR Service Center in Financial and
Administrative Services (FAS)Administrative Services (FAS)– Sept. 30: Migration of all FAS HR activities
• Finance Service Center in FAS• Finance Service Center in FAS– Dec. 2010: Center up and running
• Information Technology• Information Technology– Evaluation underway
• Other HR Finance Service Centers• Other HR, Finance Service Centers– Evaluation underway
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Next Steps: Schools
NEXT STEPS
Next Steps: Schools• School of Medicine has
formed 2 committeesChancellor Exec Cabinetformed 2 committees
• Dean’s Steering Committee (faculty, staff)
SOM( y, )
– Evaluate options; submit recommendations for implementation,
SOMDean
implementation, communication
• Department Managers Work Group (dept mgrs)
SteeringCommittee
Group (dept mgrs)– Evaluate options; assess the
programmatic, financial i li ti d i
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implications; design, implement delivery models
Dept Managers

Next Steps: Schools
NEXT STEPS
Next Steps: Schools
• Schools of Dentistry, Nursing, and Pharmacyy g y– Focusing on implementing local efficiencies – Interfacing with SOM and campus through
committee representation
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My Commitment
COMMITMENT
My Commitment• Keep listening
Freq ent comm nication especiall if the• Frequent communication, especially if the budget or plans change
• Be sensitive to personal impact on employees,Be sensitive to personal impact on employees, their families
• Advocate for our campus– Seeking additional resources– Decreasing administrative requirements that do not
advance our missionadvance our mission
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Long-Term Focus
LONG-TERM FOCUS
• Focus on our mission
Long-Term Focus
– patient care, discovery, education
• Advance our priorities• Continue investing in our future• Strategic planning
– Update campus strategic plan, with a particular emphasis on Healthcare Reform impact
– Launch next version of Long Range au c e t e s o o o g a geDevelopment Plan (LRDP)
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