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Guidelines on Phased Retirement
College Guidelines on Phased-Retirement
May 1, 1995
Upon recommendation by the Board of Regents, the Legislature, in July of
1994, adopted a phased-retirement program for implementation by institutions
in the Regents system. Attached to the College's guidelines are the state
guidelines for participation in the Regents voluntary phased-retirement program.
Procedural guidelines, issued by the Office of Academic Affairs, are also
appended.
The Regents plan provides flexibility to universities, and units within them,
in administering phased-retirement. In consultation with department chairs
and program directors, the College Office offers the following guidelines.
Our hope is that phased-retirement will mutually serve the needs of individual
faculty and departments. These guidelines are intended to help faculty and
departments achieve that end.
The College phased-retirement guidelines seek to provide mutual benefits for
professors and their departments in the College. It continues health insurance
coverage for a professor while it enables departments to better plan their
courses. At the same time, both the department (as a representative of the
College) and the individual professor incur obligations. We attempt to outline
here both the benefits and obligations for each party.
- A faculty member, upon eligibility (i.e., age 55 or older, with at least
ten years of full-time service in the Regents system), may request phased-retirement
at any time, subject to the approval of the department and the College. Faculty
who elect phased-retirement must retire within five years. A faculty member
may opt for a maximum initial appointment of 0.75 FTE and a minimum of 0.25
FTE. These levels should be negotiated between a professor and the department.
While a routine phased-retirement might begin at 0.75 or 0.50 FTE, and then
lower to 0.25 FTE over the years, there is no required pattern. The faculty
member should discuss options with the department chair and agree upon the
approved combination of activities for the fractional appointment. It is
important to note, however, that once the reduction in appointment has been
established, the appointment cannot be increased at a later time (e.g., a
0.75 FTE appointment cannot be restored to a 1.0 FTE; a 0.25 FTE appointment
cannot be increased to 0.50 FTE, etc.).
- Space constraints may require that the office assigned to the faculty member
on phased retirement will not be the one the professor had formerly used;
however, every effort should be made by the chair to provide an office/laboratory
that is suitable for the professor in the principal arena of the department.
Professors may retain for office use any computer equipment they used when
they elected for phased-retirement. This is a matter that varies across departments.
- Professors who are a member of the regular Graduate Faculty are eligible
to apply for Faculty Scholarly Travel Funds through the Office of Research,
Graduate Studies, and Public Service. Faculty on phased-retirement can serve
on any of the Standing Committees of the College. Departmental voting rights,
however, are a matter of departmental by-laws.
- Professors who elect phased-retirement are able, subject to the constraints
of the Graduate School, to direct dissertations, master's theses, and Ph.D.
examining committees. There is no constraint based on level of appointment.
Such professors are welcome and are expected to advise both undergraduate
and graduate students, and they should also maintain regular office hours.
- Phased-retirement professors are eligible to apply for summer teaching
appointments, consistent with departmental policies. These are matters best
left to negotiations between the chair and the faculty electing phased-retirement.
Additional information on phased-retirement may be obtained from the Office
of the Provost or Staff Benefits.
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