faculty members
have wanted to play a more prominent role in University
planning decisions and community relations for years.
Now, the Senate’s planning and policy board has
recommended adding professors to the provost’s
capital planning group and creating a new faculty committee
on community affairs.
When local surveys ask about Stanford as a property
owner and a neighbor, “there are as many negative
opinions as positive ones,” geophysics professor
and board chair Mark Zoback, MS ’73, PhD ’75,
told the senate in June. In University-commissioned
polls, residents tend to give Stanford high marks for
its performance as an academic institution, but lower
responses for the University as a supporter of public
schools and as a landowner.
With 3,500 more employees working at Stanford today
than there were 10 years ago, the senate policy board
also called for some brakes on campus growth. Noting
that much of the increase can be traced to the success
of the medical center and the Stanford Linear Accelerator
Center, Zoback urged the University to provide the social
sciences and humanities with nurturing and funding to
ensure that Stanford remains a “balanced institution.”