Loyola University • New Orleans • Volume 101 • Issue 01 • January 27, 2023
M THE MAROON JANUARY 27, 2023
Hole left in campus’ heart after professor’s death By Heather Rabassa hnrabass@my.loyno.edu
Infographic by Patrick Hamilton/The Maroon
DAFFRON TO MAKE BIG CHANGES University’s interim president shares plans to improve Loyola
By Kloe Witt
inspire further change at Loyola,” said Daffron.
kgwitt@my. loyno.edu
Funding Campaign Several changes are on the way to Loyola’s campus and community, according to interim president the Rev. Justin Daffron, S.J. at a town hall meeting on Dec. 8. Daffron discussed several new initiatives at the meeting that he and his administration have developed to make the university more competitive with other institutions. These initiatives include a broad compensation package for Loyola faculty that would be rolled out over the next three years, a new residential hall to be completed by 2025, and a multi-million dollar fundraising campaign that will help fund new projects across campus. Daffron also enlisted a panel of experts to advise his administration on different ways he can create a more competitive marketplace for students and faculty. The ideas included partnering with other schools to reduce costs in areas such as human resources and information technology. “We’ve had some internal discussions, but are still in the ideation phase of what might
At the town hall meeting, Daffron said that most of the funding for these plans is expected to come from an ambitious fundraising campaign that will provide a $150 million investment in Loyola, and further outlined the three categories of investment: mind, body, and spirit. Daffron said that $85 million will be allotted to the mind portion of the campaign. “The campaign will provide investments in academics for faculty research and endowed professorships,” he said. Daffron and the board of trustees said they plan to establish a “Faculty-Staff Excellence Fund” to reward the work of faculty and staff. $30 million of the original $150 million investment will go toward the body portion of the campaign, Daffron said. This would include upgrades to existing buildings on campus, such as residential halls, athletic facilities, and general campus improvements. $35 million will be raised to invest in the
“Jesuit, Catholic identity, as well as in diversity, equity, and inclusion” in support of the spirit portion of this campaign, according to Daffron. However, Loyola’s administration offered no clear answers when asked where this money would specifically go and what investing in these criteria means. Most of the money expected to be received during the fundraising campaign will offset the cost for the new residential hall, Daffron said. Compensation Increase As part of the new compensation plan, Daffron has proposed cost of living adjustments, retirement contributions, and addressing gaps discovered by a compensation study the university commissioned in 2021. While the study’s results remain confidential, Daffron said they will help create “pay structures that are both competitive in the marketplace and equitable for all employees.”
See EXPANSION, page 9
NEWS 2 | CRIME MAP 3 | WORLDVIEW 5 | LIFE & TIMES 7 | SPORTS 8 | EDITORIAL 10 | OPINION 11
FIND US ONLINE AT LOYOLAMAROON.COM
Loyola Criminology and Justice professor Kelly Frailing will be remembered most for her laugh and dedication to serving others, said Rae Taylor, an associate professor and chair of the department of criminology and justice. Frailing died on Dec. 11, 2022 at 45 years old. She was loved and respected by all within the criminology department at Loyola, according to Taylor. “She was such an incredibly dedicated professor who loved her students like they were family, and so that emotion will be here as long as we’re all here,” Taylor said. Frailing was one of the world’s leading experts on crime and disaster, a field she co-founded, and also held deep knowledge in other areas, such as mental health in the criminal system and specialty courts, according to Loyola’s website. Frailing received her PhD in criminology at University of Cambridge in England in 2010 before teaching at Texas A&M International University, and then at Loyola University in 2015. Frailing taught at Loyola for over seven years, and developed a strong connection to the city after receiving her master’s in criminology and justice at Loyola in 2007, Taylor said. Frailing started her master’s degree in 2005, right before Hurricane Katrina. Not having anywhere to evacuate to, Frailing was welcomed with open arms into the family of her mentor, Sociology, Criminology and Justice Professor Emeritus Dee Wood Harper, Jr., according to Taylor. It was during this time that she became close friends with Harper’s daughter, Miriam Denis-Harper. “When it became apparent that Katrina was coming our way, my parents suggested that I offer to bring Kelly with me to Birmingham, Alabama for the evacuation. We always loved to retell this story and had a whole Abbott and Costello routine down,” Denis-Harper said.
See FRAILING, page 2
FB.COM/THELOYOLAMAROON @LOYOLA_MAROON @LOYOLA_MAROON