Information User Funding Model
The Information User (IU) Funding Model shares the cost of certain IT infrastructure and services with UCSC units based on types of full-time employees and associated weightings. This guide includes information about the current assessment amount, as well as background and historical context on the funding model.
Questions about the IU Funding Model?
For questions about the Information User Funding model, including about the IT services funded by the assessment, please contact Laura Persson in ITS.
Current Information User assessment
For fiscal year 2024-25, the Information User assessment per weighted FTE will be $1705/year.
The Information User model defines the following categories of users and associated weightings:
- Information User non-student payroll FTE (100%): This population pays the full IU assessment and includes most faculty and staff who typically use basic network and phone connectivity services as part of their normal job duties.
- Other Information User non-student payroll (30%): This population pays 30% of the full IU assessment and includes those FTE who do not consistently use basic network and phone connectivity services as part of their normal job duties (e.g., custodians and food service workers).
- Graduate major count (50%): This population pays 50% of the full IU assessment.
- Residential student headcount (24.5%): This population pays 24.5% of the full IU assessment and includes students living on campus in a dorm or apartment.
For questions about the weightings, please contact Paul Scalisi in Budget Analysis & Planning.
IT services funded and eligibility criteria
Information Technology services funded
For the 2024-25 fiscal year, the IU assessment fully or partially funds the following IT services:
- Network and Wireless
- Telephone
- IT Security and Policy
- Accounts
- Standard Desktop Support
- Web
- Data Center
- E-mail and Calendaring
- Physical Security
- Zoom Conferencing
Eligibility criteria
Services that are funded by the IU assessment must meet the following criteria:
- Service is provided by ITS
- Population of users is broad and campuswide
- Service provides a basic level of network and telecommunications connectivity or another basic IT service that supports productivity or minimizes risk
- Service level agreements are established and costs are discernible and allocable
- Services included should not undermine campus’s ability to diversify resources
All services listed in ITS’s service catalog are reviewed and determined to be eligible or ineligible for Information User funding (see Eligible Information User Services List). Given the broad nature of the criteria used to determine whether a service is eligible to be funded by the IU assessment and ongoing evolution of IT services, the specific IT services that IU funds have changed slightly over time.
For any questions about the IT services funded by the IU assessment, please contact Laura Persson in ITS.
Background on the IU Model
In 2007, then-Executive Vice Chancellor/Campus Provost (EVC/CP) Dave Kliger charged a group, known as the Funding Model Advisory Group (FMAG), with creating a funding model for universally required IT services and infrastructure based on a “user-based” metric.
The implementation of the IU funding model allowed the campus to move away from the antiquated port/jack and line-based charging metric. Additionally, the IU model was intended to:
- Prepare for cost recovery in an increasingly wireless communication environment
- Institutionalize the principle that all units benefit to some extent from the central IT infrastructure and must share in its cost
- Provide a rational basis for funding increases for the campus investment in shared IT services
- Reduce security risk of new network devices (hubs, routers, unsecured wireless networks)
- Move from the current port/line/jack charge model to a FTE-based metric (IU model)
- Increase the number of services provided in a single unit (user) charge
History of annual IU assessments
- 2008-09: $1286/IU/Year
- 2009-10: $1286/IU/Year
- 2010-11: $1286/IU/Year
- 2011-12: $1286/IU/Year
- 2012-13: $1333/IU/Year
- 2013-14: $1333/IU/Year
- 2014-15: $1397/IU/Year
- 2015-16: $1397/IU/Year
- 2016-17: $1459/IU/Year
- 2017-18: $1505/IU/Year
- 2018-19: $1505/IU/Year
- 2019-20: $1548/IU/Year
- 2020-21: $1609/IU/Year
- 2021-22: $1663/IU/Year (per employee FTE, non-student); $2343/IU/Year (per residential student FTE)
- 2022-23: $1705/IU/Year
- 2023-24: $1705/IU/Year
- 2024-25: $1705/IU/Year
Historical documentation
Frequently asked questions
Do we need to submit a request to add network and telephone jacks?
Yes. Submit an IT Service Request for changing or adding to telephone and network services. ITS staff provide service changes through recharge rates.
- Campus Recharge Rates (see page 10 for ITS rates)
- Telephone Services
- Network Services
Who shall I contact regarding Information User questions?
Contact itsbill@ucsc.edu
Do we need to disconnect unused or unwanted telephone or network jacks even though there are no ongoing charges for keeping them active due to the Information User Assessment?
Yes. Keep your unit’s services up-to-date for the following two reasons:
- Liability: units will be liable for charges incurred on telephones that are left active. The latest FOAPAL assigned to the service will be billed for chargeable calls and service features.
- Capacity: equipment supporting communications networks has limited capacity. Disconnecting unwanted and unused services benefits the university by allowing operating efficiently now and preventing higher costs in the future, plus updating historic records whenever staff change locations or leave the university.
Do I still need to continue reviewing and sending in FOAPAL, units and/or subscriber names assigned to network and telephone jacks?
Yes. These billing components need to be reviewed and maintained to ensure correct billing for chargeable services and to disconnect unwanted services.
How does my division manage the annual Information User Assessment?
Contact your divisional business office.