海角社区

Campus appoints first ombudsperson: Susan Kee-Young Park

The chancellor鈥檚 office this week announced the appointment of Susan Kee-Young Park as the campus鈥檚 first ombudsperson, to provide confidential and independent conflict resolution services to faculty and staff.

Park

Park previously served as ombudsperson at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston and the University of Hawaii, Manoa. For the last year, she has taken intermittent assignments with the Federal Emergency Management Agency, going to disaster sites to help FEMA employees problem-solve and deal with workplace conflict.

鈥淪everal campus groups recommended that we create an ombuds office; I strongly believe we need one, and we are very happy to open this office with such an experienced and effective ombuds,鈥 Chancellor Linda P.B. Katehi said.

鈥淪usan has a strong track record in mediation and conflict resolution in universities, for the courts, for the public and for the federal government,鈥 Katehi said, 鈥渁nd now she will bring her skills to 海角社区.鈥  

Park is due to start her new job on June 3. She will report administratively to the chancellor鈥檚 office, but will operate independently to resolve conflicts in an informal and impartial manner.

As an attorney, hearing officer and judge for many years, Park participated often in the 鈥渇ormal鈥 process of dispute resolution. Eventually, she found the 鈥渋nformal鈥 process more to her liking 鈥 and became an ombudsperson.

鈥淭he parties tend to have their fundamental interests better met, and the solutions are more enduring and more creative,鈥 Park said by phone from New York, where she is on a FEMA assignment.

She is a member of the International Ombudsman Association, which has four guiding principles for ombuds work: informality, confidentiality, impartiality and independence.

鈥淧eople can feel safe in speaking with the ombudsman, because what they say is held in confidence,鈥 Park said.

The ombudsperson, she said, helps people in identifying their options, making their own choices 鈥 and moving forward. The ombudsman also presents training sessions 鈥渟o people can become more conflict-competent.鈥

In a university, Park said, the ombudsperson deals with a wide range of conflicts and communication issues in a wide variety of ways, with individuals and teams.

海角社区 joins all its sister schools but one (Santa Cruz) in having an ombudsperson.

Katehi announced last November that an ombudsperson鈥檚 office would be established, saying at the time: 鈥淔aculty and staff need and deserve to have this important resource available to them.鈥

While the campus encourages all members of the 海角社区 community to express themselves freely in an honest, candid and respectful manner, the chancellor said, there are times when those expressions result in conflict.

Now, with an ombudsperson, there will be an established and effective way to resolve those issues in a constructive fashion.

The ombudsperson will not replace the university鈥檚 formal grievance, investigative and appeal processes. Rather, the ombudsperson will offer an alternative for resolving complaints, concerns or problems in a timely and private manner.

If a matter cannot be resolved through the ombuds office, the ombudsperson will advise of other options and resources. Student Affairs and Graduate Studies will continue to assist students in resolving their concerns.

A trainer in 鈥極mbudsman 101鈥

Park, a native of Hawaii, earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree in psychology, with distinction, from the University of Hawaii, and stayed there for law school, serving as associate editor of the law review en route to receiving her Juris Doctor degree. Subsequently, she received a Master of Laws degree from Yale Law School.

She worked primarily in business bankruptcy and commercial litigation for a number of law firms in Honolulu and elsewhere, and ran her own office as well, before starting her ombuds career at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2006-09. During that time at Manoa she served as a national trainer for the International Ombudsman Association鈥檚 鈥淥mbudsman 101鈥 program.

After leaving the university, and before going to the MD Anderson Cancer Center, she served as a mediator for the Mediation Center of the Pacific, Honolulu, and helped in the training of other mediators there; and served on the U.S. Bankruptcy Court Mediation Panel for Hawaii and the Hawaii Supreme Court鈥檚 Appellate Mediation Panel.

She previously served the state of Hawaii as insurance commissioner, and as a hearing officer in the Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs.

She has served as an adjunct faculty member in business law at the University of Hawaii and Hawaii Pacific University. She also has been affiliated with Creighton University Law School鈥檚 Werner Institute, developing and teaching a course on organizational ombuds principles and practices, and conducting a 鈥渢rain the trainer鈥 webinar on bullying in academia and the workplace.

Park is a practitioner member of the Association for Conflict Resolution and a member of the American Bar Association鈥檚 Dispute Resolution Section.

She is certified as an organization ombudsman practitioner and has tallied more than 250 hours of training in alternative dispute resolution training, covering such topics as mediation, facilitation and coaching skills.

Media Resources

Dave Jones, Dateline, 530-752-6556, dljones@ucdavis.edu

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