GeminiFocus April 2016 | Page 12

Inger Jørgensen A Transition Coming to an End Gemini’s Transition Program 2011-2015. Figure 1. Savings from the Transition Program projects. Amounts are in thousands of dollars. In 2010 the United Kingdom announced its intention to leave the Gemini Partnership. This prompted the Observatory to plan for a roughly 25% reduction in its annual operations budget, which translates to about $6.5 million in 2012 dollars. To handle this situation, we developed a plan that touched all areas of the Observatory, including nighttime science operations, energy consumption, maintenance schedules for printers, and just about everything in between. Thanks to the Observatory’s available cash reserves, we could stretch the implementation through 2015. The plan, called the Transition Program, consisted of three general areas of focus: staff reductions, general reductions, and the implementation of specific projects. Staff reductions contributed about $3.5 million to the required savings. General reductions in nonlabor expenses — enabled by tight tracking of budgets, reduction in travel expenses, lower computer prices, etc. — saved about $1.5 million. And the implementation of about 25 projects (aimed at reducing non-labor costs or enabling operations with a smaller staff ) also secured about $1.5 million, of which about $400,000 are still to be realized in 2016. Figure 1 gives an overview of these savings. Some of the changes resulting from the Transition Program are visible to our users while many \