Category Archives: Governance

Free Speech and Ohio Trustees

Inside Higher Ed: Free Speech and Ohio Trustees

Amid criticism from local and national quarters — criticism that Ohio University officials said was premature — a committee of the institution’s Board of Trustees on Thursday substantially revised a draft “statement of expectations” for the board’s own members that had been viewed as potentially gagging dissent and shielding university officials from scrutiny. The draft policy, which the board was reportedly supposed to take up at Thursday’s meeting, called for individual trustees to direct “concerns about university operations” to the university’s president and said board members should “publicly support” decisions once consensus on an issue is reached. The policy came under attack from the American Council of Trustees and Alumni (which said the guidelines would render the trustees “nothing more than potted plants”) and from The Post, Ohio’s student newspaper, whose editorial said: “The board wants to put on a public mask that hides the sometimes-ugly realities of running a university. It expects students and taxpayers to believe that this board and the administrators it hires are the arbiters of good decisions, and it refuses to answer to those who question that authority.” At Thursday’s meeting, the policy’s drafters insisted that they had never intended to interfere with members’ right to speak their minds, and the board’s governance committee went “virtually word by word” through the policy, said Sallly Linder, a university spokeswoman. “Everybody agreed to change any language in it that seemed an attempt in any way to result in the quashing of free speech,” Linder said, noting that the board would consider the revised policy, when it is redrafted, at its April meeting.

Saskatchewan: Black eye for FNUniv

Leader-Post: Black eye for FNUniv

A new controversy greets the embattled First Nations university

Canada’s university teachers are blackballing the First Nations University of Canada as a potential employer.

The 65,000-member Canadian Association of University Teachers (CAUT) has censured the FNUniv., the first time the association has imposed such sanctions on an institution in 29 years.

Canadian Faculty Group Censures First Nations U. Over Governance

The Chronicle News Blog: Canadian Faculty Group Censures First Nations U. Over Governance

The Canadian Association of University Teachers has censured the First Nations University of Canada, in Saskatchewan, the first time in nearly 30 years that the organization has voted to boycott a college or university.

First Nations is the only aboriginally controlled university in Canada. By imposing censure, the association asks that all professors, including those in other countries, not accept faculty jobs at First Nations, nor invitations to speak there or participate in its conferences.

UK: Universities reject more scrutiny

BBC: Universities reject more scrutiny

University chiefs say that there is no need for any further scrutiny

Universities have defended the effectiveness of self-regulation in maintaining standards – rejecting any need for further external scrutiny.

Baroness Warwick, chief executive of Universities UK, said that this did not mean there was a “free for all”.

Do as I Say, Not as I Do

Inside Higher Ed: Do as I Say, Not as I Do

When faculty members off the tenure track discuss their grievances, a common theme is that their employers pretend they are temporary employees when in fact they teach at the same institutions semester after semester, year after year. So when adjuncts find themselves bumped off health insurance or treated as non-employees between semesters, they talk about how such policies are both insulting and expensive to them. In fact, unions cite such treatment as evidence of why adjuncts need better job security protections.

Grievances About Grievance Procedures

Inside Higher Ed: Grievances About Grievance Procedures

When a faculty member feels wronged, there’s usually a system in place to turn to, whether or not it’s one that has broad support and trust.

It’s that last part that makes the difference between grievance procedures that enjoy broad buy-in from faculty, as opposed to a perception that they are a tool of the administration. At the University of Missouri at Columbia, where the system has undergone several overhauls in recent years, faculty members are again voting for a new set of procedures that would streamline the process and, among other things, place an administrator on the grievance resolution panel along with members of the faculty.

In Search of Self-Governance, Unionization?

Inside Higher Ed: In Search of Self-Governance, Unionization?

Ohio University’s Faculty Senate voted 23-18 with three abstentions Monday to endorse a movement toward unionization — calling on professors to “begin the process of organizing themselves into a collective bargaining unit for the purpose of negotiating a contractual agreement with the university, instituting meaningful shared governance, to which the university administration would be bound by law.”

Missouri: Dissident faculty concerned about grievance revisions

Columbia Tribune: Dissident faculty concerned about grievance revisions

The University of Missouri chapter of the American Association of University Professors focused the bulk of a meeting yesterday on how to dissuade fellow faculty members from voting to approve a modified grievance policy.

New President and Faculty Tangle at U. of the District of Columbia

The Chronicle: New President and Faculty Tangle at U. of the District of Columbia

Just a month after becoming president of the University of the District of Columbia, Allen L. Sessoms is locked in a battle with the institution’s faculty senate, which he wants to shut down and replace with a new forum of students and faculty and staff members.

Texas: Some BU faculty questioning what role they will have in choosing a new president

Waco Tribune: Some BU faculty questioning what role they will have in choosing a new president

A statement Thursday from Baylor University’s regent chairman has left some faculty wondering how valued they will be in the selection of a permanent president.

Kentucky: U of L trustees approve review of ‘collegial governance’ in wake of hostile work environment and failed greivance process

Courier-Journal: U of L trustees approve review of ‘collegial governance’

Prompted by allegations of improper hirings and management at its education college, the University of Louisville’s board of trustees voted yesterday to review the governance practices of all of U of L’s schools and colleges.
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The review was requested by the faculty senate in the wake of the ongoing federal investigation of former education dean Robert Felner, who is accused of misappropriating grant money. …

The board’s action yesterday brings the number of reviews and audits being conducted as a result of the Felner investigation to five. The others are:

A faculty senate review of the university’s grievance policies, which is expected to be completed in late November.

An audit of the College of Education and Human Development’s financial records.

An independent audit by the accounting firm Cotton and Allen of U of L’s business practices as they relate to research administration.

A blue-ribbon committee to review alleged improprieties in the awarding of an education doctorate to John Deasey in 2004.

Kentucky: Former Faculty Send Letter to Board of Trustees Detailing Misconduct by Former Dean Robert Felner

PageOneKentucky.com: 21 Former Faculty Send Letter to Board of Trustees

In what could only be considered an explosive development, twenty-one former University of Louisville faculty members who served under infamous Dean Robert Felner have penned a letter to the UofL Board of Trustees. The letter, which is in response to perceived inaction and mismanagement by President Jim Ramsey and Provost Shirley Willihnganz, addresses a number of issues that have not been appropriately addressed by the University.

Wisconsin/Kentucky: Robert Felner and the dark side of Parkside

The Badger Herald: The dark side of Parkside

by Badger Herald Editorial Board
Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Behind the tumultuous fanfare associated with the nomination of Biddy Martin as University of Wisconsin-Madison’s new chancellor, another chancellor search process taking place revealed a number of disastrous inadequacies in the screening of UW System chancellor candidates. The system, scrambling to find a replacement for outgoing Chancellor Jack Keating, settled on a Robert Felner to take the helm at Parkside starting in the fall.

Kentucky: White Washing Begins at the University of Louisville

PageOneKentucky.com: White Washing Begins at the University of Louisville

The Courier-Journal’s latest update on the Robert Felner scandal at the University of Louisville reveals that the chairman of the Board of Trustees wrote a letter saying he is satisfied with the actions taken by the university’s leadership regarding faculty complaints and the Felner investigation.

Seriously. After all of the super-negative news coverage and after all the negative facts about dozens and dozens of grievances and complaints. After UofL President Jim Ramsey called them “anonymous crap” and never apologized. After we have repeatedly published information painting a less-than-stable situation among the university’s leadership team, that is what the chairman had to say.

And Nancy Rodriguez doesn’t even bother to use the hundreds of email messages we published that proves otherwise.

You can pretty much bet that nothing is changing within the unversity. So don’t hold your breath.

Kentucky: Trustee chief backs U of L leaders in Felner inquiry

Courier-Journal: Trustee chief backs U of L leaders in Felner inquiry

Porter ‘satisfied’ on Felner inquiry

The chairman of the University of Louisville board of trustees sent a letter to the full board this week saying he is “satisfied” with actions taken by the school’s administration regarding faculty complaints and a federal investigation involving former education dean Robert Felner.

“We care about our employees — they are a source of our pride,” J. Chester Porter said in the letter. “We have worked with (U of L President) Jim (Ramsey) and (Provost) Shirley (Willihnganz) long enough to know they, too, care deeply about the welfare of all the University’s employees and students.”

Porter acknowledges in his letter that “given issues raised in the media, there is little doubt that Dean Felner’s personality may have accelerated the departure of some of the faculty.”

He then says that during Felner’s five-year tenure, Ramsey and Willihnganz “began to understand the tensions he created in the college” and notes it was the university’s investigation that “alerted the U.S. Attorney to investigate peculiarities” in the College of Education and Human Development.

Felner, who resigned from the university June 30 to take a chancellor position at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside that he later backed out of, is the focus of a federal investigation sparked by his possible misappropriation of a $694,000 federal grant.

Kentucky: Higher-ed council realigned

Courier-Journal: Higher-ed council realigned
It’s to fall under governor’s office

FRANKFORT, Ky. — Gov. Steve Beshear signed an order yesterday that attaches the Council on Postsecondary Education to his office, saying it will strengthen the state’s hand in recruiting a new higher education chief.
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The restructuring shifts the council from the Education Cabinet, where it was moved by Beshear’s predecessor, Ernie Fletcher. He had said he wanted it insulated from political influence.

Beshear said at a press conference that the council’s president will become one of his top advisers, but that the council will remain independent. The council is the state’s coordinating agency for Kentucky’s public universities and community and technical colleges.

British Columbia: CNC Faculty to Hold Rally and Info Session Tonight

250 News: CNC Faculty to Hold Rally and Info Session Tonight

Prince George, B.C. – There will be a rally and information event this evening at the College of New Caledonia Prince George Campus.

The CNC Faculty Association recently passed a motion of non confidence in the governance of the college by the College Board, the President and the administration.

One-Third of West Virginia U.’s Faculty Meets, Reaffirming Calls for President’s Ouster

The Chronicle: One-Third of West Virginia U.’s Faculty Meets, Reaffirming Calls for President’s Ouster

A gathering of more than one-third of all full-time faculty members at West Virginia University voted overwhelmingly Wednesday to call on their institution’s president, Michael S. Garrison, to resign over his involvement in the awarding of an unearned executive M.B.A. degree to the daughter of the state’s governor.

Changes Seem Unlikely For University System

Tampa Tribune: Changes Seem Unlikely For University System

TALLAHASSEE – A controversial proposal to overhaul the state’s university system is on life support.

Instituting an elected education commissioner and gutting the power of the board that oversees the state’s higher education system is a top priority for Senate President Ken Pruitt, R-Port St. Lucie.

Boards Need More Student Voices, One Student Trustee Says

The Chronicle News Blog: Boards Need More Student Voices, One Student Trustee Says

Boston — Judging by the attendees at this week’s national conference on trusteeship, students don’t have much of a voice on boards. Of the more than 1,000 trustees registered, only a few are students.