Posted on 08/26/2005 8:11:18 AM PDT by freespirited
The summer of 2005 has been an embarrassing one at the University of Wisconsin at Madison.
First, the university came under fire when it was revealed that Paul W. Barrows, the vice chancellor for student affairs who quit last year, did so because he had had an affair with a graduate student. That Barrows stayed on the universitys payroll infuriated legislators, and focused attention on how the university treats employees who get into trouble.
Now some lawmakers have shifted their attention to professors three of whom remain employees even though they are either in jail or headed there.
On Friday, Roberto Coronado, a professor of physiology at Madison, was sentenced to eight years in prison after he entered a plea of no contest on three felony counts of repeated sexual contact with a child. While the university is seeking to dismiss Coronado, he is appealing that decision and remains an employee, even though his incarceration prevents him from being on campus.
Because he has unused vacation time, he is currently receiving his salary $137,641 and will continue to do so until he uses up his vacation time, at which point he will be on an unpaid leave, pending the outcome of his appeals of his dismissal.
Scott Suder, a state representative, on Tuesday called for Coronado to be dismissed immediately. In a letter sent to Chancellor John D. Wiley, he questioned the universitys track record in dealing with employees. In a statement, Suder noted that Coronados victims were girls between the ages of 5 and 9, and said, For the sake of the innocent victims who fell prey to this predator, the university should take immediate action and clearly outline the steps it will take to remove him from the universitys payroll.
The university says it is doing just that, but that due process doesnt disappear because a professors crime is particularly vile. The appeal process which includes constitutional guarantees of due process is under way, said a statement from the university.
The other cases involve Lewis Keith Cohen, who has been sentenced to 30 days in jail for exposing a child to harmful material, and Steven Clark, a human oncology professor serving a one-year jail term for felony stalking. Cohen and Clark are both being reviewed for possible dismissal under Wisconsins regulations for firing professors.
But Clark, whose salary is $67,761, continues to be paid his vacation time. Cohen who has not yet started to serve his sentence and who did not respond to a request for comment works on a nine-month contract and so is not paid in the summer. His salary is $72,856. If he returns for the fall semester, he would be paid, but if he is forced to miss work for jail, he would be put on leave without pay.
Faculty members who are involved in reviewing these cases take them very seriously, said James S. Donnelly Jr., a professor of history and a member of the Committee on Faculty Rights and Responsibilities. Donnelly stressed that he could comment only on general approaches to such cases because his committee may be involved in dealing with some of the professors whose cases are in the news.
He said that when a faculty member is convicted in a court of law of a crime of moral turpitude, it is normal for administrators to seek the committees approval for a dismissal. In such a case the concern that I or any other member of the Madison faculty in good standing would have is a double one: Is there clear and convincing evidence of moral turpitude, and have the legally required university procedures for dismissal been carefully followed?
WHAT...Ward Churchill ain't in the Cooler...still?!?!?
Interesting, I thought that was a generally accepted practice in Academia.
Another "fine" investment of the Wiscowsin tax dollar...
That last sentence is priceless. It shows you that when it comes to their own, the faux socialists at Madison are a bunch of elitists who don't trust the jury system to get it right.
They don't trust common sense either.
Bill OReilly had this on yesterday and mentioned that this University is one of the most liberal in American history. True?
"the vice chancellor for student affairs who quit last year, did so because he had had an affair with a graduate student."
When I was in grad school, boinking a prof was practically a graduation requirement.
Herein lies the problem. The administrators have abdicated their responsibility to a committee. It should be "normal" for the administrator to do the job compensated for and fire the employee immediately on conviction.
eight years for repeated sexual contact with girls aged 5 and 9? Looks like the courst ain't too hard on them either.
Getting rid of tenure would help. It creates a dependent class of useless drones.
Due process needs to be followed. Freepers, remember that someone can be falsely accused. Now it is the easiest thing to do. As people wrote, it used to be assumed and OK to have affairs with students. Now it is not. (Always wrong and felony stupid, in my opinion)
Would you have someone one canned upon hearing the accusation? Then there would be no job ever again. That could be done with a conservative, a Creationist, etc.
Due process could be speeded up, but it is a contract provision that cannot be changed afterwards.
The professors are hired and part of that process includes an employee handbook containing the policies of the university. These policies are contractual and cannot legally be broken by the university.
But if the professor breaks the binding contract, wouldn't that null and void said contract?
A good start. (Bada-boom)
It has some stiff competition from those universities located in the People's Republics of Berkeley and Ann Arbor, as well as from some private schools, but yes, I would say true.
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