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Collin College cracks down on COVID critics and union organizers, dismissing two professors and warning a third
Collin College in Texas is already under 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 microscope for inappropriately responding to a faculty member鈥檚 online political speech. Now, the college鈥檚 leadership has thrown caution to the wind.
Senior administrators at the college directed that professor Audra Heaslip and professor Suzanne Jones when their contracts expire 鈥 despite recommendations from the college鈥檚 faculty and staff that the two faculty members鈥 contracts be renewed.
The reasons? The faculty members criticized the college鈥檚 response to COVID-19 (a pandemic that college district president H. Neil Matkin shrugged off in August as 鈥溾 and comparable to motor vehicle deaths), exerted 鈥渆xternal pressure鈥 on the college (apparently by talking to the media), and formed a chapter of a non-collective bargaining union, the .
Today, FIREsent a letter to Collin College, explaining 鈥 again 鈥 that the First Amendment protects the rights of faculty members at public institutions to speak as private citizens about matters of public concern, like the institution鈥檚 efforts to respond to a public health crisis. Our letter also explains that the First Amendment protects the right to form and join organizations, including unions. The institution may not be required to recognize or bargain with unions, but engaging in expressive association with your allies is a cornerstone right of freedom of expression.
Over the course of this pandemic, we鈥檝e too often seen institutions鈥 policies and practices inhibit the ability of students and faculty to raise concerns about how their institutions are handling the pandemic. These rights are particularly important in the employment context, where students and faculty may not only be raising concerns about their workplaces, but also their homes.
Collin College is in another league altogether.
Before President Matkin鈥檚 controversial remarks, the college鈥檚 Faculty Council adopted a resolution 鈥 spearheaded by professor Heaslip 鈥 calling for more aggressive measures to safeguard students and faculty from the virus. In response, the college鈥檚 leadership agreed to some of the proposals. Matkin鈥檚 email sharing that response, however, struck an ominous chord, claiming that the faculty he spoke to were unanimously opposed to shutting down the campus and suggested that faculty critics were speaking out of turn:
I find it ironic that some of the chief proponents of closing our campuses and going fully online failed to speak to the faculty they were charged to represent. We will explore this further together as time goes on.
That exploration would have to wait. Matkin鈥檚 earlier remarks downplaying the pandemic provided kindling for the local media, which contrasted Collin College鈥檚 COVID-19 efforts unfavorably with other local institutions. One outlet that 鈥淸w]hile the caliber of information varies, Collin College is noteworthy because it refuses to publicly divulge anything鈥 about the impact of the virus on students and faculty. (Sounds familiar!)
Then Iris Meda 鈥 a Collin College instructor who had come out of retirement to train future nurses and expected to teach online 鈥 . Collin College鈥檚 leadership informed Meda鈥檚 colleagues of her death, without identifying her, in the twenty-second paragraph of an email. Media reports in the wake of Meda鈥檚 death, the college鈥檚 in December, and its belated launch of on the virus, Matkin鈥檚 earlier remarks downplaying the virus.
Against this backdrop, faculty at the college have been organizing. Faculty members formed a chapter of the Texas Faculty Association, which 鈥 because Texas is a right-to-work state 鈥 is a non-collective bargaining union of faculty members at a . That chapter was , linking to Jones鈥 personal (not college) email address.
Last week, the college鈥檚 administration retaliated against its critics. Heaslip and Jones, who make up two-thirds of the officers of the burgeoning Collin College chapter of the TFA, were both summoned to meetings within hours of one another. During those meetings, administrators informed the professors that their contracts would not be renewed. Although at every step in the chain, those responsible for evaluating the professors鈥 effectiveness at their jobs 鈥 teaching 鈥 recommended that they be rehired, the college鈥檚 senior leadership refused the recommendations.
Why? In Heaslip鈥檚 case, administrators cited her efforts to put 鈥渆xternal鈥 pressure on the college by publicly criticizing the administration and for not being supportive of the administration鈥檚 goals 鈥渙nce the Board determined鈥 that it would reopen the college. (Heaslip was in, among other media reports, the article that first brought Matkin鈥檚 incendiary comments to light.)
Jones, meanwhile, was faulted for twice mentioning the College鈥檚 name without permission. First, she signed a by including her name and professional background, just as the other signatories did: 鈥淪uzanne Jones, education professor, Collin College.鈥 Second, the TFA鈥檚 website and Jones鈥 personal email address in noting that it had a chapter there.
As our letter explains, all of those things are protected speech. Faculty members are not required to be supportive in public and critical only in speaking to their supervisors. So, too, are they allowed to say where they work when signing petitions 鈥 a common practice especially among faculty members 鈥 or creating organizations composed of other people who also work there.
The brazen, nakedly retaliatory action may reflect the college鈥檚 belief that the form of retaliation 鈥 the decision not to renew contracts rather than terminating the faculty members 鈥 shields its administrators. (Indeed, the College鈥檚 initial response to the controversy was to singularly that it 鈥渄id not fire鈥 the professors.)
Not so.
The First Amendment doesn鈥檛 just apply to firings; it prevents retaliation by government actors for protected speech, including decisions not to rehire someone because of their protected speech.
The First Amendment doesn鈥檛 just apply to firings; it prevents retaliation by government actors for protected speech, including decisions not to rehire someone because of their protected speech. This has been the unmistakable holding of the Supreme Court and the .
Heaslip and Jones are not alone.
Unfortunately, this is the second time we wrote to Collin College just this week. On Monday, FIREsent a letter to the college鈥檚 leadership sharing our concerns with a 鈥淟evel 1 warning鈥 issued to professor Lora Burnett, who 鈥 after having already faced pressure from the college over her extramural political speech 鈥 earned renewed ire from the College鈥檚 leadership over a tweet about a former professor who recently died, apparently from COVID-19.
FIRE will continue to monitor efforts to suppress expression at Collin College, and we urge its leadership and board members to take seriously their to the First Amendment and the institution鈥檚 express policy to 鈥渦phold vigorously the principles of academic freedom and to protect the faculty from . . . censorship.鈥
This is not what a 鈥渧igorous鈥 defense looks like.
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