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Essex County College tells The Intercept its termination of Lisa Durden is being mischaracterized
Last summer, Essex County College terminated one of its adjunct faculty members, Lisa Durden, after she appeared on Fox News to debate Tucker Carlson about a Black Lives Matter event. Essex鈥檚 president that the college had been 鈥渋mmediately inundated with feedback from students, faculty and prospective students and their families expressing frustration, concern and even fear鈥 about 鈥渢he views expressed by a College employee,鈥 burdening administrators with the 鈥渞esponsibility to investigate those concerns.鈥
Earlier this week, FIREpublished the records we obtained through a public records request 鈥 records obtained only after we sued the college for ignoring our requests. Those records showed that, contrary to having been 鈥渋mmediately inundated鈥 with feedback, Essex received one critical email in the first thirteen days after Durden鈥檚 appearance on Fox News.
Yesterday, Essex :
In the past week, statements have been publicized which mischaracterize Essex County College鈥檚 actions last summer relating to an adjunct who formerly taught at the College.
Essex County College utilizes hundreds of adjunct instructors each semester and, as a matter of course, each is advised they will receive tentative teaching assignments that can be withdrawn at any time.
In addition, the College provided a good faith response consistent with the Open Public Records Act when responding to records requests pertaining to this matter.
Essex County College is entering our 50th year of providing a top quality education to Essex County residents and was ranked in the top 50 community colleges in the nation for 2017 by College Choice. We will continue to provide our students with the best education possible as well as the tools to become future leaders in whichever field they choose.
As a general rule, a college鈥檚 claims of being mischaracterized are most credible when they鈥檙e accompanied by some explanation of how the college is being mischaracterized. Essex doesn鈥檛 attempt to provide any such explanation. Before we published our story, we shared our analysis of the documents with Essex and twice invited their response. Essex chose not to respond to our request then, and its response now doesn鈥檛 explain the gulf between its claims and what its records show.
More worryingly, Essex doesn鈥檛 even bother to offer the usual perfunctory statement about how they support freedom of expression, but nevertheless had to take some censorious action. Instead, Essex says that its 鈥渉undreds of adjunct instructors鈥 can lose their teaching assignments 鈥渁t any time.鈥
That鈥檚 not true. A public institution can鈥檛 withdraw appointments for a reason that violates the First Amendment rights of the professor, which is precisely what happened to Durden. The implication of Essex鈥檚 statement, then, is that none of its 鈥渉undreds of adjunct instructors鈥 retain First Amendment rights. In the absence of a tenure system or administrators willing to stand up for adjunct faculty members when controversy arises, the First Amendment is the only legal protection adjunct faculty have.
Essex鈥檚 administration did not stand up for Durden. To the contrary, they claimed that a controversy had 鈥渋mmediately鈥 impacted their campus 鈥 a claim that is not reflected in their own records 鈥 and cited the 鈥渇ear鈥 created by Durden鈥檚 views as a justification for taking adverse action against her, ultimately resulting in her termination. This action is inconsistent with Essex鈥檚 obligations under the First Amendment and could needlessly jeopardize Essex鈥檚 , which Essex to demonstrate a commitment to freedom of expression.
As for Essex鈥檚 claim that it responded in 鈥済ood faith鈥 and 鈥渃onsistent with鈥 New Jersey鈥檚 public records law? Essex failed to respond even though it asked for (and was given) numerous extensions, stopped responding even when we warned them that we were willing to file a lawsuit, and only produced the requested records after we filed that lawsuit 鈥 a lawsuit we waited to file until just shy of the . You be the judge.
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