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Faculty Senate Censures LSU President for Firing Tenured Professor

This past June, Louisiana State University (LSU) President F. King Alexander fired tenured associate professor Teresa Buchanan for sexual harassment, ignoring a faculty panel that unanimously recommended that she keep her job.

As has been reported here on The Torch and elsewhere, Professor Buchanan鈥檚 transgression (if one can call it that) was to occasionally use vulgar language in class. She gave unvarnished feedback to students, which prompted a few complaints about her tone in student evaluations. And one student took personally remarks Professor Buchanan made in class that students鈥 significant others become increasingly less willing to make allowances for the rigors of the program as time goes on. But the idea that these isolated, blunt remarks created a 鈥渉ostile learning environment鈥 is ridiculous.

On October 6, 2015, LSU鈥檚 Faculty Senate took the extraordinary step of censuring President Alexander, Provost Stuart Bell, and Dean Damon Andrew of the College of Human Sciences and Education for terminating Professor Buchanan鈥檚 employment. The resolution states:

Be it therefore resolved: That LSU Chancellor-President F. King Alexander, Provost Stuart Bell, and Dean Damon Andrew of the College of Human Sciences and Education be censured for their failure to adhere to due process standards in faculty review proceedings and for their pursuit of confusing, dangerous, and untenable standards for dismissal of a tenured faculty member at Louisiana State University. And

Be it further resolved: That the Faculty Senate requests of LSU鈥檚 administration that the decision in the case of Associate Professor Teresa Buchanan shall be reversed and all necessary and continuing matters related to her case be considered in a proper PM-35/PS-109 review process.

In the preamble to the resolution, the LSU faculty aptly calls the 鈥渟tandard鈥 for firing Professor Buchanan 鈥渁s chilling in its breadth and ambiguity as it is absurd in its apparent connection to sexual harassment.鈥

As I explained last month when the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) took the rare step of issuing a supplemental report on the , intermittent use of profane language is not sexual harassment. And since Buchanan made the offending remarks in 2011鈥2012 and the LSU administration , it seems unlikely that anyone at the university really thought it was sexual harassment, either. Yes, that鈥檚 right; the administration fired Professor Buchanan for sexual harassment, despite the fact that no student, professor, or staff member ever accused her of sexual harassment. Some individuals complained because they found her remarks offensive or her language inappropriate. But that鈥檚 a far cry from an allegation of sexual harassment. In other words, President Alexander saw fit to fire her for something that no one ever accused her of doing. It is no wonder, then, that the Faculty Senate ended the preamble to its resolution with the following:

Concluding that the violation of tenure, the creation and implementation of vague and chilling standards of discourse that violate all precepts of free inquiry and speech, the failure to follow faculty counsel in these matters, and the outright abrogation of proper due process by LSU鈥檚 administration have placed the LSU community in a state of confusion and outrage about the lack of commitment of LSU鈥檚 administration to an environment of freedom of inquiry and speech.

Incredibly, however, the LSU administration reacted to the faculty censure by doubling down in a statement issued Tuesday defending its actions:

While we respect the Faculty Senate鈥檚 right to disagree with the administration, they simply don鈥檛 have all the facts in this case. Unfortunately, due to potential litigation, we are not at liberty to share all of the facts. We stand behind the decision made by our dean, former provost, president and Board of Supervisors and what it represents 鈥 that our students have the right to learn in an environment free of sexual harassment, bullying and verbal abuse. Being deliberately indifferent to hostile learning environments is not only damaging to our students but undermines the educational values and principles that higher education represents. We firmly support tenure and academic freedom as integral parts of academia, but they do not supersede the civil rights of our students. Our faculty understand this, but when the rare exception occurs, action must be taken to prevent the continuation of such damaging and counterproductive environments.

Secret facts? Come on.

One of the brightest red flags out there is the 鈥渢rust us, we have information that we can鈥檛 share that shows we鈥檙e right鈥 line that universities trot out from time to time. That reasoning may work in totalitarian regimes, but it doesn鈥檛 in any open society. If LSU has information that justifies its actions, it should release it. If it doesn鈥檛, it should stop pretending that it does. Using innuendo to smear Professor Buchanan underscores the Faculty Senate鈥檚 concern about a chilling effect and makes it look like the LSU administration is vindictively determined to add to her distress.

LSU needs to understand that words have meaning, as defined by dictionaries or legal precedent. If the anonymous, corporate 鈥渨e鈥 of LSU 鈥渟tand[s] behind the decision made by our dean, former provost, president and Board of Supervisors and what it represents,鈥 then it would be good to know what the 鈥渨e鈥 is talking about. 鈥淪exual harassment,鈥 鈥渂ullying,鈥 and 鈥渧erbal abuse鈥 are not the same thing. The students complained because they were offended by what Professor Buchanan said. And now LSU is posing as the defender of students鈥 鈥渃ivil rights.鈥 That鈥檚 absurd.

Humpty Dumpty may be allowed to declare, 鈥淲hen I use a word, it means what I choose it to mean, ,鈥 but the leadership of a major public university is not. The Faculty Senate at LSU should be commended for its courage in speaking out on behalf of Professor Buchanan. After all, its members are as vulnerable as she was to the whims of LSU administrators who don鈥檛 follow their own policies and who don鈥檛 seem to understand the meaning of academic freedom.

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