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Head of Collin County praises terminations of faculty who criticized Collin College administration

Collin Colleges Spring Creek Campus in Plano Texas. Oldag07_CC BY SA 3.0

Collin Colleges Spring Creek Campus in Plano Texas. (Oldag07, CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons.)

Over the last several months, Collin College鈥檚 leadership has moved to terminate three faculty members 鈥 Lora Burnett, Audra Heaslip, and Suzanne Jones 鈥 over the exercise of their First Amendment rights to criticize both political figures and their institutional leadership. Now, Collin County鈥檚 highest elected official has chimed in, sending an email to a range of Collin College officials and Texas lawmakers to praise the 鈥渇orebearance and tolerance鈥 of the college鈥檚 administration for terminating its critics.

A faculty member at a New Jersey institution 鈥 alarmed that Collin College鈥檚 leadership was refusing to renew the contracts of faculty members because they had criticized its plans to reopen during COVID-19, formed a chapter of a faculty union, or criticized politicians and Confederate statues 鈥 emailed various elected leaders in Collin County, including Collin County Judge Chris Hill. (In Texas, the 鈥渃ounty judge鈥 is , but instead presides over the administration of the county government 鈥 like a county executive or chief administrator).

In response (and copying Collin College鈥檚 administrators, trustees, and a legion of Texas lawmakers) Hill lamented that he had been 鈥渄rag[ged] into this issue鈥 by receiving an email and praised the professors鈥 terminations:

First, please understand that these three individuals were not fired from their positions. They completed their employment contracts with the college, at which time the administration decided not to renew their contracts for future service.

Second, you have overlooked some significant facts about these particular individuals鈥 behaviors and public conduct. Admittedly, I do not know for certain why these individuals鈥 contracts were not renewed. Those are private personnel matters to which I am not privy. But I can tell you that these three individuals have demonstrated a pattern of reprehensible behavior, consistently and publicly deriding and destroying the very institution for which they worked. They continuously leveled personal attacks against the leaders of the organization, even going so far as doxxing the leaders and attempting to harm their private businesses. Those of us who live in this community (but not you, obviously) have watched as these three individuals have attempted to tear down this great institution and its leaders.

In the end, I am amazed and impressed with the forbearance and tolerance demonstrated by President Matkin and the Board of Trustees. If these three individuals worked for me, and behaved as they have, I would have pursued their immediate termination for cause. The fact that the administration and the Board graciously allowed these three individuals to complete their contracts speaks very highly of the character, the patience, and the professionalism of President Matkin and the Board of Trustees.

I support President Matkin and the Board of Trustees in their decision, and I am grateful for their leadership in our community. Furthermore, I am quite disgusted with the ignorant attacks that you and others have leveled against them from your safe spaces in distant New Jersey.

Hill is wrong. Government officials, including administrators of a public college, cannot retaliate against employees for exercising their First Amendment rights. That鈥檚 true whether they do so by firing them in the middle of a contract or by declining to renew their contract when it expires. Nobody would suggest that Hill could, for example, decline to renew the contracts of county employees for belonging to the 鈥渨rong鈥 political party or belonging to the 鈥渨rong鈥 faith.

Government actors and elected officials cannot use the levers of government employment to deter criticism.

As we鈥檝e repeatedly pointed out, the First Amendment permits faculty members at public institutions, like Collin College, to speak as private citizens on matters of public concern. That includes much of the speech about which Hill complains, such as 鈥渄eriding鈥 the college or levying 鈥減ersonal attacks鈥 against the 鈥渓eaders of the organization.鈥 Those leaders are government actors and elected officials; they cannot use the levers of government employment to deter criticism. (As for 鈥渄oxxing,鈥 Hill is presumably referring to Burnett鈥檚 and encouraging voters to contact them 鈥 an exercise of the First Amendment right to petition.)

While Hill feigns ignorance of the real reasons for the faculty members鈥 nonrenewals, Collin College has not been shy in pointing to the professors鈥 speech. In particular, the college has cited Suzanne Jones鈥 reference to the college鈥檚 name when joining hundreds of other citizens in signing an critical of Confederate monuments (鈥淪uzanne Jones, education professor, Collin College鈥), as well as a reference to the college鈥檚 name on , as Jones helps to run the Collin College chapter. This, Collin College claims, runs the risk of confusing the public into thinking that Jones speaks on behalf of the college.

That is not how people interpret references of this sort. Instead, faculty members who identify their employer do so to establish their own credibility, not to suggest that they speak for the institution. 

Helpfully, Chris Hill himself provides a perfect illustration of this kind of credential-dropping in action. Take a gander at the list of on Hill鈥檚 campaign website:

Hill鈥檚 campaign Facebook page is likewise these endorsements, and his old website included a from 鈥淐ollin College Trustee Dr. Bob Collins,鈥 who has as the treasurer for Hill鈥檚 political campaigns. Other political leaders trustees using the college鈥檚 name.

Nobody, of course, would think that means Collin College 鈥 a nonpartisan government institution 鈥 endorses particular politicians in their elections. 

Hill is, like everyone else, free to share his opinions. The First Amendment protects his right to be wrong about the First Amendment.

Then there鈥檚 the college鈥檚 response to Burnett, faulting her for responding to angry emails sent to her college email address, even though the college鈥檚 policy permits 鈥渋ncidental鈥 use of email for personal purposes. A similar standard (鈥渂rief and occasional personal use鈥) to use of Collin County鈥檚 email system. That would presumably encompass Hill鈥檚 use of his county-provided email address to opine on the controversy at Collin College. That is a sensible approach to email usage, recognizing that the line between what is purely 鈥減ersonal鈥 and what is official business is not always bright.

Hill is, like everyone else, free to share his opinions. The First Amendment protects his right to be wrong about the First Amendment. Collin College鈥檚 board members 鈥 whatever their interwoven relationships with Hill may be 鈥 should not listen to him. While Hill has the right to opine, the college鈥檚 board members have the legal obligation, enshrined in Collin College , to respect faculty members鈥 expressive rights.


FIRE defends the rights of students and faculty members 鈥 no matter their views 鈥 at public and private universities and colleges in the United States. If your rights are in jeopardy, get in touch with us: thefire.org/alarm.

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