Showing posts with label James Ramsey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Ramsey. Show all posts

Friday, May 21, 2010

Former UofL Dean Robert Felner sentenced to more than five years in prison

This from the Courier-Journal:

Robert Felner, former University of Louisville dean of education, was sentenced on Monday to 63 months in prison for his role in defrauding U of L and the University of Rhode Island of $2.3 million.

Felner -- who was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Charles R. Simpson III in Louisville -- pleaded guilty in January to nine federal charges, including income tax evasion.

In addition to prison time, Felner must pay restitution of $510,000 to U of L, $1.64 million to the University of Rhode Island and $88,750 to the Rock Island County Council on Addiction in Illinois.

The plea agreement was reached with the U.S. attorney's office after Felner was indicted in October 2008 in Louisville on charges of mail fraud, conspiracy to commit money laundering, income tax evasion and conspiracy to impede and impair the Internal Revenue Service. The charges against Felner carried a maximum penalty of 75 years in prison...

C-J Editorial sums it all up:

Felner's cautionary tale

Monday's sentencing of Robert Felner, former education dean at the University of Louisville, brings some degree of closure to a seamy, nationally embarrassing scandal.

However, the fact that Mr. Felner is going to prison is no cause for celebration at UofL. Nor is it merely an unpleasant episode that now should be forgotten.

To its credit, the university called in law enforcement authorities when it became obvious, some two years ago, that something was amiss in the education school.

But what followed was not the finest hour for President James Ramsey, who scoffed at the news in a TV interview about more than 30 grievances filed against Mr. Felner during his tenure. Calling the allegations “anonymous crap,” he said that the complaints showed him that the dean “was bringing about change that needed to be made.”

Change? Like granting an associate a Ph.D. after only one semester's residence in Louisville?Like running off solid faculty members whose complaints were given a deaf ear by the administration?

And change like stealing millions of dollars from UofL and the University of Rhode Island?It will take time, and a lot of obvious progress for the university to put all of this to rest.

Meanwhile, it should serve as a cautionary tale for many years to come. No official in a public institution should have the kind of unbridled discretion that Robert Felner enjoyed. And administrators eager to make rapid change should be wary of the cost that comes with such upheavals.

And Page One Kentucky has all the details.

KSN&C Backstory.

Wednesday, January 06, 2010

Felner to plead guilty to siphoning millions from Louisville, Rhode Island U

This from Nancy Rodriguez at C-J:

Former University of Louisville education dean Robert Felner will plead guilty Friday in a case in which he and a colleague are accused of defrauding U of L and another university out of $2.3 million, his attorney said.

Attorney Scott C. Cox said Monday the plea is part of an agreement Felner made with the U.S. Attorney’s Office. He would not disclose any terms of the deal, including which charges Felner would plead guilty to or how much jail time he may receive. Felner was not available for comment.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office said Monday that it would have no comment until Felner formally enters his plea — he is accused of funneling millions of dollars through non-profit centers he helped create, then using the money to buy private property and make other personal expenditures.

A trial for Felner and his co-defendant, Thomas Schroeder of Port Byron, Ill., was scheduled to begin Feb. 1. Schroeder could still be tried in February...Felner’s charges carry up to 75 years in prison, while Schroeder faces up to 45 years.

U of L officials released a statement Monday in which they expressed “hope that Mr. Felner will be held accountable for his actions.”
This is an improvement - since Felner was never held accountable by President James Ramsey for anything, despite substantial reason to do so. Ramsey's own dismissive attitude toward the 33 faculty complaints as "anonymous crap" might not have uncovered the depths of Felner's wrongdoings, but it surely would have served to save the university from substantial embarrassment - if only Ramsey had trusted his faculty. As it was, Ramsey's low opinion of the faculty left him completely blindsided by the most serious Felner revelations.

In that time-honored tradition of declaring an end to ones own misery as soon as possible, the university issued a "move on" statement declaring,
“Our College of Education and Human Development moved past Mr. Felner some time ago with the hiring of Blake Haselton as its interim dean,” the statement read. “Enrollment is up, there were a record number of graduates last school year, and we've attained a significant accreditation. Those are the chapters being written since Mr. Felner left U of L.”
The statement did not specify whether UofL grads are now required to actually attend the university or do their own work.
While not part of the criminal case, Felner's treatment of faculty and staff at U of L’s College of Education and Human Development — and grievances against him — came to light during the investigation. Former faculty accused Felner of being vindictive, manipulative and threatening. As a result of those claims, the university revamped its grievance process, reviewed its faculty governance procedures and established an Ombuds Office to address faculty concerns and complaints.

Bryant Stamford, a former faculty member who worked at U of L for more than 30 years and who has joined other former education faculty in criticizing the university for its handling of Felner, said Monday he had “mixed feelings” about news of a plea agreement.

“… It was good that he was finally caught and held accountable for his actions, but I think all of us still sort of default back to: How is it possible that this man was allowed to operate in such a manner for years? He wasn’t operating in a vacuum.”
Blaming Felner for his toxic effects on the school is certainly appropriate.

But blindly absolving university leadership for their contribution to that climate is inconsistent with best practice. UofL trustees should have pled guilty to that.

Tuesday, June 09, 2009

Chronicle: Red Tape Hid Felner's Red Flags

Former UofL Education Dean Robert Felner was big on promises.

Having received a $694,000 grant from U.S. Department of Education funds, earmarked by Rep. Anne Northup, Felner promised to create an elaborate research center to help Kentucky's public schools. Five UofL faculty members, supported by a staff of four, would work at a center under an advisory board headed by Kentucky's Secretary of the Education Cabinet Virginia Fox. The state would be carpeted with surveys. There would be papers and conferences.

Too bad Fox didn't know there was a grant.

Too bad none of the surveys were conducted.

Too bad the Kentucky Department of Education didn't know anything about the surveys.

Too bad there were no papers or conferences.

Too bad most of the money had disappeared.

By the spring of 2008, all but $96,000 of the grant had been spent, but none of the tasks listed in Mr. Felner's proposal had been accomplished.

So he approached Louisville officials for $200,000 more to enter into a subcontract with his buddy Thomas Schroeder's nonprofit organization in Illinois - a group that had already received $450,000 from the Felner grant.

Felner assured UofL officials that the surveys Schroeder was supposedly conducting with students and teachers in Kentucky would "let us give the feds something that should make them very happy about the efficiency and joint commitment of the university to doing a good job with an earmark, as I know we will want more from this agency," he wrote in an e-mail message on June 18.

Two days later, as Felner was preparing to leave for a new job at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, federal agents raided Felner's UofL offices and confiscated his files and laptops.

Turns out Uof L was not Felner's first rodeo.

By October a federal grand jury had indicted Felner on nine counts of mail fraud, money laundering, and tax evasion. The indictment said Schroeder's National Center on Public Education and Prevention was a shell organization that existed to funnel money into the Felner and Schroeder's personal bank accounts. Prosecutors calculate that the men made off with the $694,000 earmarked grant plus $1.7-million in payments from three urban school districts connected to Felner when he was in Rhode Island.

But that's not the way it's supposed to work. There's supposed to be oversight. UofL officials made some promises too.

In their upcoming June 12 issue, the Chronicle on Higher Education takes aim at the lack of oversight at UofL.

When Louisville accepted the earmarked grant, its officials signed the boilerplate language attached to most federal contracts. The university, they promised, had "the institutional, managerial, and financial capability ... to ensure proper planning, management, and completion of the project."

But did it in fact have that capability? For several months in 2007, Mr. Felner charged almost $37,000 of his salary against the grant, but there is no evidence that he ever worked on the project. (In an October 2008 memorandum, Robert N. Ronau, the college of education's associate dean for research, declared that he knew of no
reports, articles, or other products that resulted from the grant.). Federal regulations require that universities use "suitable means of verification that the work was performed" when they prepare time-and-effort reports; Louisville officials declined to comment on how Mr. Felner's time-and-effort reports were processed.) And when he sent his first big payment to the Illinois group, Mr. Felner constructed the deal as a personal-services contract instead of a formal subcontract, which would have been subject to more oversight by the university. But no one corrected that error for more than a year.

Provost Shirley C. Willihnganz, seemed to admit that UofL's procedures could be overridden by an individual of high standing, such as a dean.

"I think what we had in this case was a person who abused the system. And so it's not so much that our policies were bad or that our procedures were bad. We had a person who did not follow them and did not respect them."

"This person was a dean," says Ms. Willihnganz, the provost. "And deans here have a very wide breadth of control. They have a lot of authority. I think, in fact, no one else here at this university could have gotten some of those things through. Because he was a dean, he was trusted."
But that explanation goes nowhere with former UofL education faculty who say they had plenty of reason to distrust Mr. Felner.

Beginning in 2004, the university's grievance officers were approached dozens of times by faculty members and students with complaints about Mr. Felner's temperament and personnel decisions. Many of those records were first described last year by Page One Kentucky, a political blog that has aggressively covered Mr. Felner's story (and whose comment section has become a meeting ground for aggrieved faculty members at Louisville).
The Chronicle lists the most egregious alleged offenses which include harassment of a female grad student, threats, intimidation, violations of governance policies, questionable expenditures and a generally oppressive atmosphere in the department. This was followed by a 27-24 "vote of no confidence" against Felner.

After the vote, Ms. Willihnganz hired a mediation company called Just Solutions to review morale at the college of education — but after interviewing many faculty members, the company never filed a final report.

"I talked to a lot of people" after the no-confidence vote, Ms. Willihnganz says. "There were detractors, but there were also supporters. My hope was that Just Solutions could come in and find some common ground to go forward. They completed some faculty interviews — but in all honesty, at that point I realized that they weren't going to be able to accomplish what I had hoped."

Several months later, a faculty member circulated an anonymous note that read, "It appears that the Provost has chosen to bury that [Just Solutions] report without giving any feedback to faculty. ... Now the dean likes to taunt people about how nothing came of any of our complaints."

By the time university leadership finally recognized that they had been suckered by Felner's unmet promises they were stuck cleaning up Felner's mess. That didn't go all that well.

President James Ramsey and Willihnganz circled the wagons, inferred that faculty complaints were only from the disgruntled who refused to make necessary changes and Ramsey called their complaints anonymous crap.

Calls for Ramsey's resignation could be heard but he was supported by Louisville's board.

Last September he and 20 other faculty members who left the college of education during Mr. Felner's tenure wrote to Louisville's Board of Trustees, asking it to scrutinize how complaints about Mr. Felner had been handled by Ms. Willihnganz and by James R. Ramsey, the university's president.

"Felner often bragged openly at faculty meetings that he had the full support of the provost and president," the letter said. "Faculty should feel free to speak their mind
and be counted. Yet, when faculty did exactly that, they were systematically ignored and targeted for further abuse by Felner."

Former county superintendent and Council for Better Education president Blake Haselton was appointed interim dean of the college of education. Unlike his predecessor, Mr. Haselton's background promises steady leadership, not flashy research grants.

University-wide accounting and research-compliance reforms were undertaken but some current and former faculty members are skeptical that the reforms will go far enough - or that all parties who erred during the debacle will be held appropriately accountable.

The Chronicle concludes that too much red tape hid what should have been red flags to university overseers.

HOW RED TAPE MIGHT HIDE RED FLAGS

The University of Louisville, like other institutions, has struggled to bring order and coherence to its research-administration system. A single federal grant might be monitored by multiple offices there: one office to verify researchers' time-and-effort reports, another office to approve subcontracts, yet another to oversee the protection of research subjects.

Does that fragmentation allow some things to slip through the cracks? Robert D. Felner, a former dean of education at Louisville, has been indicted on charges that he misappropriated a $694,000 federal grant.

At one point, Mr. Felner set up a subcontract as a personal-services contract, which allowed him to bypass some layers of supervision.

In March, Louisville's Board of Trustees received a report on plans to improve the system. Deans will have less unilateral power to make purchases, and the university will "develop a central process to monitor research projects for compliance."


Belated hat tip to Page One Kentucky.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

UofL upholds challenged doctoral degree

John Deasy, a former Malibu California school superintendent who had given a research center run by former UofL Education Dean Robert Felner a $375,000 contract in 2002, subsequently got a doctoral degree after studying there only one semester. Sweet.

This from Nancy Rodriguez at C-J:

...The agency that accredits schools in Kentucky and 10 other Southern states requires candidates for graduate degrees to earn the majority of their credits at the university awarding the degree.

And a university rule requires doctoral candidates to spend at least two years studying at U of L, including at least one in full-time residency.

Campus residency requirements are considered important because a university is vouching for a student when it issues a degree. For that reason, universities have typically insisted that a substantial part of the work must be performed on campus.

Deasy's degree was called into question last fall after The Courier-Journal and WHAS-TV reported that Deasy got the degree after studying at U of L for a single semester...

This from the Chronicle of Higher Ed:
...Before his short stint at Louisville, Mr. Deasy had earned at least 50 credits toward a doctorate at three other institutions, including the University of Rhode Island, where Mr. Felner taught until 2003.

In September the University of Louisville appointed a committee to investigate whether the degree had been awarded improperly. In a statement quoted by The Courier-Journal today, the university said that the panel had concluded that Mr. Deasy successfully defended his dissertation before a faculty committee. “The degree stands; no further action will be taken,” the statement said.

The university said the review had confirmed the “integrity of our degree-granting process. We do not give away degrees.” It also noted several changes it was making to put more checks on the process for granting exemptions from graduate-degree requirements.

A federal indictment issued in October accuses Mr. Felner and an associate of diverting more than $2-million into their personal bank accounts from a federal research grant and from contracts with municipal school districts, including the district in Santa Monica, Calif., where Mr. Deasy served as superintendent from 2001 until 2006.

Mr. Deasy is now deputy director for education at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The federal indictment of Mr. Felner does not suggest that Mr. Deasy knew about or benefited from the embezzlement that Mr. Felner is accused of. Mr. Felner has pleaded not guilty to the federal charges.

Ramsey Absolves UofL in Deasy Degree Scandal

UofL investigates UofL and Finds Integrity

“Based upon the totality of the circumstances
and information available,
it is evident that waivers were granted by the then-graduate dean
which permitted the student to register
and defend his dissertation in one semester.

The dissertation defense before a committee of
University of Louisville CEHD faculty
was successful, and the degree was subsequently awarded.

“The degree stands; no further action will be taken.

--UofL President James Ramsey and
Exec VP and Provost Shirley Willihnganz

Interpretation: This decision concludes our review and confirms the integrity of our degree granting process. We do not give away degrees.

Alternative Interpretation: We were so totally screwed by former Dean of Education Robert Felner that it took a lot of people months and to dig through all of the bad acts he perpetrated and we still found the record sketchy. What we do know is that Felner influenced a former graduate dean to bend the academic rules for one of Felner's buddies, John Deasy. We have high standards at UofL but sometimes we waive them. Deasy was permitted to register and defend his dissertation in one semester which effectively proves that the work was not done at the University of Louisville. But what are we going to do? Having given Felner the authority to screw us, he screwed us. Since the error was clearly UofL's, we're not in a position to take it back now. Maybe we'll get a big grant from the Gates Foundation some day.

In a letter from President Ramsey and Provost Willihnganz to the university community the issues surrounding John Deasey's easy degree was laid to rest.
  • A blue-ribbon panel reviewed the awarding of Deasy's 2004 degree and found...
  • In very rare instances, almost always when student well-being was at issue (though no such claim is made here), the graduate dean acted within his authority to grant waivers.
  • The Blue Ribbon Panel reinforced the need to reconstitute the graduate school to increase oversight and accountability.
  • The panel noted several needed changes that were made in graduate education at UofL since the Deasy degree was granted.
  • The authority of the graduate dean was changed so that he or she could no longer allow certain types of exemptions and variances in graduate student programs.

That's a lot of fixin' for something that supposedly wasn't broken.

Hat tip to PageOne Kentucky.

Wednesday, April 08, 2009

Mark Hebert Leaves WHAS for UofL

In a significant coup, long-time WHAS political reporter Mark Hebert announced tonight that he will start PR work for President James Ramsey at UofL in May. This is potentially wonderful for The Ville which could use some experienced, professional help rethinking their public relations approach.

For those of you who haven't heard, I'm leaving WHAS-TV for a job at the University of Louisville. My first day at U of L is Monday, May 4th. I hate to leave WHAS-TV and covering politics but I'm extremely excited about the opportunity to work for Jim Ramsey, a guy who's been a terrific President at U of L. I'll write more of my thoughts and thank you's later.

Thanks.

Mark.

President Ramsey scores major points for luring to UofL the same guy who elicited the "anonymous crap" comment during the rollout of the Robert Felner scandal; still in progress. In that same interview, Ramsey told Hebert that even good people get “a little weak...violating the law now and then.”

Hiring Hebert would seem to represent a sincere desire for improved communications. If so, well done.

On a personal note, Mark's been a great guy for as long as I've know him - which goes back to the early 80's during our Jaycee days. He's always been trustworthy and professional. So congratulations, Mark! And thanks, in advance.

Friday, February 13, 2009

Has Ramsey's Post-Felner PR Campaign Resorted to Lies?

The allegation being made over at Page One Kentucky is that UofL President James Ramsey "lied his rear end off" in a radio interview this week on WFPL's "State of Affairs."

When the interviewer asked Ramsey about the "damage to trust" due to numerous faculty grievances that were swept under the rug at UofL's College of Education, and whether those concerns were "heard and responded to" Ramsey responded that his trust was violated by former Dean Robert Felner.

To a degree, that must surely be true.

But still surprisingly, he treated the whole matter as if the only problem was a failure of the process - that Felner, not being from Louisville, did not follow the process. But Ramsey seemed to wash his hands of the process saying,
"I'm not involved in it, and really, the Provost is not involved in it." ...
"There were four grievances filed, against the former dean and none of them really made it to my desk as a problem."
Really? ...as a problem?

So is Ramsey suggesting that he was unaware that there were real problems? This, despite as many as 33 grievances consultations for sexual harassment and intimidation, four of which lead to formal grievances being filed under UofL's process, but most of which did not due an acknowledged fear that complaints would only lead faculty to be retaliated against.

And if Ramsey didn't see any real problems, why not?

As PageOne Kentucky reported, in 2005 the College of Education and Human Development was responsible for 42% (13) of faculty grievance consultations campus-wide. The 2006 report from Faculty Grievance Officer Suzanne Meeks showed that 15 (56%) of the 27 grievance consultations that took place were from the CEHD. Meeks confirmed in her letter that the Provost was very well aware of the problems.

Due to the number of consultations from CEHD, and the level of negative affect associated with those consultations, I have worked with the Provost’s office to recommend that they use administrative mechanisms to restore morale, faculty governance, and collegial interaction there. Although I believe interventions have been attempted, it is not be sense that they have yet been effective.

Again in 2007 more than 33% of the grievance consultations on campus came from the College of Education.

No problem?

Meeks reported to the Faculty Senate,

As with previous years, a disproportionate number of consultations have related to the College of Education and Human Development (one-third). Over the three years of my tenure as FGO, I have consulted with at least one-third of the CEHD faculty. Throughout this time, I have heard talk of retaliation against faculty members who file grievances or requests for mediation. The majority of those I have spoken with are not willing to file grievances because of this fear of retaliation, which extends to those who testify at grievance hearings as well. This situation demonstrates a significant weakness in the grievance system, in that there is no way to prevent such retaliation when one files a complaint against someone who has the power to determine work load agreements and salary increases, approve expenditures, and allocate resources.

Is Ramsey suggesting he and Provost Shirley Willihnganz were unaware of faculty senate proceedings? Both admitted they discounted the rare "no confidence" taken against Felner.

More likely, they didn't want to see the complaints as "a problem" - therefore, they weren't. In their minds Felner deserved credit for raising CEHD's ranking in US News and World Report. In his now famously unfortunate quip, Ramsey reduced such complaints to "anonymous crap." Calling faculty who were afraid to put their names on such complaints “cheap,” Ramsey credited Felner with “bringing about change that needed to be made.”

Willihnganz acknowledged that "the heat on this one is on us."

Now Ramsey says, "We're taking this very seriously," and called the whole episode "an opportunity to improve."

In an August letter, Ramsey assured the university community that an audit would take place. Now, the quality of that audit is being called into question. Page One Kentucky now reports,

Thanks to open records requests, we have been able to determine that there isn’t an audit per se. ...What is available, however, is a PowerPoint presentation from [Cotton + Allen] given to the Board of Trustees. It’s ‘Grants Management Internal Control - Preliminary Report to the Board of Trustees.’
See it here.

Ramsey called for a review of the grievance process and the entire shared governance model but the faculty committee that undertook the review was not charged with exploring infractions at the university, so it didn't.

Meanwhile, WLKY reports, a federal judge will hear arguments on March 25th about whether to suppress evidence in Felner's fraud case. Judge Charles R. Simpson also ruled against a separate motion asking him to suppress evidence taken from Felner's new office at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside.

Friday, February 06, 2009

Ramsey Appoints Ombudsperson

Apparently UofL President James Ramsey doesn't want to hear it.

Plus, in partial response to the administration's lack of fidelity to its own policies - a faculty committee recently recomended the addition of a university ombudsperson.

Ramsey wasted no time attending to the committee's recommendation.

This from Nancy Rodriguez at the Courier Journal:

U of L appoints ombudsman

The University of Louisville has appointed a longtime faculty member to provide ombudsman services to faculty and staff.

Dennis Hall, professor of English, will serve as interim ombudsman. He will hold the post until the appointment of a university ombudsman, who will be selected by the provost from a slate recommended by the faculty and staff senates, according to university officials...

The office's creation is a response to concerns raised over the handling of grievances and complaints involving former U of L education Dean Robert Felner, who a federal grand jury indicted in October on 10 counts of mail fraud, money-laundering, conspiracy and income-tax evasion.

Felner and former associate Thomas Schroeder face charges of fraudulently obtaining nearly $2.3 million in grant and contract money from the universities of Louisville and Rhode Island. Both have both pleaded not guilty and have been released on unsecured bonds.

The Ombuds website is under development.

(Hey C-J! Why the switch in gender reference? I didn't find it in my AP Style Manual. UofL labeled the position "ombudsperson" but C-J changed it to "ombudsman." True, a man was selected for the position. But unless men are also referred to "person" doesn't that create a situation where man = man; but woman = person. That reduces "person" to a euphemism, doesn't it?)

The Buck Stops....Somewhere Else

PageOneKentucky reports that UofL President James Ramsey has refused to make good on his promise to meet with any faculty members who may have been aggrieved by former Dean Robert Felner.

Instead, he is dumping the problem on new Dean Blake Heselton - "if he deems necessary, any follow-up.“

Saturday, January 31, 2009

UofL Committee Raises Questions about Shared Governance

A faculty committee report submitted to President James Ramsey by, and with the full concurrance of Provost Shirley Willihnganz, calls into question the university's adherence to, and consistency in, enforcing its own policies.
"while the central administration typically abides by the principles of collegial governance by consulting in a timely fashion with the leadership of the faculty, staff, and student senates on policies that affect those groups across units of the university, the events in the CEHD have raised some concerns about how consistently the rules of shared governance are followed within units."
Citing insufficient orientation, training and evaluation of unit administrators, the committee states,

"In particular, it appears that accountability for adherence to established principles of collegial governance may be weaker at the level of unit administration than any other level of administration."

The balance of the report contains a set of recommendations that the university follow its own polcies and the establish a new University Ombudsperson to mediate problems.

The committee did not set out to uncover infractions at the university, and it didn't. Rather, it offered a set of recommendations for "looking forward."

Find a copy of the report at PageOne Kentucky.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Is UofL Stonewalling?

Some in Louisvile are getting antsy.

In November officials with the University of Louisville provided updates on steps the school had taken in the wake of former College of Education and Human Development Dean Robert Felner’s federal indictment on charges of money laundering, mail fraud and conspiracy to defraud the Internal Revenue Service. U of L president James Ramsey appointed a campus-wide task force to review the findings and recommend action steps. The public was assured that university would get in front of the issues that have plagued it since the toxic dean's deeds came to light - and would report. Since then, it's been all quiet on the Belknap front.

Was there a conflict of interest with Cotton & Allen, the firm UofL hired to conduct an external audit of the university’s grants management and contracts practices? (Page One Kentucky reports: "Nolan Allen is, as is well-known in the community, highly involved with the University. He is a financial supporter and is the father-in-law of the Dean of the School of Medicine... it wasn’t even put out for bid." ) No word.

Was John Deasy's instant doctorate legit? No word.

Was it appropriate to allow staff to assist UofL donor Sonny Bass in getting a degree by working on his interview and written materials and developing a portfolio to document his expertise? No word.

What restructuring of the CEHD has occurred? No word.

Since Ramsey's admission of problems within the university - and after having conducted a PR campaign of damage control in the wake of the Felner scandal - some in the public were hoping they would have heard a more substantive report of the affirmative actions taken by the university by now.

No word.

Thursday, November 27, 2008

UofL Continues the PR Campaign by Reporting Continuing Investigations of Everything Except Leadership

This from Biz First of The Ville:

U of L provides investigation updates

Officials with the University of Louisville provided updates on steps the school has taken in the wake of former College of Education and Human Development dean Robert Felner’s federal indictment on charges of money laundering, mail fraud and conspiracy to defraud the Internal Revenue Service...
  • U of L officials said auditors have completed an internal audit of the College of Education and Human Development’s finances - due out after Thanksgiving.
  • Auditors with Louisville CPA firm Cotton and Allen presented findings of an external audit of the university’s grants management and contracts practices earlier this month.
  • Ramsey's campus-wide task force to review the findings and recommend action steps plans to meet again in December.
  • A faculty senate review of the school’s faculty grievance policy is "under way."
  • A separate U of L committee currently is reviewing U of L’s managerial and administrative practices, but the report will be given to Provost Shirley Willihganz (so it's safe to assume that neither the practices of her office or those above her are being investigated).
  • Another committee is reviewing the university’s conflict of interest policy.
  • And happily, the university also continues to investigate the university’s awarding of a Ph.D. to John Deasy, deputy director of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, during Felner’s tenure.
Over at Page One, Jake is raising the question of "any potential conflict of interest with the Cotton Allen firm."

This from Nancy at C-J:

And this from WFPL:

Thanks Jake.

Friday, November 14, 2008

Good News for The Ville, Ramsey

The internal audit that absolved UofL in awarding John Deasy an easy degree leaves one in doubt that such audits can be fully trusted. But let's hope this one can. After all, everything points to former Dean Robert Felner as the prime bad actor in the grant scandal, despite his being surrounded by enablers - or were they victims too?

Yesterday's audit report should come as some relief to President James Ramsey if only to confirm the extent of Felner's toxic effect.

This from Nancy Rodriguez at C-J:

Auditors: No further evidence of wrongdoing at U of L education school

In the wake of alleged grant mismanagement at the University of Louisville’s education school, auditors said [yesterday] that they have found no further evidence of possible wrongdoing.

Dave Barker, the university’s internal auditor, said at a trustee meeting that his staff has completed its field work and is drafting its final report on the College of Education and Human Development.He said he expects the report to include recommendations for financial controls at the college.

“We have not seen anything that resembles or leads us to believe there is further fraud,” he said.

So the extent of the alleged theft and attempted theft from UofL totals $816,000. Felner allegedly made off with $1.7 million from the University of Rhode Island.

Monday, November 10, 2008

The Felner Chronicles

The Racine Post listed a series of Felner stories last week. The now infamous former UofL Education Dean Robert Felner -- who was trying to get out of town (and into a new funding stream, perhaps) was appointed Chancellor at UW-Parkside but was forced to resigned before his investiture.

The Post's "cautionary tale" has been significantly expanded by KSN&C to include more of Felner's collateral damage.

Felner case may bring U of L new scrutiny on grants Oct 26
Felner Stink Sticks to Deasy Oct 25
Sifting the Ashes as UofL Oct 24
Felner in handcuffs: The Money Shot Oct 23
Reaction to Schroeder indictment in Illinois Oct 23
Felner and Schroeder Indicted Oct 22
INDICTED! He pleads innocent Oct 22
UofL President James Ramsey's Statement on the Indictment of Robert Felner Oct 22
Deasy's Easy Degree raises questions about Doctoral Quality Oct 3
Louisville Grad Students Uneasy about Felner Investigation Oct 2
Another U of L Instant Degree For Sale? Sept 26
Ramsey's PR Campaign Continues Sept 25
Deasy has Resume Errors. Ray & Associates was on the Job Sept 24
Ramsey got Felner's assurance. Now we get Stone's Sept 19
Don’t say the f word Sept 17
Felner Attny Defends Deasy's Instant Doctorate Sept 17
Ramsey says U of L broke no rules on disputed doctorate Sept 13
It's Time to Begin the Search for U of L's Next President Sept 12
SACS, NCATE Look Into U of L Accreditation Problems Sept 12
Was the Price of a Ph.D. at the U. of Louisville 9 Credits and a $375,000 Grant? Sept 11
Probed: The four-month PhD Sept 10
U of L's Integrity on the line Sept 10
Deasy Blames U of L Sept 10
Accountability for John Deasy Sept 10
Need a Doctorate? Hire Felner. Let him Chair your Committee Sept 9
At Last: The Ville's Ramsey apologizes over Felner incident Sept 6
Change agent, class clown or criminal? Sept 3
21 Former U of L Faculty complain of inaction on Felner Sept 3
University distances itself from earlier compliments paid Felner Aug 31
Ramsey Tosses the Faculty a Bone Aug 30
C-J smacks Ramsey, Willihnganz and Porter Aug 29
Felner’s follies - Former U of L dean Robert Felner racked up grievances, not grants Aug 29
UW-Parkside: WHEW! He's not our problem! Aug 27
Felner Update: U of L funds used to keep Rhode Island center afloat Aug 21
A trail of outrage
Feds: More 'threads' probed Aug 13
U of L's Felner tried to get more funding, investigation reveals Aug 10
Lack of Oversight of Felner Conflicts Compromises Research Integrity at U of L Aug 9
U of L grant checks end up in local bank Aug 7
Charge it! he said ($31,000 worth) Aug 4
Emails detail fraud, collusion, fear of IRS and much, much more! July 28
Felner and Schroeder's Sweetheart Deal July 28
Felner Attny hints at Schroeder involvement July 27
Felner: Anatomy of a Fraud? July 26
31 Felner Grievances not typical...so only 4 count? July 22
A Letter from Ramsey and Willihnganz July 21
Felner Pal got Bulk of Money July 20
UofL president raps 'anonymous crap' July 17
33 Grievances = Excellence at U of L July 17
FOI brings stack of grievances July 14
That $694,000 grant was for us? July 10
Grant money went to fake company? VIDEO July 10
Grant monitoring ignored -- VIDEO July 9
The Grievance King July 7
Feds widen probe July 7
He was crime victim, too July 2
UW System finger-pointing July 1
Retaliated against critics July 1
Troubles began in '80s at C-U June 30
Try this, Unified and UW-P! June 27
THE NEVERENDING STORY June 26
Withdraws before taking office June 24

Hat tip to Page One.

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Felner Stink Sticks to Deasy

Deasy's $375,000 Ends Up in
Felner's Bank Account

On this week's Comment on Kentucky, WHAS reporter Adam Walser recaped the story of Robert Felner and his wide-ranging toxic effect on the University of Rhode Island, UofL, several of the country's school districts and many tainted individuals.

But who were the victims, and who were the co-conspirators?

One of the affected school districts was the Santa Monica-Malibu (CA)public schools during the time that John Deasy was the superintendent. Deasy recently resigned his position as Superintendent in Prince Georges County (MD) schools to join the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation - which hired him with some knowledge of the controversy.

Walser told host Ferrell Wellman,

...what we found in this federal indictment was that the entire $375,000 that came from the Santa Monica-Malibu public school system (John Deasy had given that contract to Robert Felner) the entire amount went to this shell corporation and went into Robert Felner's bank account ultimately.
Deasy, you will recall, was the Felner colleague (from URI) who - after awarding Felner the $375,000 grant - was gifted a suspiciously quick doctorate under the guidance of Felner. Deasy's dissertation is dated seven months before he even enrolled at UofL. Felner supervised no other doctoral students during his five years at the university.

This sweetheart deal appeared to have the full support of UofL President James Ramsey since he recommended that the Board of Trustees approve John Deasy as an Alumni Fellow Award winner in 2007.

The Fall 2007 issue of UofL Magazine says, “The Alumni Fellows are awarded to graduates who are exemplary ambassadors for their UofL schools or colleges through their contributions to their professional fields and their communities.” On his application for the award, Deasy did not list any contributions.

Bloggers and other media questioned how Deasy was able to receive a doctorate of philosophy in education in 2004 after taking only nine credits at the school.

Deasy immediately claimed that,

If the university finds that it did not follow its own policies and procedures when conferring my doctorate, that is of course its right to make any decision thereafter.
That must have seemed like a great deal if it meant Deasy would not be pulled into the rest of the allegations surrounding Felner, and another URI colleague and indicted co-conspirator, Thomas Schroeder.

The university quickly declared the doctorate to be proper.

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Felner in Handcuffs: The Money Shot

Screen shot from Video at WDRB Fox 41:

After a six month investigation involving hundreds of pages of evidence, Robert Felner was indicted on charges of fraud, embezzlement and tax evasion. Close friend and co-conspirator Thomas Schroeder of Illinois was also indicted.

Felner appeared at the Mazzoli Federal Building to turn himself in to agents from the Secret Service one of several agencies which investigated Felner's alleged misuse of tax dollars and federal grants while serving as the Dean of Education at the University of Louisville and the University of Rhode Island.

Felner was perp-walked to court in handcuffs.

He appeared briefly this afternoon before a Federal Judge where he entered a plea of not guilty on all counts.

Felner was released on a $100,000 bond after surrendering his passport.

Yesterday's indictments charge Felner with pocketing $1.7-million that belonged to the University of Rhode Island and taking more than $500,000 in federal grant money that should have gone to U of L.

Meanwhile across town, UofL President James Ramsey was announcing $11.6-million dollars in grants received by UofL medical researchers to study and treat diabetes and obesity.

Stung by the Felner affair Ramsey proclaimed, "There are great things happening at the University. He told Fox News the school would better monitor grant money and would listen to staff complaints - a direct reference to criticism that he and Provost Shirley Willihnganz ignored 33 complaints including four formal grievances and against Felner while he was dean of the College of Education and Human Development.

"This has been a difficult experience. We're gonna learn all that we can from it to make the University more focused and strong going forward," said Ramsey.

Raw Video At WHAS.

Big hat tip to Page One Kentucky.

Shout Out to Jake at Page One

A big thanks to Jacob Payne for being the fly in the ointment of Robert Felner, and unfortunately by extension, U of L President James Ramsey.

For the first time the Courier-Journal and other news sources are reporting that the alleged fraud ranges in the millions of dollars. Jake reported that months ago.

But it's hard to know what standards of verification bloggers use, especially when reporting unattributed matters where folks don't want to be quoted on the record - a major and necessary hang up for the mainstream media - which explains why C-J was so slow to report the extent of the fraud.

So we had to wait for the official processes to tick away before knowing whether Page One's reporting could be trusted. In the end, clearly, it could be trusted.

I'm not sure that explains why C-J was so slow to pick up the story to begin with. Was it homegrown protectionism? Was it a lack of news-gathering resources? Something else?

It was unfortunate that Ramsey and Provost Shirley Willihnganz were so protective of such a renown jackass as Felner. They clearly paid too much attention to the man behind the curtain. There's a big lesson in there somewhere.

Better would have been a strong response from Ramsey that upheld the best ethical principles at U of L and assured his commitment to discover and correct whatever nefarious individuals may have done to tarnish the reputation of this fine institution. Instead he chose a type of blind loyalty that allowed him to gaze fixedly at U S News and World Report rankings while ignoring all of the smoke - until there was a fully-stoked blaze.

It is obvious from internal emails that university leadership was caught totally off guard by the incident. They were slow on the uptake and chose to go totally defensive in their public relations responses - a move Ramsey later regretted and apologized for. Many U of L faculty were dismissed as malcontents and some called for Ramsey's head.

It seems clear from the public comments that the U of L trustees have accepted Ramsey's explanations and seem to want to go forward with him at the helm. I am told by some who know and respect him, that he is much more capable than this sorry episode would lead one to believe. Ramsey did respond belatedly with a series of efforts to relook the obvious problems uncovered by the whole affair.

It's now up to the citizens (and I suppose, the Governor) to decide if the trustee's handling of this mess was OK with them.

It is not clear that accountability, beyond what lies in "Dr Feloner's" future, will extend to any of his lieutenants - or to what degree the trustees may have formally "evaluated" the situation.

One would hope new Dean Blake Hesselton has his dustpan out for a little house cleaning. I guess we'll have to wait for that as well.

But here we have yet another situation where "the press" (including citizen journalists like Jake) is threatened and painted as the bad guy for reporting "unattributed lies" that turn out to be the truth.

Good job, Jake.

Also a big thanks to Adam Walser at WHAS (and Mark Hebert for catching the definitive Ramsey quote) and the Courier-Journal. You can't ignore that big megaphone the mainstream media wields, and after a slow start both outlets did a fine job of elevating the story to its proper place as the lead story and on the front page.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

UofL President James Ramsey's Statement on the Indictment of Robert Felner

Ramsey issues statement on
grand jury indictment

October 22nd, 2008

James R. Ramsey, president of the University of Louisville, issued the following statement this afternoon in response to today’s announcement from the U.S. attorney’s office regarding the indictment of Robert Felner, former dean of the College of Education and Human Development.

The grand jury’s indictment of former dean Robert Felner confirmed our initial concern of wrongdoing in the management of federal grant funds in the College of Education and Human Development. The University of Louisville brought this information to federal authorities last spring. We continue to work with the federal agencies on this investigation and look forward to its conclusion. We have confidence that the judicial system will take the next step and reach a verdict based on the evidence.

Let me reiterate the actions the university has taken since we reported our suspicions regarding Dr. Felner’s alleged criminal behavior to the U.S. attorney’s office.

These actions include:
  • Reviewing internal control processes, including an audit of the finances of the College of Education and Human Development.
  • Conducting an external audit of the university’s grants management and contracts practices.
  • Reviewing faculty grievance procedures.
  • Establishing a committee to review managerial and administrative practices at the request of the faculty, staff and student senates.
  • Reviewing the university’s policies and procedures regarding conflicts of interest.
  • Appointing a blue ribbon committee to investigate the alleged improper awarding of a doctoral degree.
  • Creating a new office to field employee concerns and grievances.
  • Visiting frequently with affected faculty and staff and updating the university weekly on actions taken.
  • Updating members of the media on a regular basis.

While the past few weeks have been difficult for the university community, we believe we have taken the necessary steps to address the issues that have surfaced and to begin the healing process on campus and in the community. We have been supported by our faculty, employees, students, donors, retirees and the many friends of the university.

SOURCE: U of L press release

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Gaming the System: NCLB for the University Set

Baylor uses "Cheap Ploy" to Gain Rankings

In the Robert Felner debacle, there is reason to question whether President James Ramsey's singular focus on raising the University of Louisville's rankings, a worthy goal, caused him to discount numerous grievances (official and otherwise) as just part of the improvement process.

Now Baylor University does him one better.

Cartoon by Claire Taylor/The Lariat Baylor University.
This from the New York Times:

Baylor Rewards Freshmen Who Retake SAT


Baylor University in Waco, Tex., which has a goal of rising to the first tier of national college rankings, last June offered its admitted freshmen a $300 campus bookstore credit to retake the SAT, and $1,000 a year in merit scholarship aid for those who raised their scores by at least 50 points.

Of this year’s freshman class of more than 3,000, 861 students received the bookstore credit and 150 students qualified for the $1,000-a-year merit aid, said John Barry, the university’s vice president for communications and marketing.

“We’re very happy with the way it worked out,” Mr. Barry said in a telephone interview. “The lion’s share of students ended up with the $300 credit they could use in our bookstore. That’s not going to make or break the bank for anybody. But it’s sure been appreciated by our students and parents.”

The offer, which was reported last week by the university’s student newspaper, The Lariat, raised Baylor’s average SAT score for incoming freshmen to 1210, from about 1200, Mr. Barry said. That score is one of the factors in the rankings compiled by U.S. News & World Report.

News of the action by Baylor, a 14,000-student, private Baptist university, came just weeks after the National Association for College Admission Counseling (Nacac) issued a report calling for a re-examination of the use of SAT and ACT scores in both college admissions and the awarding of merit aid.

Critics of standardized testing said they were troubled by Baylor’s action, pointing out that the SAT was a college admission test and that these students had already been admitted.

“This appears to be the type of misuse of undergraduate admission tests that the Nacac Testing Commission sought to identify and correct,” said David A. Hawkins, the author of the new SAT study and the director of public policy and research for Nacac...