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Florida fears brain drain as political interference mounts

As Republicans pile up assaults on academic freedom, experienced out-of-state president suggests extensive costs to brand value

Published on
April 4, 2022
Last updated
April 4, 2022
University of Florida
Source: iStock

Florida politicians are escalating their acts of interference with their state鈥檚 public universities, drawing a toughening array of warnings that they risk scaring away top talent from their highly ranked institutions.

The state鈥檚 governor and other Republican leaders acted in recent months to subject students and faculty to聽tests of personal viewpoints,听and to bar faculty聽countering the state聽in courtroom testimony.

From there, they have moved to erode聽tenure protections,听restrict and interfere聽in campus聽leadership聽searches and appointments, and reduce funding to locations that teach聽.

Such extreme partisanship could cost Florida some of its best聽scholars and their millions of dollars in research grants, the United Faculty of Florida 鈥 the academic labour union at the state鈥檚 top-ranked institution, the University of Florida 鈥 cautioned聽聽that amplified Democratic party arguments against the tenure measure.

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A prominent US higher education expert with experience in such matters, Rebecca Blank, the outgoing chancellor of the University of Wisconsin鈥檚 flagship campus, endorsed the overall sentiment.

Wisconsin鈥檚 troubles began shortly after Dr Blank arrived in Madison in 2013, as state lawmakers cut hundreds of millions of dollars in higher education spending, weakened layoff protections for tenured faculty, and reduced faculty input into campus governance.

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Many Wisconsin faculty responded by pursuing outside job options, Dr Blank told聽探花视频. That forced university leaders to raise staff salaries while they waged a statewide lobbying campaign to reverse the legislature鈥檚 moves, she said. In the autumn of 2015, she said, the university handed out $8 million (拢6 million) in research funding and more than $700,000 in raises to keep 40 top faculty who otherwise might have left Madison with $18 million in federal research money.

The strategy worked 鈥 in large part because Wisconsin鈥檚 legislature and regents resumed a more traditional approach to tenure 鈥 but the win 鈥渞equired proactive, sustained leadership and investment,鈥 she recalled.

The eventual outcome in Florida was seen as less clear, given that the state鈥檚 governor, Ron DeSantis, is widely understood to be harbouring US presidential ambitions while seeing great political benefit in portraying equity-minded educators and their institutions as out of touch with the concerns of most voters.

As in Wisconsin a decade ago, tenure is a favoured target for politicians in Florida and some other Republican-led states. The Florida version, approved this month by lawmakers, takes the authority for periodic performance reviews of tenured professors out of the hands of colleagues聽and puts it under the control of institutional governing boards, whose members are typically political appointees.

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Some of the state actions in Florida have also drawn the attention of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges, or Sacscoc, the main accrediting agency in the southeastern US. Institutional accreditation by a federally recognised agency is necessary for student loan eligibility, and Sacscoc warned that rules preventing faculty testifying in court against the governor鈥檚 political interests could be grounds for revoking accreditation.

That led state officials to聽back off the prohibition. Some Republican lawmakers, however, also initiated legislation that would require public universities to pick a new accrediting agency every five years.

The head of Sacscoc, Belle Wheelan, said she believed that move was ultimately prompted by a separate warning she issued, concerning a failed attempt to install Richard Corcoran 鈥 a DeSantis ally and former speaker of the state House of Representatives 鈥 as president of Florida State University, the state鈥檚 other well-ranked public research institution.

The accreditation violation that Dr Wheelan saw in that case was Mr Corcoran鈥檚 membership of FSU鈥檚 governing board while standing as an FSU presidential candidate. 鈥淭ruly an overreaction,鈥 she said of the attempt by Florida鈥檚 lawmakers to force all universities to choose new accreditors, 鈥渂ecause all he had to do was send a substitute to the meetings until the search was over.鈥

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paul.basken@timeshighereducation.com

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