Carolyn Fowler and Tim McInnis: both were senior managers at the university at the time the donation was discussed; they are now married
When the registrar of Durham University left the institution at the end of June, there was much speculation about her departure. Some believed that it was connected to a blog post written about three months earlier in which she had appeared to jokingly compare the vice-chancellor, Christopher Higgins, to Muppet Show diva Miss Piggy.
Durham has still not confirmed why Carolyn Fowler left her position. Although the mystery continues, 探花视频 has since found that she was at the heart of a much bigger controversy among the top echelons of the university, relating to Durham鈥檚 acceptance in 2010 of a gift of 拢125,000 from British American Tobacco.
THE can reveal that in accepting the gift, the university overruled its own ethics committee and communications office, and tried and failed to keep the gift under wraps, thereby setting in motion a major tussle over ethics and conflicts of interest at the very top of the institution.
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BAT has always defended the gift, which was to fund scholarships for five Afghan women to undertake postgraduate study at Durham, as an end in itself, rather than a form of self-promotion. But leaked documents show that the communications office feared - correctly, as it turned out, and as THE reported in June 2011 - that acceptance of the donation would be condemned by groups such as Cancer Research UK and would draw unfavourable attention to the university鈥檚 investment in 鈥渘on-ethical鈥ehicles鈥.
Publicity would draw attention to the university鈥檚 lack of 鈥渁 clear and robust gift and donation policy from certain types of donors i.e. [a policy on] which sectors we do and do not accepts [sic] gifts/donations from鈥, the office noted in a risk assessment on 12 May 2010.
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It concluded that the gift should be 鈥減olitely rejected鈥, and if not, it should be kept quiet.
The donation was also rejected by the chair of the university鈥檚 ethics committee. The Very Reverend Michael Sadgrove, Dean of Durham, concluded in his response just over a week later that the university should consider 鈥渘ot only reputational risk but the principled pursuit of a genuinely wise outcome鈥.
The decision then went up to Durham鈥檚 university executive committee, a streamlined body that makes recommendations to the institution鈥檚 council. It is composed of the vice-chancellor, seven pro vice-chancellors, the registrar and secretary, the treasurer and the director of human resources.
Like the communications office, the committee feared that other donors to the university might withdraw their support in protest if the gift was accepted.
But, it also noted, publicity about the gift could be avoided.
But no decision could be reached as 鈥渢he views of its members on the relative risks/benefits were divided鈥. In May 2010, the views of the author Bill Bryson (who was then chancellor of Durham, and in whose name the appeal for donors was being made) and the vice-chancellor of the University of Kabul were sought.
Neither had any objections, and the chair of Durham鈥檚 council, Anne Galbraith, was 鈥渇ully supportive鈥. The gift was accepted on 8 June 2010, although two members of the executive committee - it is not clear who - had their reservations noted.
In the agreement was a clause that neither the donor nor the university should publicise the donation, with the exception of BAT being mentioned on a list of donors online. However, this online list was removed from Durham鈥檚 website some time around October 2010 once a new fundraising campaign was launched.
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Personal conflicts of interest cited
The controversy was only just beginning. The gift鈥檚 acceptance triggered concern in Durham鈥檚 highest decision-making body, the governing council. In its meeting on 6 July 2010, the first after the university had accepted the BAT money, Ms Galbraith, in 鈥渓ight of concerns expressed to her by members鈥, assured them that 鈥渄ue process had been followed鈥.
She said the issues at stake would be hammered out at a council awayday in September, when Durham鈥檚 values statement would be discussed. One member objected to her proposed 鈥渨ay forward鈥.
A Durham spokesman told THE that the acceptance had been made 鈥渋n compliance with the university council鈥檚 policies and processes鈥.
The council discussed the ethics of gift acceptance in two further meetings before the student newspaper Palatinate revealed the existence of the BAT gift in May 2011.
The council then focused on a new area of concern: conflicts of interest. This was the first item on its agenda in its meeting on 5 July 2011, a part of the minute that was closed for reasons of 鈥減ersonal confidentiality鈥.
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At the same meeting, Ms Fowler - who was the council鈥檚 secretary, in addition to being registrar - is for the first time listed as having a conflict of interest 鈥渇or business relating to DARO [the Development and Alumni Relations Office]鈥 because of a 鈥減ersonal relationship鈥.
She was in a relationship with the director of DARO, Tim McInnis, a supporter of, and the final signatory on, the BAT gift.
According to Mr McInnis鈥 Facebook profile, he and Ms Fowler had come out as an item online just over a week after the council first discussed the BAT gift on 6 July 2010. (They would go on to marry in the spring of 2012.)
Ms Fowler did not respond to a direct approach from THE for a comment.
New job for BAT gift supporter
In the autumn of 2011, Mr McInnis moved to a new job. He was made director of the newly established Office of Principal Gifts, where he was to work 鈥渨ith the vice-chancellor and other university champions to secure individual gifts of at least 拢1 million鈥.
The struggle at the top of Durham claimed its most senior scalp that autumn when John Cuthbert, vice-chairman of the council and former managing director of Northumbrian Water, resigned.
Having discussed the 鈥渋ssues and concerns鈥 his resignation letter contained, the council decided in November to investigate further several issues at the heart of the dispute over the BAT donation: the management of conflicts of interest, the relationship between the roles of registrar and secretary to the council, and the relationship between the council and the executive committee.
Then, in May this year, Ms Fowler went on 鈥渟pecial leave鈥, and departed from her position at the end of June. Durham still refuses to say why Ms Fowler left, but insiders at the university say they do not believe that the 鈥淢iss Piggy鈥 blog post was the real cause of her departure, although it is still not clear what was.
It is understood that the council now feels it is more capable of dealing with the ethical dilemmas and conflicts of interest that have come out of the BAT Pandora鈥檚 box.
A new gifts policy was approved by the council in January. It stipulates that development staff must flag up any donations from firms involved in 鈥渃aution topics鈥 such as 鈥渁rms manufacture, tobacco, alcohol, gambling, [or] pornography鈥 to the treasurer.
In July, the council agreed updated guidance on 鈥渃onflict of interest and personal relationships at work鈥.
However, members of faculty at Durham do not appear satisfied that the university鈥檚 management is listening. A leaked staff survey for 2011-12, conducted by Capita, the business-process outsourcer, found that employees felt less able to 鈥渧oice opinions鈥 or 鈥渞aise points of concern鈥 than in 2007.
鈥淎s an organisation we do not鈥ppear鈥o be engaging our staff and to be embracing change,鈥 it says.
鈥楽addened鈥 by speculation
The university faced further criticism in late September by accepting 拢2.5 million from Sheikh Nasser Al-Mohammed Al-Sabah, the prime minister of Kuwait, who resigned from government last year following unproven allegations of corruption.
In response to THE鈥檚 inquiries, the spokesman for Durham acknowledged that the BAT donation was 鈥渆xtensively debated within the university prior to its acceptance and there was not unanimous support for doing so鈥.
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The university was 鈥渆xtremely grateful for the financial and other support for its students, education, intercultural activities and research from hundreds of benefactors from around the world鈥, the spokesman said, adding that it was 鈥渟addened鈥 that gifts had been subject to 鈥渋naccurate speculation and innuendo鈥.
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