Los Angeles Times

USC leader defends dean’s ouster amid protests

Interim president says decision to remove business school chief wasn’t ‘hasty or rash.’

- By Alejandra Reyes-Velarde alejandra.reyesvelar­de@latimes.com Times staff writers Harriet Ryan and Matt Hamilton contribute­d to this report.

The dispute over the ouster of a popular USC dean continued to roil the campus Friday as scores of students, professors and alumni protested at an afternoon rally and the university’s interim president renewed her defense of the decision to remove him.

Around the statue of Tommy Trojan, about 150 people, many wearing yellow shirts that read “I stand with Dean Ellis,” cheered on a series of speakers praising James Ellis, dean of the Marshall School of Business.

“He’s the most ethical person I know,” Heather Kline, a 1993 graduate, said.

Ellis, 71, is being forced from the job he’s held for 11 years over what he has described as administra­tive dissatisfa­ction with the handling of harassment and discrimina­tion complaints against business school faculty and staff.

Interim President Wanda Austin, tapped in August to oversee the university while it searches for a permanent leader, has presented the dean’s removal as part of a broader effort to reform USC’s culture. The university’s previous president, C.L. Max Nikias, was forced out in the wake of a scandal involving a campus gynecologi­st accused of abusing hundreds of patients.

After outside legal and human resources experts reviewed the business school’s record on harassment and discrimina­tion, Austin informed Ellis last month that his term as dean would end in June, according to university correspond­ence and interviews. USC offered to pay out the three years remaining on his contract, the correspond­ence said.

In a statement after the protest, Austin said she supported the expression of views but indicated that she stood by her decision.

“We must have the appropriat­e processes and personnel in place to live up to the promises we are making,” she wrote. “This was not a hasty or rash decision. It was made after many meetings and discussion­s, along with reviews by several external, objective sources.”

USC has declined to release details about the nature and number of complaints at the business school, citing confidenti­ality concerns.

In a letter to USC trustees Friday, an attorney for Ellis demanded the university turn over documents related to his dismissal, including a law firm report into the business school’s history of harassment and discrimina­tion complaints.

Lawyer Louis “Skip” Miller noted that in October, the month before the dean was informed of his removal, he received a $70,000 performanc­e bonus.

“If there was a problem, why would the school reappoint him and award the high bonus,” wrote Miller, who was retained by billionair­e trustee Ming Hsieh to advocate for the dean.

At the rally, many shared anecdotes about the support Ellis provided.

Yasmin Scott-Halcromb, an alumna from Watts, recalled a conversati­on with Ellis in which she described herself as “a nobody.”

“You are a graduate of Marshall School of Business. You are somebody,” he replied, she recalled.

Ellis appeared to try to quell the unrest Friday in a letter to Marshall students, faculty and alumni.

“I am hoping that we all can calm down, take a breath, and evaluate where we are,” Ellis wrote, noting that students were in the middle of exams.

“We are all on the same team,” he added.

The trustees are to discuss Ellis’ status at a meeting this week.

 ?? Alejandra Reyes-Velarde Los Angeles Times ?? ABOUT 150 people rallied in support of James Ellis, who is being forced out as dean over the business school’s record on harassment and discrimina­tion.
Alejandra Reyes-Velarde Los Angeles Times ABOUT 150 people rallied in support of James Ellis, who is being forced out as dean over the business school’s record on harassment and discrimina­tion.
 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? INTERIM President Wanda Austin is seeking to reform USC’s culture.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times INTERIM President Wanda Austin is seeking to reform USC’s culture.

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