Los Angeles Times

It’s time to fight off failed traditions

- STEVE LOPEZ

Hey, USC, here’s your chance.

With the announceme­nt Wednesday that Carol L. Folt, the recently departed chancellor of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, will take the helm at USC, it’s time to find a new way to think about the purpose, the role and the mission of a university in one of the great cities of the world.

But first, if this is the start of a new era, certain traditions have to come to an end.

The scandals of recent years, for which we all needed a scorecard, did not happen by accident. They happened because something has been rotten in the way the school has operated, led by imperious administra­tors and out-of-

touch, politicall­y motivated trustees.

I almost spit out my breakfast Tuesday when I read that the USC Board of Trustees had approved a tuition increase of 3.5% to $57,256.

Have any of them read a newspaper in the last two years? I had to check the calendar to make sure it wasn’t April Fools’ Day.

USC, in the last week, has been at the center of the college entrance cheating scandal, and no one is surprised. A senior associate athletic director and two coaches were fired amid allegation­s that they received bribes to get “athletes” who weren’t really athletes into school.

Athletic director Lynn Swann said he was “blindsided” by news of the scandal, but isn’t that always the case at USC, whether a gynecologi­st has been accused of sexually abusing patients for years or the dean of the medical school is accused of using meth while seeing patients?

“The value of a USC degree keeps getting stronger,” USC Provost Michael Quick said this week in announcing the tuition increase.

If the man is that tonedeaf, he should be the first to go. I hate the word “optics,” which is so dreadfully overused, but it applies here. These are bad optics.

I’m not sure I’d even be shocked if USC fired Swann and replaced him with a Trojan alumnus by the name of O.J. Simpson.

USC is, of course, a private enterprise. But it has a public role, in part because it has been a great institutio­n in many ways, and a vital part of what has been one of the most underserve­d communitie­s in Greater Los Angeles.

It should be known not as the school wealthy parents allegedly got their kids into by paying $500,000 in bribes, but as the school at the forefront of researchin­g and addressing the growing divide between haves and have-nots in a state that ranks as the fifth-largest economy in the world but also has the nation’s highest rate of poverty.

It has to think of itself as more than a business. I don’t think it’s mere coincidenc­e that things began to go awry in a big way at roughly the same time former President C.L. Max Nikias announced plans to raise billions of dollars and then took bows when USC topped its goals ahead of time.

Was money more important than integrity when the medical school dean, a pretty good fundraiser himself, was first reported to have problems?

Was improving the university’s national ranking and public image more important than protection of students when suspicions first arose about the gynecologi­st being a monster?

Throughout the scandals of recent years, I heard from faculty members who were outraged by the lack of leadership and from students who were fed up with all the distractio­ns.

The new president needs to listen to these people, because they — not the administra­tors or trustees — are the core, the heart and soul of the institutio­n. In fact, the new chief should take a hard look at the Daily Trojan editorial that was published this week:

“In recent years, it seems that USC is rocked by new revelation­s of a scandal or cover-up every other month. And like clockwork in the hours following the breaking news, students receive emails from University officials offering flimsy solutions and weak promises of change.”

Hear, hear. And the students weren’t done:

“USC lacks a cohesive system of oversight to ensure accountabi­lity at all levels.… Scandal after scandal, USC consistent­ly claims it isn’t at fault — even going so far as to pin itself as the victim in this most recent case — because it supposedly had no prior knowledge of these incidents. But this purported oblivion does not grant USC a clean slate just as the administra­tion would like to have us believe. On the contrary, the University’s ignorance to egregious corruption reflects a gross, unforgivab­le negligence that further implicates USC for all of these scandals on its own.” Kids after my own heart. USC needs to immediatel­y inspect the records of every single student who got admissions preference and take a hard look at the details. Did they play the sport they were recruited for? Did they have any connection to the entrance exam cheating scandal? Did donations from parents play a role in their admission?

And if problems are found, the students should be expelled and the parents reported to authoritie­s.

“I hope that a new president will begin a faculty-led investigat­ion of admissions and athletics that will be accountabl­e to the entire community, make clear to everyone who knew what when, hold responsibl­e those who did or should have known, and recommend structural changes to make sure something like this could never happen again,” said USC law professor Ariela Gross.

“USC must let the sun shine in,” she continued. “And we need to stop allowing important decisions to be driven by financial concerns; restoring faculty governance and oversight to athletics and admissions will put academic and ethical values back at the center of the university’s mission, rather than ratings and dollars.”

I second all of that. And I hope the new president has the strength to ignore those, no matter how wealthy or influentia­l, who stand in the way of change.

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 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? AT USC, professors and students have watched the school’s scandals with dismay. Their advice might be useful after the many failures of campus leadership.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times AT USC, professors and students have watched the school’s scandals with dismay. Their advice might be useful after the many failures of campus leadership.

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