The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Morehouse board under fire from students, faculty, alumni

Handling of dismissal of school’s president a point of contention.

- HIGHER EDUCATION By Eric Stirgus estirgus@ajc.com

Morehouse College board members are encounteri­ng increasing criticism from students, faculty and alumni about their decision-making, which has now also drawn the interest of the college’s accreditat­ion agency.

An official from the Southern Associatio­n of Colleges and Schools is scheduled to meet with faculty today as part of a review to determine whether the board violated its own guidelines in January when voting to dismiss the president, John S. Wilson, when his contract expires in June.

A spokeswoma­n for SACS said it is reviewing Morehouse at the behest of faculty. There are trouble signs, the agency said.

“Any time informatio­n about a member institutio­n hits the

media, SACS makes a determinat­ion as to whether or not the allegation­s might put an institutio­n out of compliance with any of our accreditat­ion standards,” said the spokeswoma­n, Pamela Cravey. “Recent media reports suggest that might be true at Morehouse.”

Faculty and student leaders contend Morehouse board chairman Robert Davidson ignored legal advice by preventing student board members from participat­ing in the January meeting when the board voted not to extend Wilson’s contract. One student trustee, Johnathan Hill, said in court records that Davidson wanted to know how the students would vote on Wilson before allowing them to enter the meeting. Hill refused to disclose their position.

Faculty members took the extraordin­ary step last month of a “no confidence” vote against Davidson, a Morehouse alum and business executive who lives near Los Angeles.

Davidson said he wasn’t available for an interview. He released a statement from the board accusing some faculty of “counterpro­ductive behavior” by sharing internal documents with reporters and other informatio­n it says is inaccurate. He also shared a letter updating the selection process for Wilson’s replacemen­t. Wilson, a Morehouse graduate who became president in 2013, declined comment.

Morehouse has more than three dozen board members, most of them current or retired business leaders. Only one dozen of them live in Georgia. Board members include civil rights pioneer and former U.N. Ambassador Andrew Young, Chick-fil-A CEO Dan Cathy and former NAACP president Ben Jealous. The board is scheduled to hold its monthly meeting Friday and Saturday.

Some faculty members are worried SACS could put the nation’s only historical­ly black college for men, located near downtown Atlanta, on probation, which could hurt fundraisin­g and student recruitmen­t.

“We’d like to get some clarity about the board and how it can change,” said English professor Cindy Lutenbache­r, who’s been a Morehouse faculty member 27 years. “We’re very dishearten­ed. We feel like we’ve been ignored. Morehouse is such a great institutio­n and I’d hate to see it harmed in any way.”

The public feud comes at what should have been a celebrator­y time for Morehouse. The college marked its 150th anniversar­y in February. The board vote was announced on the birthday of its most famous alumnus, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

Davidson and a faction of board members have been at odds with Wilson for years, documents show. One consultant report from 2014 said Wilson needed to communicat­e better with the board. It also recommende­d changes to the board structure, noting that many of them had served more than 10 years.

Some of Morehouse’s most influentia­l and prominent graduates signed a letter earlier this week questionin­g the board’s actions. The letter, signed by former U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson, actor Samuel L. Jackson and filmmaker Spike Lee, asked if the board is “part of the solution or part of the problem?”

“Morehouse College is at present drowning in acrimony,” the letter said. “Student leaders feel they have no voice, and are compelled to take you to court. The faculty has no confidence in your Board Chair. Your decision not to renew President Wilson’s contract is inexplicab­le and you must now search for the school’s third president in 10 years.

“All of us in the Morehouse family — students, faculty and alumni — hold you, the Trustees, responsibl­e for this dismal state of affairs.”

Other alumns said in interviews they still support Morehouse, but worry about how the acrimony will affect enrollment and fundraisin­g.

“It distracts from celebratin­g the school’s remarkable perseveran­ce and accomplish­ments,” said Howard Franklin, a well-known political consultant and lobbyist. “Coming off my 15th year reunion with a class that is energized in support of our alma mater, recent events have definitely dampened that enthusiasm. I hope that we can limit the fallout and re-instill confidence with swift and transparen­t resolution of the issues that have been made public.”

Chuck Hobbs, a Florida-based attorney and writer, said he’s concerned Morehouse’s brand, “is in danger of being sullied to the point where some families are hesitant to send their sons to a school that seems unstable.”

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