The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Money scandals lead to tighter oversight at Tech

University President Peterson agrees to ‘substantia­l’ changes.

- By Ty Tagami ttagami@ajc.com and Johnny Edwards jredwards@ajc.com

Georgia Tech President George P. “Bud” Peterson has agreed to tighten his oversight over employee compliance with ethics policies after a series of scan- dals caught the attention of his bosses.

The University System of Georgia, as it happens, will have an ethics awareness week in mid-November, noted Chancellor Steve W. Wrigley in an email to Peterson last week. “I expect a strong and visible prese nce and participat­ion from you and your senior lead- ership team,” Wrigley wrote.

The email noted that Peterson had agreed to more substantia­l changes aimed at tightening controls to avoid more violations of the type that have resulted in the departures of several senior staffers.

Three top administra- tors recently resigned amid recent internal investigat­ions and another was fired.

The scandals that prompted their departures were only the latest signs of weak oversight at Tech.

On June 5, Tech removed Andrew Gerber from his lead- ership role at the affiliated Georgia Tech Research Insti- tute, a spokeswoma­n said on Friday. Gerber, who was paid about $400,000 a year, subsequent­ly resigned.

Gerber was the focus of an April report by Channel 2 Action News that GTRI had spent more than $1 million on employee “morale” events.

The spending included $73,000 for Georgia Aquarium visits by employees and their families, $109,000 for a staff picnic at Six Flags, $26,000 at a Braves game, nearly $12,000 for go-karts and laser tag at Andretti’s and $7,300 at Topgolf, including more than $1,000 in cock- tails, beer and wine.

Tech initially defended the use of the federal money, but the tone changed after Wrigley’s team looked into it.

A May 25 letter to Peterson from John M. Fuchko, one of Wrigley’s vice chan- cellors, describes an ethics reporting system that seemed designed for abuse, with an organizati­onal chart that “substantiv­ely and sym- bolically” marginaliz­ed an ethics and compliance offi- cer.

One of the top executives who designed that org chart, Executive Vice President Steven C. Swant, was fired by Peterson last week, the day after he got the results of a separate investigat­ion into Swant’s dual roles as both the member of a com- pany board and the leader of the division that hired the company as a vendor for Tech, Channel 2 reported Thursday.

These are only the latest scandals at GTRI. In 2016, t hree employees were indicted on federal charges involving Georgia Tech pur- chasing cards and consulting activities. The charges against James G. Maloney, GTRI’s principal research engineer, are still pending. The two other employees pleaded guilty and are awaiting sentencing.

Wrigley’s email to Peterson last week gave the Tech president until Aug. 15 to overhaul his ethics oversight, noting the changes they’d agreed upon.

Peterson didn’t wait on one of the measures, sending an all-campus email Thursday to report that the internal auditor is already reporting directly to him.

 ??  ?? Andrew Gerber
Andrew Gerber

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