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Mark Ridenour: ACTA Board Member and Former Board Chairman, Miami University
Mark Ridenour graduated from Miami University in 1982 with a bachelor’s degree in finance. He began his career at National...
What can be done to improve governance at Penn State?
That’s the question before the Pennsylvania Legislature this week and it’s one legislators can and should address.
Concealing information, finger-pointing, sanctions. That’s not the mental image one should have of a governing board. And yet that is the state of affairs at Penn State in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky scandal.
Yes, something is clearly wrong with governance at Penn State, but it is something that will require more than just the removal of bad actors. The problem is the board structure–a structure put in place by the Legislature at the time of the Civil War that renders accountability to the people of the Commonwealth virtually impossible. This is, happily, something the Legislature can fix.
Examining what caused the breakdown of board oversight is commendable, but it must result in substantive change. Trustees, at their best, insist on checks and balances. They put the big picture ahead of internal demands; they balance competing interests in service of students and the public. They are the eyes and ears of the public to ensure that Pennsylvania’s universities spend tax dollars wisely and transparently, adhere to their mission, and deliver a quality education.
The problems of Penn State governance are clear. They’re spelled out in the reports of former FBI director Louis Freeh and the recommendations of Auditor General Jack Wagner which show an outdated structure, accountable to no one.
It’s time that the Legislators demand accountability by adopting a new and responsive board Charter. Here’s how:
There’s much work to be done, but Pennsylvanian taxpayers and students deserve a far more responsive board structure, one that will ensure accountability.
Trustees once explained to investigators their de facto governance role as a purely ornamental “rubber stamp.” One former trustee said board culture was driven by a small “Power Group,” commenting there was “almost no distinction between this first group and the administration itself.”
Even the sobering findings of the Freeh report have not produced encouraging results. Days after the NCAA held a nationally-televised press conference announcing a range of sanctions including a $60 million fine, some trustees reported they were never apprised. As one trustee bluntly stated: “This is the most significant decision in the history of Penn State, and we didn’t know. The financial impact of this decision could run as high as $500 million, and we didn’t know anything about it.”
It’s time for trustees to know–and it’s time for the Legislature to help them.
Mark Ridenour graduated from Miami University in 1982 with a bachelor’s degree in finance. He began his career at National...
WASHINGTON, DC—The American Council of Trustees and Alumni (ACTA) is proud to announce […]
The Utah Board of Higher Education is undergoing its second structural overhaul in three years in an ongoing push to centralize the oversight of the state’s 16 public institutions. The latest effort will reduce the board from 18 to 10 members and prioritize...
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