Junior College Follies
by
Doug French
by Doug French
For
most people working in private industry, the everyday life of working
on a college campus would seem like some sort of alternative Kafkaesque
universe. The backstabbing, betrayals, and bureaucratic baloney
are so commonplace that scandal and waste are barely newsworthy
items.
And
when it comes higher education follies, the Community College of
Southern Nevada (CCSN) gives any institution a run for its money.
It’s hard to imagine the scope of nonsense ongoing at CCSN. The
school has continually made news during the past few years for a
variety of questionable activities. There are so many transgressions
a person tends to forget them, and chalk them up to business as
usual. That this must be how all junior colleges are run.
Teaching
Amidst the Neon Palm Trees by Lee Ryan Miller tells the
story of one professor’s struggle at CCSN and will enlighten readers
to the waste inherent in a system that constantly requires taxpayers
to shovel in more and more money to keep it operating at peak inefficiency.
Professor
Miller doesn’t make for a sympathetic hero unfortunately. He’s a
whinny leftist political science instructor who constantly makes
it clear that he’s underpaid, under appreciated, constantly broke
and without dependable transportation (he tells of two instances
when his car either didn’t start or died inside the first 16 pages
of the book). When he was not assigned any classes to teach during
the summer months he applied for unemployment benefits. In a letter
to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, Miller wrote; "The
state unemployment insurance law is mean-spirited. The state of
Nevada should not penalize people solely because they wish to devote
their lives to educating their fellow Nevadans." Do you think
he has a sense of entitlement?
When
he hit town in 1997, Miller applied at both UNLV and CCSN to teach
either political science or economics and quickly landed a job as
an adjunct professor teaching economics at both. Miller, whose PHD
in political science is from UCLA, writes that he had a great rapport
with his students. In an example of how he reached his economics
students he writes; "They loved my ‘Star Trek’ explanation
of federal open market operations: ‘The "Federation" has
its origins in twentieth century America. Where we know it as the
"Federal Reserve" or "Fed," for short. It rules
the galaxy through its power over the money supply. Here’s how they
do it. The Fed sells some bonds. Someone buys these bonds, and the
money paid to the Fed for the bonds, from our perspective, ceases
to exist. It seems to disappear into another dimension. As a result,
the money supply shrinks.’"
Oh
my, that analysis is really something to be proud of. Beam me up,
Hans Hoppe.
But,
Miller’s story really begins when he is hired full-time by CCSN
in 1998 to teach political science. Miller writes that he "dazzled
the committee with [his] insights into the federal campaign finance
system in the U.S." His "insight" was that it costs
a lot of money to win a congressional seat. Wow. No wonder the selection
committee was impressed.
It
took weeks for CCSN to offer Miller the job however, despite individual
members of the selection committee telling him privately that he
had their recommendation for the position. Why? Miller keeps this
a deep, dark secret until the end of the book. But, it took phone
calls from Democratic Senator Harry Reid (Miller’s girlfriend worked
for Reid), and Nevada Legislator Kathy Von Tobel (who had taken
one of Miller’s classes) for the CCSN brass to hire Dr. Miller,
because they "had gotten it into their heads that spring to
hire a Hispanic for the political science position," fellow
professor Mike Green told Miller later.
The
department already had a Hispanic instructor (in a department of
four), but evidently that wasn’t enough. Despite no qualified Hispanic
applicants, Bob Silverman CCSN Senior Vice President almost decided
to cancel the search and start over again rather than hire a qualified
white male.
Once
on the job, Miller didn’t see himself as merely a political science
instructor. "I tried to cajole and inspire students into becoming
more active participants in the political process," writes
Miller. In fact, one of Miller’s assignments required students to
either register to vote or write and turn in a paragraph explaining
why they chose not to register. His students, being ever pragmatic,
spent the two minutes to register rather than write a paragraph
articulating any dissatisfaction they might have had for the democratic
process. Miller registered hundreds of students, while only one
60-year-old student turned in a no-register paragraph.
Professor
Miller also required his students to "engage in some sort of
‘political participation activity.’" Thus, Miller generated
plenty of volunteers for political candidates in southern Nevada
as well as candidates for student government at CCSN. Miller didn’t
see his mission as educating students. As he writes: "I enjoy
teaching, but what really thrilled me about my job was the opportunity
to replace apathy with interest in the political system. I measured
my success as a teacher not by the quality of my student’s work,
but by the passion that they developed."
Much
of the book is devoted to Miller’s attempt to gain approval and
funding for a European political tour. His proposal was to take
a group of students to Europe during the summer to meet with officials
of the European Union.
The
number of people that play a roll in the twists and turns of Miller’s
project is so long that the author provides a helpful "Cast
of Characters" section for the reader’s reference. Anyone who
has been forced to deal with the multiple fiefdoms and overbearing
bureaucracy on a college campus will empathize with Miller’s quest,
described as "A Crime Against the Bureaucracy" the title
of Chapter IX.
The
college ultimately issued Miller a "NOTICE OF NONREAPPOINMENT
because of [his] unprofessional behavior with the professionals
of this College and our System," according to a letter from
CCSN Senior Vice President Bob Silverman.
In
other words Miller was fired over petty jealousies and not kissing
the right rear-ends in the right order.
It
was CCSN President Richard Moore along with Silverman that didn’t
like Professor Miller. Miller had unintentionally upstaged Moore
at a New Faculty Brunch held at the Las Vegas Country Club. After
he had been fired, Miller’s attorney told him, "They have no
accusations of wrong doing. [CCSN Assistant General Counsel Karl]
Armstrong said that you had just ‘pissed off Silverman and Moore,’
and therefore they decided to get rid of you."
It
was at that New Faculty Brunch in 1999 that Richard Moore made a
prescient statement concerning Nevada’s state budget that went unreported
at the time. During his speech, Moore heaped accolades on Nevada
Governor Kenny Guinn and Guinn’s Millennium Scholarships that go
to any Nevada high school graduate with a "B" average
attending a state college. Moore told the audience that Guinn’s
secret plan was to use the Millennium Scholarships (which are funded
with tobacco settlement money) as "a Trojan horse to attack
budget limitations." "The governor knows that we’re going
to need a lot of money to expand our colleges to meet the surge
in enrollment," Moore said. "He knows that this is the
way he’s finally going to be able to get a tax increase passed by
the legislature. It’s a brilliant plan!"
Professor
Miller wrote that he thought Moore was crazy to think that a Republican
governor could have a secret plan to raise taxes. But, Moore had
it exactly right. Four years latter, the Nevada Legislature passed
$833 million in new taxes, close to the $1 billion that Governor
Guinn proposed. At the same time, the Legislature increased the
CCSN budget by $47 million, a 46.5 percent increase.
However,
Moore was not at CCSN to spend the money. Moore left CCSN to become
the President of the new Nevada State College at Henderson for a
salary of $175,000, while he was under investigation by the Nevada
Attorney General for wrongdoing while at CCSN. The AG reported that
enrollment padding under Moore had included a scheme to rent union
halls and hire union personnel to teach apprenticeship classes that
union members needed to take, so that the union members could be
counted toward college enrollment figures.
The
college claims to have 32,000 students enrolled. Yet, a May 16,
2003 Las Vegas Review Journal story indicated that only 1,600 students
were eligible to participate in last years commencement exercises.
That’s not exactly a rip-roaring graduation rate. Of course the
school receives funding based upon its enrollment, not its graduation
rate.
Mr.
Moore subsequently resigned as President of the Nevada State College
for improprieties there, and currently teaches business and economics
to a dozen or so students at the college for a salary of $90,000
per year.
You
will be happy to know that professor Miller was able to find a position
with Cypress College in southern California where he is presumably
motivating students to vigorously support democracy. He writes that
he is making 42 percent more than he did at CCSN but that the place
is "not entirely free of tyrannical administrators or back-stabbing
colleagues."
As
for the author of this review, I was turned down by CCSN for an
adjunct economics instructor position in 1995 despite having a letter
of recommendation from a CCSN board member and teaching experience
at the University of Nevada Reno. My rejection letter stated; "We
have offered the position to another candidate whose overall qualifications
are more in line with our needs at this time." I always suspected
that it was a mistake to mention in my application letter that I
had earned my masters degree under Murray Rothbard. But maybe it
was as simple as the college needing an instructor who wasn’t a
white male.
May
5, 2004
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of a Nevada bank and a policy fellow
of the Nevada Policy Research Institute.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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