If you’ve been following the news then you know that back in
December KBOR approved a social media policy that gave the Executive
Administrator of each institution authority to fire any faculty or staff member
who used social media in a way that disrupted workplace harmony or implied
disloyalty or impaired supervision or was in any way not in the best interests
of the University as that individual defines it. Uproar ensued.
A Workgroup comprised of staff and faculty from all seven Regents
institutions was charged with revising the policy; they came up with one that
was short, affirming and definitely (or defiantly) not punitive and presented
it to the Regents at the April meeting. You can find a link to the work group
policy here.
Apparently, KBOR wasn’t too happy this new policy. Maybe it
wasn’t sufficiently punitive? Anyway, KBOR revised their original policy by
adopting some of the language of the Workgroup policy, notably that affirming
academic freedom. Much to the disappointment of a lot of people, however, the
revised KBOR policy retained the language about harmony, loyalty and discipline.
You can read KBOR’s revised policy here.
Included on the agenda for the meeting last Wednesday was a
vote on the slightly revised KBOR Social Media policy. To their credit, the
Regents gave Emporia State University’s Sheryl Lidzy an opportunity to read—on
behalf of the Kansas Council of Faculty Senate Presidents—a statement
defending freedom of speech and requesting the Regents to abandon their pursuit of an overly broad and highly
punitive policy and to instead adopt the Taskforce policy. You can find Lidzy’s
statement here.
So here’s where things stand: if Kirk Schulz or someone who
has his ear, like my department head or dean or any one of the Regents, decides
that this post somehow contrary to the best interests of the University or
disrupts harmony, loyalty and discipline, then I can be fired from my tenured
position, post-haste. Will that happen? I seriously doubt it. But the fact that
it could happen . . . well, that’s cause for concern and not just for me or my
family or KSU but for the entire state of Kansas.
Next: why I think this has happened.
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