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Panel Finds Age Discrimination at Ohio U.

January 26, 2006

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Ohio University engaged in age discrimination when it denied tenure to a then 51-year-old engineer in 2001, the Ohio Civil Rights Commission said in a stinging ruling this month, rejecting the recommendation of an administrative law judge. The commission ordered the university to offer a tenured associate professor position to Robert Lipset and to give him $266,000 in back pay. Ohio University officials said they would appeal the agency's decision.

Lipset spent 20 years as an engineer in the automobile industry before deciding, in a "midlife career change," to get a Ph.D. Ohio University's Industrial and Manufacturing Systems Engineering Department hired him in 1995, and he received positive annual evaluations and won a series of awards, for both teaching and research, in his first six years there. "I was very confident I was going to receive tenure," he said.

When he came up for promotion in 2001, however, the department's tenure committee voted him down, citing perceived problems with his research. Lipset challenged the decision through the university's internal appeals process, but was turned down at each and every stage.

Lipset then submitted a public records request for documents from his peers' tenure decisions, which suggested that "I had been treated very, very differently from others who had come up for tenure," he said. He then complained to the state civil rights commission in 2002; its investigation concluded that it was "probable" that Ohio had discriminated against him based on age.

The case was turned over to an administrative law judge, who ruled in Ohio's favor in October. But in December, the commission reviewed the case, and concluded that the judge "did not take notice of reliable, probative and substantial evidence in the record which establishes that unlawful discrimination occurred." It is unusual for the commission to ignore the recommendation of its own administrative law judge.

First, the commission rejected Ohio's contention that Lipset's research had been deficient, citing the fact that he had won the department's research award the year before he applied for tenure, been published in "some of the most highly respected journals in engineering," and received grants.

Second, the panel noted that Lipset had received the largest merit raise in the department just before the tenure ruling, and that the raises were distributed based on the same basic criteria used in the tenure process.

Third, based on the records Lipset had gathered, the commission concluded that "substantially younger professors in the IMSE Department have been awarded promotion and tenure despite having markedly lower performance ratings than Dr. Lipset." (To the probable dismay of some of those professors, they are cited by name in the panel's report. One, for example, "was also ranked as 'below average' to 'average' due to his low number of actual publications, and his annual evaluation letters repeatedly pointed out his 'serious deficiency' in publications." Ouch.)

Lastly, the commission cited as "evidence of age discrimination" the fact that "several persons involved in the ultimate decision to deny tenure and promotion" to Lipset had "demonstrated a troubling animus against older persons." The professor with the "serious deficiency" in his research record, the panel found, had written at the time of Lipset's hiring that he was "too old" for the job. Another departmental colleague took to referring to Lipset and other older professors as "legacies," a term, the commission said in its report, "that was used to refer to 'old and outdated' computer equipment."

Taken together, the commission concluded, "the reliable, probative, and substantial evidence presented at the hearing demonstrates that Dr. Lipset's research, and indeed his entire performance, compared favorably to the other, substantially younger, professors who were granted tenure and promotion by Ohio University."

The panel acknowledges that the evidence is "circumstantial" rather than "direct" evidence of age discrimination. But the commission "disbelieves," it wrote with emphasis, Ohio University's proffered reasons for the denial of tenure and promotion, and believes that the real reason for the employment decision is unlawful age discrimination."

The commission ordered Ohio to hire Lipset within 30 days of its written ruling this month, and to reimburse him for three and a half years of back pay, totaling at least $265,998.

John Burns, director of legal affairs for the university, said it would appeal to Common Pleas Court, the state trial court. Burns said the university had given Lipset multiple opportunities to make his case but had been deemed at every level that "he didn't meet the standards that the particular department and the college felt were grounds for tenure."

He said that the university had gone to court to challenge a ruling by the civil rights commission once before and been successful, and that it would seek to prove that the panel "did not rely on good and valuable evidence" in reaching its conclusion. Burns also said, though, that "the possibility of settlement is always there."

In an interview Wednesday, Lipset said that he wanted to return to teaching, because "I thoroughly enjoyed working with students and want to try to have an effect on educating the next generation of engineers."

He said he hoped the university would "do the right thing," adding: "It's time for them to recognize the seriousness of what they've done and make it right."

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Comments on Panel Finds Age Discrimination at Ohio U.

  • Disgusted
  • Posted by Kate , Visiting Asst Professor on July 18, 2007 at 9:25am EDT
  • I was one of two finalists for a tenure position at a private liberal arts college in Pennsylvania. The position was offered to the other candidate who turned the offer down. Then I was told that "at this point in my career" they didn't think I could make tenure. My teaching evals and merit raises based on excellence in teaching and service to the department and the community essentially mean nothing. I'm in my 50s with immense experience and a recent doctorate. I've also been responsible for bringing in grant money, raising awareness of our digital media literacy in the community and engaging students in extraordinary extracurricular activities.

    But what does it matter?

  • Posted by bystander on January 26, 2006 at 7:30am EST
  • The court, if not the tenure committee, did look at the data. I once sat on a hiring committee whose members actually laughed out loud reading papers from an applicant they thought to be a silly old man, what does he think he can offer here? I did confront them, saying their age discrimination was illegal (oh, they said, oh, we didn't mean it haha); but they DID mean it. (Remember when the prevailing wisdom was Don't Trust Anybody Over 30?) This professor is to be admired for standing firm. That is why he got all those fine evals in the first six years of his service at Ohio.

  • Typical mess
  • Posted by R.A.S. on January 26, 2006 at 9:20am EST
  • My best guess is, he was brought in, then either (s) didn't leave or (b) the politics shifted.

    So, they decided to torture him, but, in a rare move, he fought back. (Luckily, he's in a very employable area.)

    Good for him -- proves that inmates are running the asylum, and someone ought to fix the mess. Chances of repair without serious, concerted effort: 0.000001%

  • Posted by Karen Phillips on January 26, 2006 at 9:25am EST
  • Kudos to this professor for his tenacity. Age discrimination is everywhere at Ohio University. It's about time that somebody exposed it.

  • Posted by Whistleblower , Professor of Journalism at Ohio University on January 26, 2006 at 9:45am EST
  • Ohio University has a new president who has made "diversity" his major goal. Ohio University Lawyer John Burns evidently hasn't got the message if he plans to appeal this decision favoring a faculty member with the courage to fight agism. Or, perhaps, Ohio University is an institution that disrespects the protected status of employees, students, applicants for positions, or applicants for admission who are older than 40 years of age. Or, perhaps, Ohio University's definition of "diversity" varies from that found in Federal labor law.
    Whistleblower

  • Go for it!
  • Posted by Edward , A "Retired" Business Professor on January 26, 2006 at 10:05am EST
  • A Second to the Kudos for putting up a fight! With the wealth of experience that is added to the ability to help the younger generation learn is a valuable combination that the "inexperienced" tenured professors can't possibly have. In addition, This experience of the process of change and innovation is critical to the success of the New World.

    Having been on the receiving end of a forced "retirement" by not achieving tenure or a new non-tenure appointment, I can fully understand his position. Ironically, another "old" silent generation colleague and I led the fight beginning in 1998 to establish an online learning capacity at our small catholic university, but with a change of deans ( a silent generation leader replaced with a Gen Xer) the new administration typically refused to accept the fact that the world is moving to the digital realm and our online program brought in 5000 registrants to the decline of face to face students.
    The boomers and gen xers seem to simply want the power of the face-to-face classroom because they can't cope with the innovation and change necessary for the US to re-claim its world leadership through understanding "The World is Flat" as Tom Friedman explains.

    In our case and several others it was the old guys leading the way and the younger staff that killed the online program.

  • Age discrimination disconcerting
  • Posted by Concerned Alumnus , Doctoral Candidate at U of Michigan on January 26, 2006 at 10:15am EST
  • As an alumnus of Ohio, and a late life Doctoral Candidate (over 40) I am very concerned about the behavior of my alma mater. I will have to think twice before giving any further donations.

  • Age Discrimination Pandemic
  • Posted by John F. DeFelice , Assistant Professor of History at University of Maine at Presque Isle on January 26, 2006 at 10:45am EST
  • I'm glad to see someone fighting back! I am 50 and almost finished with the tenure process. While I have not observed age discrimination on our campus, I did in the job application process elsewhere. I was a finalist in nine academic searches, and lost each time to one younger than myself with equal or lesser qualifications. In one case I was actually expected to join in a snowball fight as a "team building exercise" with members of the committee! At the time I was recovering from a long respiratory illness and declined. The silence was ominous. Other colleagues in my graduate program who were in their 40's colored their hair before interviews, made sure any references to their age were not in their CV (including any information from previous careers: those were listed under "Other material available upon requests), worked out and dieted and talk among themselves of their discrimination concerns. This played out in quiet conversations in conferences and meetings I attended as well. This does need to be addressed nationally. Maybe the Conservatives should hire job candidates to tape their their interviews and do some good for a change where it counts!

  • You go, guy!
  • Posted by B.J. on January 26, 2006 at 3:35pm EST
  • Anyone who reads this and still claims "academia is an 'intellectual meritocracy'" ought to be required to re-take freshman year.

    It's always about power, greed, and selfishness -- not some 'greater good.' We know what this is about -- let's just get to the numbers, please.

    Ohio U administration and their stooges can either fix this themselves -- or someone will do it for them. Their choice -- their decision.

  • Posted by Danielle Barker , Industrial Engineer on January 26, 2006 at 3:35pm EST
  • I was a student of Dr. Lipet's and can attest to his dedication to the occupation. Where other professors were more concerned about how to spend more time on research and less time in class, Dr. Lipset remained constant in his teaching responsibilities. Many of his 'younger' counterparts were always too busy for their students - even when they were your assigned advisor. I can honestly say that were it not for Dr. Lipset I would have an entirely different view on my career/education. His advice has been unsurpassed. Similar to the other OU alum, I ceased any contributions to the university if this is the type of treatment they give the good professors.

  • Devasting reading
  • Posted by R.A.S. on January 26, 2006 at 3:45pm EST
  • My God -- in 25 years of reading legal documents, I can't remember a more devasting legal critique than the OCRC decision in this case. Well-done, IHE.

    http://insidehighered.com/index.php/content/download/39062/558735/file/Lipset.pdf

    Not just a disagreement in views -- basically, an accusation of duplicity by the OU faculty and administrators involved. To write one thing, and do another -- how do they face themselves, as paragons of "academic truth?"

    OU thought their workhorse-victim would leave early or quietly. Well, OU was wrong -- big time. OU better get ready to write a big check, before Robert Shapiro, or Barry Sheck, or some other legal shark hears about this.

    To Dr. Lipset -- well done, sir. IMHO, take the money -- you are 100-times better than those OU yahoo's. Go independent, with your research and your courage.

    You'll make it -- going independent is five-times easier than working with yahoo's. Your former students are your best sales leads for consulting.

    Better yet -- make OU give you tenure, then a seven-year paid sabbatical. That would be a fine lesson for them -- when someone meets objectives, they ought to be rewarded as promised. Life isn't some silly game for those with low EQ -- people's lives are involved.

  • Posted by Matt Webster on January 26, 2006 at 4:50pm EST
  • I was a student that studied under Dr. Lipset at Ohio University's IMSE department. I can without question state that Dr. Lipset was the best professor I had throughout my college career. More so than any other teacher there he cared that his students learned and enjoyed what they learned. Without his influence I would not have enjoyed the successful career I have thus far. I owe him far more than I can post in a simple reply to a story. I am proud that he is standing up for himself and against a college whose priorities are obviously not with developing and teaching students and allowing them to reach thier fullest potential. Keep fighting the good fight and good luck, thank you Dr. Lipset for everything you did for me.

  • Best Prof around
  • Posted by John Morris , Consulting Engineer on January 26, 2006 at 9:05pm EST
  • Dr. Lipset was the reason I went into Industrial Engineering. I have been in touch with him even after graduation. It was my last year at school when I heard what happened to him. I felt it was a terrible mistake by the department. I felt even worst when I thought about how many students would not benefit from his teachings and real life examples.

    Keep up the good fight