Search News


Browse Archives

News

You Want a Job with That?

December 18, 2008

Share This Story

FREE Daily News Alerts

Advertisement

This story is starting to have a familiar ring to it: A Florida senator secures funding for a local college in his district, and then finds himself a job there. Such is the case with House Speaker Ray Sansom, a Republican from Destin, Fla., who has come under fire for taking a high-paying position at Northwest Florida State College. As a number of news organizations have pointed out, Sansom helped the college land millions of dollars for construction projects before the offer was made, suggesting to critics a potential conflict of interest.

Other similar stories have caused controversy in Florida, but it’s unfair to disqualify lawmakers from jobs in higher education, argues Bob Richburg, the college’s president. The Legislature is home to real estate agents, teachers and doctors, all of whom have potential professional interests in specific appropriations or changes in state law, he said.

 

“Where do you stop?” Richburg said. “I don’t believe because you work for a state college or a community college that you should be excluded from being elected to serve in the Legislature.”

Sansom was hired by the college in November as vice president for development and planning, a newly created position that was not publicly advertised. The job, which pays $110,000 a year, is part time.

“We don’t advertise part-time positions,” Richburg said by way of explanation.

“We’re doing it on a part-time basis because of the flexibility that Mr. Sansom needs,” he added.

A similar rationale was given by the University of Florida when it hired state Sen. Mike Haridopolos for a lecturer position in political science that wouldn’t require him to be on campus during legislative sessions. Haridopolos, a rising star in the state Republican Party, did not have a doctorate and made $75,000 a year, $5,000 more than his predecessor, who had a Ph.D. and a higher-ranking title.

Other lawmakers have also found positions in the state’s higher education system, including Sen. Evelyn Lynn, an Ormond Beach Republican who -- under scrutiny -- gave up a lucrative position at a Florida State University research center she helped to fund.

Add to the list former House speaker Marco Rubio, a Republican from Miami who landed a $69,000-per-year job at Florida International University this summer.

No Quid Pro Quo, President Says

Much of the scrutiny on Sansom concerns $25.5 million he helped steer toward Northwest Florida State College during a year when budgets were being cut across the state. The money went in large part toward a student services center building.

The money for the college was drawn from a state tax on utilities that funds education-related construction projects in Florida. Before the last legislative session, community colleges submitted priorities for construction to the State Board of Education, which suggested Northwest Florida State College receive just $1 million this year for planning. The project, however, was “accelerated” to stimulate job growth in Florida’s downward economy, according to a spokeswoman for Sansom.

Jill Chamberlain, spokeswoman for the speaker, noted that it’s within the Legislature’s authority to allocate dollars as they see fit, even if doing so goes against the recommendations of the State Board of Education or the Board of Governors, which submits priorities for universities.

“They have the final authority to do that, subject to the checks of the governor’s veto pen,” she said. “The idea that one project benefits while another one doesn’t, that’s just the way it works in distributing dollars.”

There were a number of projects that received more funding this fiscal year than the Board of Education had asked for, but none saw a windfall like Northwest Florida State College -- and only one came anywhere close. The Legislature approved $18.5 million for Indian River State College’s new science center, a project that the board didn’t even request money for this year. The center will be housed at the college’s Port St. Lucie branch campus, which is situated in the district of former Senate President Ken Pruitt, a Republican and Indian River alumnus -- not an employee, however.

Asked about the money steered toward Northwest Florida State, and the subsequent job offer for Sansom, Richburg bristled at the suggestion of any connection.

“The whole issue of the quid pro quo is just absolutely not there,” he said.

Richburg, who happened to be traveling to Alabama Wednesday, quickly rejected any comparison of the Sansom hire to the scandals in Alabama’s community college system that have led to resignations and even criminal charges.

“This is not a show job,” Richburg said. “This is an absolutely legitimate job. Those situations in Alabama, it’s unfair to compare them to those; many of those were no-show jobs.

“This man will do a job. I will hold him accountable, and the board will hold me to that.”

Sansom, who did not respond to an interview request Wednesday, has been criticized by at least one lawmaker for not answering questions about his new job. Rep. Franklin Sands, the Democratic House leader, issued a statement Monday urging Sansom “to be forthright about his involvement with Northwest Florida State College, and to answer reporters' questions about how he has handled the appropriations process.”

“We do not aim to embarrass a colleague,” Sands’ statement reads. “But we think the Speaker should address these reports. If left to fester, the allegations may cast a haze over the Legislature and its work.”

Sansom is feeling heat from other quarters, too. A column penned by none other than Joe Scarborough, the former Republican Congressman from Florida turned MSNBC pundit, ran in the Pensacola News Journal Wednesday, and reportedly had Tallahassee abuzz.

“The past month has show that my old friend [Sansom] lacks the judgment and character to lead Florida Republicans into the future,” Scarborough wrote.

“Republicans deserve better.

“So does our state.”

See all postings »
Advertisement
Advertisement

Matching Jobs

Comments on You Want a Job with That?

  • Posted by adjunct , PhD (in psychology) on December 18, 2008 at 7:00am EST
  • People need to be realistic. If he can get them millions from the legislature, that's way more qualifications than some run of the mill doctorate. Social science PhDs are as plentiful as pennies, and most people wouldn't bend over to pick one up.

  • The underlying cause
  • Posted by T on December 18, 2008 at 8:01am EST
  • States do not adequately compensate their legislators for the amount of time they put into their elected positions. In my home state of Indiana, legislators are among the lowest paid in the country - $11,600 annually not including benefits or per diem. In Florida, legislators earn $31,392 annually. Then consider that although state legislators are considered to be "part-time" elected positions, they are in fact more than full-time positions, and include a lot of weekend and evening work. OK, how many of you reading this would settle for that kind of salary for a full-time job? State budgets force legislators to find some kind of income outside of their paltry legislative compensation.

    If you want to clean this up, pay state legislators adequately for the work they perform. Make these elected offices full-time positions, no matter if the legislature is not in session year round. Remove the incentive to find token employment elsewhere, usually at a state-funded instution, being paid from state funds anyway. So let's drop the charade and pay them for the work they actually do.

  • scandalous and widespread
  • Posted by Kevin Burns on December 18, 2008 at 8:15am EST
  • Thank you for raising this issue, and for pointing out the credential gaps which clearly indicate that something is fishy with this situation in general. It is a widespread problem similar to the revolving door between business and government. I am a NYC resident in my 50s and it took years for me to see and understand why so many of our local pols (and their spouses) have second jobs in the CUNY system. It is about power, influence, and contacts, and it is also about money--a job for life with a pension! All this at taxpayer expense. Scandalous!

  • Holy conflict city, Batman!
  • Posted by The Boy Wonder on December 18, 2008 at 9:20am EST
  • “Where do you stop?” Richburg said. “I don’t believe because you work for a state college or a community college that you should be excluded from being elected to serve in the Legislature.”

    Uh, Richburg, I think it was the other way around!

    Of course the president is going to come out in favor...it is called being self interested.

    I have yet to see a case where a politician was better, more qualified choice than an Educator.

    Holy slippery sloping foreheads Batman!

  • Shocking, just schocking
  • Posted by Bart on December 18, 2008 at 10:03am EST
  • Any wonder why the public is so cynical about politics? And its servant, higher ed?

    Why, it would be like a governor, crudely asking for nice, cushy job for his wife and ..

    Uh, that did happen? In Illinois?

    Never mind.

  • Posted by Bob on December 18, 2008 at 12:45pm EST
  • As a faculty member who also works to influence legislation, I've noticed that it is advantageous for legislators to know what our lives are really like. It is usually very helpful if they have actually been a faculty member.

    On the other hand, if they have had some sort of job to supplement their legislator salary, they tend to think they know more about us than they do. i.e. They tend to think we are paid like they were for work like they did.

  • Florida not unlike Alabama!
  • Posted by Bob S. on December 19, 2008 at 5:55am EST
  • Okaloosa-Walton is a modest two-yr junior college going wild in the hinterlands as a state college. We could see where this deal is going. Getting big bucks for retraining is a stretch as is this unwholesome poltical deal. Legislators wheel and deal simply because they can; thsy function above the laws they relate to.

    Richburg should be ashamed of himself for such a cheesey quid pro quo. Sure it happens! That's how the game is often played. Totally unethical, immoral, unprofessional--two guys playing in the state's sandbox. The public has every right to be outraged for such two-bit leaders acting this way. After all, it's not their money.

    A part time job for $110K? Huh? Are these guys for real? I would guess that the Board is behind the deal and it's simply payoff for good 'ol boys in Florida. The state is now in the process of making some serious cuts in its budget because the money just ran out. I wonder if these two pros will give some back...? Florida is still deep south in its higher education operations; might as well be Alabama. I think there is a connection here?

  • Rot at the Top
  • Posted by Glen S, McGhee , Dir., at Florida Higher Education Accountability Project on December 19, 2008 at 12:30pm EST
  • This isn't just about Sansom's lack of judgment, but OWCC/NWSC Pres. Richburg's blatant abuse of public trust as well.

    In moves designed to evade public scrutiny (and, oh! so familiar in Florida higher ed), a part-time position for $110K is not advertised publically, and never even existed before. How convenient for those involved.

    Where were the Board of Trustees in all this? Where are the missing tapes of the Tallhassee board meeting? What do the Trustees have to hide?

    Sansom, Richburg and the Trustees have erred, and should be held accountable by resigning. There is no other way to stop the rot at the top.