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Black Eye of Nepotism

May 13, 2009

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Roger Williams University President Roy Nirschel may not be as vulnerable to nepotism charges anymore, but that’s surely cold comfort.

Nirschel drew critics when his son, Chris Nirschel, was hired by the university’s development office, even though he had a history of arrests and no discernable experience in fund raising. Once again in legal trouble, Chris Nirschel has resigned from his post, which may help close the chapter on a nepotism controversy, but leaves questions about the university's hiring procedures.

Nirschel, 26, resigned as Roger Williams’ regional major gifts officer May 11, university officials confirmed Tuesday. The resignation came two days after Nirschel was arrested on assault charges in Hoboken, N.J., where he’d been working on the university’s behalf.

Shortly before 2 a.m. on May 9, Nirschel got into a street fight with another man in Hoboken, according to a police report. When police officers approached him, Nirschel “turned to the officers and began to assault” one of them, the report states. The officer was treated at a local hospital for injuries to his head and right leg after the incident, according to the report.

Nirschel, who did not respond to interview requests, now faces charges of aggravated assault on a police officer and simple assault, the report states. Nirschel has not been convicted, however, of anything.

A report of his arrest, citing an unnamed Hoboken police source, first surfaced Monday evening on the Web site of the Hawk’s Herald, the university’s student newspaper.

Nirschel’s arrest last week is his third known arrest. He was arrested previously in 2004 for procuring alcohol for a minor and possession of a weapon – not a firearm, according to the Bristol Police Department’s Web site. He was arrested again in 2005 for driving with a suspended license, the Web site notes.

Peter Wilbur, vice president for strategic planning and government relations, said previously he knew of Nirschel’s record prior to hiring him. Wilbur, who did not respond to an interview request Tuesday, chalked the arrests up to “growing pains” in a March interview.

While Nirschel’s resignation closely coincides with his arrest, and the student paper’s report, university officials did not provide any reasons for his departure in an official statement released Tuesday. The one-sentence statement did indicate, however, that Nirschel went on unpaid leave May 5 – four days before his arrest. While Nirschel’s actual resignation followed his arrest, his unpaid leave predated the incident. University officials did not respond when asked what led to Nirschel’s unpaid leave.

Faculty Objected to Hire

Roy Nirschel, who readily defended his son’s hire in a March interview with Inside Higher Ed, did not respond to interview requests Monday or Tuesday. Nirschel said in March, however, that he was not involved in hiring his son and did not think the hire constituted nepotism, so long as his son “did not displace any quote ‘more qualified’ candidates.”

Faculty did not share Nirschel’s position, however. The Faculty Senate passed a motion May 6 that was critical of the hiring of Chris Nirschel, calling it a violation of policy.

“Faculty Senate objects to the hire of the President’s son which did not conform to the university’s hiring policies and detracts from the transparency so important to the functioning of the university and violates the principle of inclusive excellence,” the motion read.

Louis Swiczewicz, a Senate member, said faculty wanted to make their objections to nepotism clear, without making a blanket statement about legitimate familial hires.

“What we’re looking for is fair and equal [hiring practices],” said Swiczewicz, a professor of technology, leadership and management. “Overall the Senate was not opposed to the president or any member of the president’s family being hired as long as it adhered to the nepotism policy that was in place.”

The university’s policy states that “relatives may be appointed to faculty and staff positions when it has been clearly established that they are the best qualified candidate.”

Wilbur, who hired Nirschel in his previous capacity as vice president for university advancement, has defended his decision to go with a candidate who was certainly nontraditional. Wilbur acknowledged that the president’s son had no fund raising experience, even though the job advertisement called for someone with “five years of fund raising experience in a nonprofit or higher education organization.”

Roger Williams officials have never said whether Nirschel holds a bachelor’s degree, which was also a minimum qualification listed in the job advertisement. Nirschel did attend Roger Williams for a time, but university officials said they couldn’t disclose whether he graduated, citing student privacy laws.

The Family Education Rights and Privacy Act [FERPA] does restrict disclosure of personal student information, but the law allows universities to reveal directory data about enrollment and graduation. Asked about Roger Williams’ reluctance to discuss Nirschel’s academic standing, his supervisor said in March that the university had “something signed” that prohibited disclosure.

There is, in fact, an exemption in FERPA that allows students to insist in writing that their directory data be kept confidential. That exemption only applies, however, in cases where an actively enrolled student makes the request, according to a U.S. Department of Education official. In other words, Nirschel could only have made the request while he was attending the university – not months or years later when he started pursuing a job at Roger Williams.

President Has Stressed Ethics

Roy Nirschel, who was named president of Roger Williams in 2001, has touted high ethical standards for an institution that has gone through some rough patches. He helped usher through a conflict of interest policy for the university’s board of trustees, which came under heavy fire in 2007 after the chair’s use of a racial slur became a public debacle. Nirschel has also publicly suggested other university leaders should adopt policies that will place their institutions beyond reproach. After a 2005 scandal involving American University’s then president, Nirschel wrote an opinion piece for Inside Higher Ed criticizing university presidents who don’t adopt and obey “clear, rigorous” standards of ethics.

Raymond D. Cotton, a Washington lawyer who specializes in compensation issues in higher education, said Roy Nirschel can probably expect to take some more heat, even though his son has resigned.

“Maybe there’s some institutional fallout that he’s going to have to clean up,” Cotton said. “There’s no question he stuck his neck out for his son, and the son did not behave responsibly and possibly illegally. So he’s got the fallout within the university.

While Nirschel has maintained he wasn’t directly involved in the hiring of his son, there’s little question the president took on some risks by allowing it to go forward, Cotton said.

“He took a chance and it didn’t work out,” he said. “But the other side is he’s also got family issues to deal with and people need to be respectful of that. I sincerely hope neither the faculty nor anyone else associated with the university would pile on.

“… This young man has injured his career for a long time. Assuming these charges stick or one of them sticks, he’s going to have to rebuild his trust if he ever wants any kind of a job in higher education. That’s for sure.”

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Comments on Black Eye of Nepotism

  • Policy reversal
  • Posted by sibyl on May 13, 2009 at 9:15am EDT
  • I concede this is a minor point in what seems to be a large pattern of misfeasance if not malfeasance. But it would be a reversal of a long-standing FERPA interpretation to hold that only currently enrolled students can prevent disclosure of their personal information. The unnamed "Department of Education official" mentioned in the story, and for that matter the author and editor of this article, should check with the Family Policy Compliance Office, which is responsible for FERPA compliance and which has never issued anything limiting this control to students in attendance.

  • it will never stop
  • Posted by JenD on May 13, 2009 at 10:45am EDT
  • I was initially drawn to this article because I am a graduate of RWU. President Nirschel was hired just before I left, so I'm not familiar with his professional side. Through the alumni magazine, I've seen how much he has done for the school though. I'm glad it was mentioned at the end of the piece that aside from being president of the university, he is a father with family problems. That should stay in the back of the minds of the Faculty Senate, etc. It certainly doesn't excuse any nepotism, which I wasn't really surprised to hear about anywhere power is held. Banks, firms, etc. Sometimes family is the best candidate, but if his son had 0 experience in fundraising and they required 5yrs, he should not have been even considered. He took that job away from someone who was qualified and wouldn't through it away because daddy can just get them another. As an unemployed American, I find that insulting.

  • Nepotism
  • Posted by Jerry , Regents' Professor - college of Education at University of Oklahoma on May 13, 2009 at 11:15am EDT
  • Regardless of the "facts" that emerge, this seems to be a situation that brings to mind Groucho Marx's comment that he wouldn't be a member of any country club that would admit him. Any college president who isn't smart or ethical enough to know that his child being hired for a highly visible position will raise ethical questions isn't smart or ethical enough to be the institution's president. As to the comment that earlier problems with the law were merely "growing pains" raises the question of whether such growing pains would have been overlooked for anyone other than the president's son. It seems clear that situations such as this will continue to erode the public's confidence in higher education.

  • Academe Is Business
  • Posted by G. Tod Slone on May 13, 2009 at 11:30am EDT
  • Interesting article. When teaching at Fitchburg State College (MA), I noted similar instances of nepotism and brought them to the attention of the State Ethics Commission, which did nothing. In fact, I wrote an article on it (anyone interested in publishing it?). Anyhow, Wilbur and the college president should be fired. Higher ed should be a place of honor, though we all know it is not. Touting “high ethical standards” in academe by an academic president is akin to a corporate CEO like now dead Kenneth Lay doing the same in business. After all, today academe is nothing but business. Its boards of trustees tend to be used-car salesmen, while its administrators behave as businessmen (growth, growth, growth… like a tumor) and its professors as obedient workers, few daring to openly criticize. Nepotism is probably simply a convenient diversion from the much, much wider spread phenomenon of hiring friends and friends and friends. The son will likely have no problem at all finding a job elsewhere in academe, thanks to daddy’s connections. Academe is after all like politics corrupt to the core. As an unemployed American professor, I also find that insulting, Jen.

     

    G. Tod Slone, Founding Editor

    The American Dissident, a Journal of Literature, Democracy & Dissidence

    A 501 c3 nonprofit organization providing a forum for vigorous debate, cornerstone of democracy,

    And for examining the dark side of the academic/literary established-order milieu

    www.theamericandissident.org

    1837 Main St.

    Concord, MA 01742

  • Interesting Title
  • Posted by Punch Drunk , none at none on May 14, 2009 at 11:30pm EDT
  • That is an interesting title to your article. I find it a bit snippy if it is a pun but like it if it is straight forward. Look, a lad has to make his way in the world, right? Now let's assume that he was not bringing in the swag. Then he was suspended without pay. That's the right thing to do in order to light a fire under him. So then feeling hungry he resolves to change his collection habits. He decides that rather than using the gentle art of persuasion, he will twist arms (figuratively speaking of course). Perhaps on his first attempt he did not understand the subtleties involved and got carried away. So what. Come on, this is on the job training. And we know the result. But it's just a learning experience. He will be fine. Rehire him for the good of the institution.

  • Posted by Tania McDermott on May 21, 2009 at 5:15am EDT
  • Nepotism is the ugliest form of disrimination, and unfortunately there is no law against nepotism. Those who employ nepotism think that the people around them are too stupid to know what's going on, or too afraid to speak up because of fear of retaliation. Shame on all of you freaks who use your power to employ your unqualified family members who are too lazy to do it like every one else--hard work.
    Stop hiding behind the NO LAW. There is the law of ethics after all. But obviously you do not care about it, because you yourselfs are unethical persons, yet hold high positions. You too should step down, and go get a job like everyone else.