Sunday, March 3, 2013

Penn State trustees - Hiding in Plain Sight

We need to play fair.

There are so many people getting so-o-o-o-o much press...it just doesn't seem right that anyone should have to suffer from group anonymity. We talk about the Penn State Board of Trustees as though it is this singular thing. But no, grasshopper...there are many individuals that deserve recognition for the role(s) they have played in this neverending melodrama. We need to fix that.

I can't get a roll call. They insist on this unanimous thing. So be it.
I give you:

Exhibit A - Betsy E. Huber
We could do this like those "employee of the week" posters back in the breakroom, but one way or another, EVERYONE needs credit for their accomplishments.

Now, I know next to nothing about Betsy E. Huber. But, I know this much - she is responsible for firing Joe Paterno, forcing the resignation of Graham Spanier, hiring Erickson, firing Sherburne, hiring Joyner, hiring Louis Freeh, accepting the Freeh Report, accepting the NCAA sanctions, paying Mitchell and encouraging civil suit settlements without the benefit of due process...for starters. Her name will forever be linked to these historical events. THAT'S POLICY.

Does it even matter if a trustee has voting priveleges? Emeritus status? Where's the discussion? Voice of dissent? What, exactly, are they there for?

Every time the media mentions the Penn State Board of Trustees, I recommend that ALL the members names be included. No sitting in the shadows. If you didn't like what was going on, you should have spoken up. EVERYONE needs to be held accountable. Why should everyone else get all the press? Photos and bios are helpful. Maybe a plaque to commemorate all their good deeds?

And here they are:

Steve Garban, Rodney Erickson, James Broadhurst, Michael DiBerardinis, Kenneth Frazier, Edward Hintz, Keith Masser, Linda Strumpf, John Surma, Tom Corbett, Richard Allan, Ronald Tomalis, Alvin Clemens, Mark Dambly, Peter Khoury, Ira Lubert, Paul Silvis, Marianne Alexander, H. Jesse Arnelle, Stephanie Deviney, David Jones, Joel Myers, Anne Riley, Paul Suhey, Keith Eckel, Samuel Hayes, Barron Hetherington, Betsy Huber, Carl Shaffer, Karen Peetz

*I'm not sure I have all the names right, considering the sequence of events for the last 15-16 months, but the overall point remains the same. If there is a name missing, or one that should be deleted, I will be happy make correction(s).

Question: Who on the Penn State Board of Trustees said:
  • "Wait a minute. We need more time to evaluate the situation."
  • "Excuse me...we're firing who?"
  • "I'm not voting at this time."
  • "Have you lost your freaking minds???"
  • "If this is way we do things, I resign."
Answer: Nobody

You like irony? Sure you do.
Try this:
There is nobody on the Penn State Board of Trustees who is qualified to be the president of a university. They don't have the skillset or academic credentials. And yet, these are the people that decided Graham Spanier lost institutional control (within 48 hours), hired Erickson...and will choose his sucessor. Swell.

SNIPPETS

--The trials for Spanier, Curley and Schultz have been moved to The Twelfth of Never.
--According to the prevailing logic, if Sandusky had been a former trombone player, we would have spent the last 15 months skewering the Blue Band.
--Watching Corbett, Corman and Emmert fight over PSU sanction money is pretty close to watching hookers fight over a street corner. Besides, Corbett's and Corman's history with The Second Mile kinda bothers me.
--Spanier was not the only magician at Penn State. Peetz, Surma, Corbett and Frazier made ethics disappear.
--Frazier confuses being arrogant and condescending with being tough...something he can't quite pull off.
--Surma has set his own timetable for departure from this debacle and will go unscathed. I can't describe how much that pisses me off.
--In one video, Peetz actually used the word "superlatives" incorrectly...made me laugh, but there's nothing really funny about that woman.
--I cannot keep track of where the money is coming from to pay for all this. We have these mysterious piles of cash lying around, apparently.
--It's probably just me, but the time to bitch about the NCAA sanctions was before we accepted them.
--It's probably just me, but the time to bitch about the Freeh Report was when he published it.
--It's probably just me, but the time for outrage was November 8, 2011.
--BREAKING NEWS!: Insurance companies don't want to pay out.
--It seems as though the Penn State chapter of the Ron Musselman Fan Club has merged with the Dan Wetzel and Desmond Howard chapters.
--It's probably just me, but isn't it kinda stupid for Myers and others to say "the NCAA was wrong and should admit it," when they all agreed to it (backing Erickson)?
--If legislators really wanted to do something meaningful, they would (1) clean up the government agencies and procedures related to child abuse and (2) restrict/ban the use of grand jury presentments in their current form.
--In reality, would any of these people be backpeddling and questioning the Freeh Report if it weren't for the professional analysis of Ray Blehar and the Paterno family (see Paterno.com)?
--For what it's worth, anyone who is a coach, I refer to as "coach." Always have.
--Former PSU president Bryce Jordan had to learn from his wife that he was still on the board of The Second Mile...22 years after his retirement. Is that a Raykovitz thing or not?
--There seems to be a legitimate case for this: Linda Kelly commited "prosecutorial misconduct" with false information in her presentment.
--Thanks to the efforts of the Penn State Board of Trustees, there are no unemployed attorneys.
--Murder, arson and domestic violence just doesn't seem to turn heads like it used to (re: Matt Sandusky/Heichel family).
--Notice how little I write about football and sanctions? I'll let you know when I think this is about football.
--I see Mitchell got his first $million from us. I was concerned.
 
Worthwhile links. Maybe you've seen/heard/read them. Maybe not.
 
"The scandal surrounding ex-football coach Jerry Sandusky and others at Pennsylvania State University is casting a spotlight on a distinctive part of the state's criminal-justice system.
In the federal system and most states that use the grand-jury system, grand juries typically unveil their criminal allegations against someone in an indictment or a criminal complaint. Such documents are usually tersely worded and can run as few as three or four pages, stating only the most essential factual allegations. They also often use initials or pseudonyms to protect people who aren't criminally charged.
But Pennsylvania is one of a handful of states in which grand juries occasionally issue a "presentment," or report, to convey their findings. Presentments, including the one this month in the Penn State case, read as narratives rather than a set of allegations that must be proved in court.
The use of presentments was common in the early part of the century but is now infrequent in many states and extremely rare in the federal system. When they are used, they often try to point out widespread or systemic failings within an institution—not to single out individual wrongdoing."
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204517204577042491094936470.html

"The Board absolutely adores seeing things differently from everyone else—and thinking that they alone understand what is going on."
"In reality, the PSU officials’ behavior suggests that they had absolutely no idea
Sandusky was ever a pedophile."
Corbett-remember the ten-year-old:
BOT contradictions:
Lubrano comes as close as anyone to voicing my sentiments...in this interview:
http://wrscfm.com/content/morning-guys-kevin-and-jeff/post/anthony-lubrano-interview
 
"It’s possible that the social norms in this brave new domain will change once more — with users shunning meanspirited attacks from posters hiding behind pseudonyms and cultivating civil debate instead.
Until then, beware the nasty effect."

FINALLY
I try to keep up with Blehar, Zeigler, Bozeman, Morgan and others at PS4RS, Freedom Fighters, Framing Paterno, Paterno.com, etc...and similar people/groups that show the tenacity and resourcefulness to support due process, PSU governance issues...and especially, the victims.

I know that some people are tired of hearing about the Freeh Report, but it goes to the heart of the matter. It takes a lot of staying power to right a wrong.

"Truthers" - welcome to losing your personal identity courtesy of the media's penchant for pigeon-holing like-minded people with a label. According to most national columnists, you are now incapable of independent thought. To make matters worse, take a look at Twitter. All it takes is one schizophrenic nutcase, with a sprinkle of Tourettes...to have his/her obscenities assigned to your group. Of course, I'm talking about "journalists" who use Twitter as a source. I'm fortunate that I can support a group and still be the lone wolf, loose cannon my mother always said I was.

It transcends incompetence. I cannot shake the overwhelming sense of betrayal exhibited by the Board of Trustees. There have been times when I want to be wrong about them, but the facts just keep getting in the way. It's one thing for the Emmerts and Freehs of the world to do what they did...and the media. But, when your own family turns on you, abandons you and does exactly the opposite of what this place stands for...it is unforgivable.

*I hope the links work. I haven't used them before.
 

1 comment:

  1. My thoughts exactly. You have hit the nail (BoT) on the head.

    ReplyDelete