Tenure
Under Attack in the Illinois House
On February 25, 2004, Illinois House Bill 4073 was scheduled for
a hearing by the Higher Education Committee of the Illinois General
Assembly. The bill was sponsored by Monique Davis (D) of Chicago.
The purpose of the bill was to radically change the method by
which tenure criteria are established and the method by which
tenure is granted or rejected. In addition, the bill would effectively
remove the faculty from its traditional role in the tenure process.
The threat posed by this bill produced a flurry of e-mails and
phone calls to me from around the country. Conversations with
Mark Smith, AAUP Director of Government Relations, led to a plan
for testifying against this bill. Our strategy was to utilize
the AAUP Statement on Government of Colleges and Universities
from the “Red Book.”
In PART V. THE ACADEMIC INSTITUTION: THE FACULTY the “Red
Book” describes the role of the faculty in tenure decisions
as: “Faculty status in related matters are primarily a faculty
responsibility; this area includes appointments, reappointments,
decisions not to reappoint, promotions, the granting of tenure,
and dismissal. The primary responsibility of the faculty for such
matters is based on the fact that its judgment is central to general
educational policy. Furthermore, scholars in a particular field
or activity have the chief competence for judging the work of
their colleagues; in such competence it is implicit that responsibility
exists for both adverse and favorable judgments.”
The impact of House Bill 4073 would be in direct conflict with
this AAUP policy. The bill included the following provisions:
*creates a Higher Education Commission to establish criteria for
tenure of public university professors;
*the criteria shall include the amount of education of the professor,
the needs of the university, and the promotion of diversity;
*requires Commission approval of all university decisions to grant
or deny tenure;
*the Commission would consist of three members appointed by the
Governor and two faculty members selected by the trustees from
each public university;
*the members would serve four-year terms without compensation
but would be eligible for reinbursement of expenses.
In addition to clear violation of AAUP policy, the bill ignored
the fact that eight of the twelve public universities in Illinois
have negotiated contracts which include specific agreements on
tenure policy and procedure. Some of the negotiated contractual
provisions include:
*the process for awarding tenure;
*the evaluation of probationary faculty based on teaching, performance
of primary duties, research, creative activities, and service;
*the methods of evaluation from the departmental level to the
university president;
*the establishment of due process so that probationary faculty
may appeal negative recommendations;
In addition to our planned oral and written testimony at the Higher
Education Committee Hearing regarding AAUP policy as well as contractual
issues, informal conversations were held with Ms. Davis to inform
her of strong faculty opposition to her bill. Apparently, this
strong message resulted in Ms. Davis not calling her bill to be
heard by the Higher Education Committee. For the time being, the
bill is “dead.” Currently we should consider this
an important victory in retaining the preeminence of faculty in
tenure decisions.
Leo Welch
Director of Legislative and Governing Board Affairs
Illinois Conference, AAUP