The debate over Florida Atlantic University’s decision to name a football stadium after a notorious private prison company has descended into deception.
Today, student activists confronted FAU President Mary Jane Saunders at a public forum to denounce the fact that the school is taking $6 million from the GEO Group in exchange for stadium naming rights. This company has a shameful record of human rights violations, abuse, and neglect at its facilities. Unfortunately, Saunders was less than forthright in dealing with her critics.
The first problem was dishonesty over the forum rules. On Monday, students had engaged in a sit-in at Saunders’s office and agreed to leave only after Saunders promised there would be an open public dialogue on the issue, with an open Q&A and a mutually-approved moderator. There was also the strong implication that community members (i.e. non-students) would be able to ask questions. It’s all on videotape. Yet the administration quickly reneged on these terms. It named the moderator itself, declared that community members couldn’t ask questions, and made a list of the students who could ask questions. Indeed, according to student organizer Anole Halper, with whom I spoke today after the event, students tried to present Saunders with a petition that had amassed nearly 10,000 signatures, yet she refused to take it (though the moderator eventually relented and took it himself). Does this sound like an administration comfortable with an open dialogue?
FAU has also been deceitful about the nature of its arrangement with the GEO Group, insisting that the $6 million it received was just a charitable gift, not a corporate sponsorship. This claim is absurd on its face: a corporation doesn’t hand over $6 million to get nothing in return. And in this case we know the assertion is false because there’s a signed agreement in which naming rights are given in return for the “donation.” If this were a mere gift, GEO wouldn’t need its name on the stadium in the first place.
FAU’s dissembling adds to the falsehoods that the GEO Group has already been peddling. Immediately after news of the naming deal broke, the company apparently tried to scrub its Wikipedia page of all information that portrayed it in a negative light.
Then, in an attempt to bat away the bad press it was receiving, the GEO Group claimed that a number of the accusations being leveled against it were unfair because the abuse at one of its youth facilities in Mississippi had occurred under another company’s watch. Actually, that’s not true. As the ACLU has pointed out, the Department of Justice report in question was not issued until March 2012, and its investigation occurred in 2011 while GEO was in charge. The report accused GEO of “systematic, egregious, and dangerous practices exacerbated by a lack of accountability and controls,” contending that the sexual misconduct there (which included staff-on-youth abuse) was “among the worst that we have seen in any facility anywhere in the nation.” So there’s that.
Together, the GEO Group and Saunders have displayed a pattern of deception. These aren’t isolated incidents. GEO and FAU seem to think that genuine transparency would be bad publicity, and the best strategy to save their naming deal is to lie about it and shut out the community. Not that this is entirely surprising: these are the folks who thought it was totally cool to pair a public university with a human-rights-violating private prison. Yet there does come a point when being aboveboard is really the best way to stop getting raked over the coals.
Halper says there was a two-minute applause break today after a student told Saunders that the GEO Group deal is making Florida Atlantic University an embarrassment for alumni. Let’s hope Saunders and FAU’s board of trustees heed that warning and listen to their students and the broader community instead of trying to deceive them.
Photo from revkev7 licensed under Creative Commons




11 Comments

I’m sorry. I had to stop reading there to ROFLMAO.
I have about as low and cynical opinion of universities that I thought was possible.
But my imagination was not rich enough to anticipate this one.
Inquiring minds want to know if there is a secret agreement bet FAU President Mary Jane Saunders and GEO Group as to how many inmates FAU has guaranteed to get that $6 million. Inquiring minds would also like to know what the price Mary Jane Saunders puts on a human life.
Of course, the $6 million is the tip of the financial rewards Saunders hopes to recoup, as everyone knows that team sports and team spirit is more impt to fundraising (more team sports, bigger stadiums, more team sports, bigger stadiums, rinse repeat) than academics.
Well unless “academics” refer to giant corps buying scientists with huge
grantsbribes, patenting life and throwing more $$ millions of crumbs to “universities” while corps rake in billions of profits.But I digress (and rant).
As psychotically aggressive as campus PD’s are in going after innocuous student behavior, I’m sure they’ll be providing many “clients” for their Private Prison patrons.
The coporatising of the Florida State University system has been going on for quite some time, I assure you. I worked there in in university for 30 years.
This does not surprise me one bit.
It’s all one big sham.
Unbelievable.
I could brainstorm and come up with some stadium names: We whored and pimped around for money so we could call this place ‘It’s Okay for Private Prison Guards to Rape the Inmates.’
Recced, as the prison industry scares the be jesus out of me.
you and me both
This is unbelievable. Good for the students and community for protesting. Thank you for posting.
Book Salon up with Les Leopold’s How to Make a Million Dollars an Hour: Why Hedge Funds Get Away With Siphoning Off America’s Wealth hosted by Maureen Tkacik
Everyone needs to make sure this move costs FAU more than $6 million (in reduced student enrollees/more student transfers to other colleges, reduced game/event attendance etc.) That’s the only way this kind of stuff gets stopped (i.e. $$$$$, it’s the only thing they understand).
You won’t get any disagreement from me. Crap like this is like some kind of a sick damn race to the bottom.