City Colleges faculty have 'no confidence' in chancellor

SHARE City Colleges faculty have 'no confidence' in chancellor
HYMAN_999x666.jpg

City Colleges Chancellor Cheryl Hyman in 2014 | Brian Jackson/For Sun-Times Media

With Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s leadership team already under siege at Chicago Public Schools, his aides running City Colleges of Chicago had their turn in the barrel on Thursday when faculty members announced a vote of “no confidence” in the community college network’s controversial chancellor, Cheryl Hyman.

Faculty Council President Jennifer Alexander announced the symbolic vote to the City Colleges board of trustees Thursday at a regular meeting, and then she and a group of about 20 colleagues walked a corresponding resolution to Emanuel’s City Hall office. Emanuel appoints Hyman and the trustees, who oversee a system of seven main campuses and roughly 100,000 students.

Perhaps the biggest gripe among faculty: A lack of communication by Hyman, and a tendency toward what they call heavy-handedness.

Instructors said they have asked Hyman to hold a system-wide town hall meeting for faculty and students, but she has refused.

Alexander said the faculty are upset that Hyman’s administration has made a number of significant changes without talking to students and professors. The two most problematic changes, according to faculty, were the consolidation of programs into particular campuses, and the halting of registration a week before classes began, which stopped many students from signing up.

Faculty members are also upset about tuition hikes that they say disproportionately affect international students and part-time students.

These changes make the City Colleges harder to access, said Jenny Armendarez, head of the Harold Washington Faculty Council. “We see ourselves as the ‘people’s college’ and yet the actions taken are counter to that,” Armendarez said.

Trustees seemed to shrug off the resolution. After the meeting, board Chairman Charles Middleton issued a statement saying that the board is “impressed with the significant accomplishments demonstrated by . . . Hyman.”https://chicagobeta.suntimes.wordpress-prod-wp.aggrego.com/wp-admin/post-new.php?post_type=cst_article

City Colleges officials, apparently well-aware what the faculty council was up to, padded the public participation section of the meeting with about a dozen people who came with the express purpose of singing the praises of Hyman and her system-wide initiatives. Speakers included U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush (D-Ill.) who said he left the hospital bedside of his wife to talk in support of Hyman.

“I know her narrative, I know her heart and I know her story,” he said. “That she has raised the graduation rate in this city is phenomenal.”

Kevin Doinggyun Woo, a student from Korea, said the vice chancellor asked him to come to the meeting to speak in support of the tuition hike, which drew some chuckles from the crowd.

The Latest
Chicago riders may now find a blue check mark under their name, as part of Uber’s rider verification process.
It’s still not clear why the Rev. Frederick Haynes III, a Texas megachurch pastor, suddenly resigned Tuesday as president of the legendary South Side social justice organization. But longtime observers say an out-of-towner was doomed from the start.
Hall participated in Hawks morning skate Thursday — on the last day of the season — for the first time since his surgery in November. He expects to be fully healthy for training camp next season.
The most common dog breed in Chicago — making up about 14% of all registered dogs — is a mixed-breed dog, followed by pit bulls, Labrador retrievers and German shepherds.
Democrats are deeply focused on Wisconsin and Michigan to help bolster President Joe Biden’s re-election chances — and officials, in town for meetings hosted by the Democratic National Convention Committee, say they plan on showing voters a deep party contrast.