From Kim Bobo at
Religion Dispatches:
For more than twenty years I’ve supported workers who exercise their
rights to organize to improve conditions in their workplaces. Workers
care about their wages and benefits, but what usually moves workers to
organize is either concern about their clients, concern about how they
are treated, or both.
Religious workers who organize are no different. The General Theological Seminary (GTS) faculty organized out of concern for their
students, the seminary and a voice in the workplace.
....
1. The faculty has serious concerns about the dean and his leadership....
2. The board disregarded faculty concerns....
3.The board fired the faculty members when they replied....
4. Replacement workers were hired....
5. The board offered to rehire the faculty and renegotiate terms with each person individually....
6. The faculty members accepted provisional jobs and agreed to a process in order to save their jobs....
This is a labor dispute. I know which side I’m on.
Read the details at
Religion Dispatches.
I know which side I'm on, too. My default position in a controversy between those in power and the powerless is generally on the side of the powerless, in this instance the faculty at GTS, unless there
are one or more compelling reasons to take the side of those in power.
The work stoppage was scheduled for a day on which no classes
were held, but the Board of Trustees of the seminary quickly moved to
terminate the faculty who had not resigned.
The faculty speak for themselves on the GTS8 website,
Safe Seminary, and provide documentation of correspondence between the faculty and the Board of Trustees. The number of "returned" faculty
is now down to seven, because one member of the faculty, Dr Joshua Davis, chose to take severance rather than sign his new contract.
Eight of the ten
active full-time faculty members teaching at General Theological
Seminary, New York City, have reported very serious problems with the
seminary's administration through a number of channels. After being
ignored for months, the 8 faculty wrote directly to the seminary's board
of trustees about a hostile work environment created by the Dean and
President, the Very Rev. Kurt Dunkle, and then undertook a legal work
stoppage. The Board of Trustees responded that they accepted the
faculty's resignations, when in fact the faculty members did not resign.
The 8 faculty members are Dr. Joshua Davis, The Rev. Mitties McDonald
DeChamplain, Dr. Deirdre Good, Dr. David Hurd, Dr. Andrew Irving, the
Rev. Andrew Kadel, the Rev. Dr. Amy Bentley Lamborn, and the Rev. Dr.
Patrick Malloy.
I've been following the story from the beginning, even before the faculty was terminated, and the many details make it a challenge to explain the series of unfortunate events that led to the present sad situation without getting lost in the weeds. I was stunned by the response of the Board of Trustees to the work-stoppage, which unnecessarily escalated the controversy to a point that made it difficult for the trustees to back away from their position, since they would then appear to be "giving in" to the faculty. Why didn't the trustees pay attention to the faculty's reports of serious problems at the seminary? Why didn't the Executive Committee or members of the Board of Trustees agree to to meet with the GTS8 before the situation became critical?
The allegations against Dean Dunkle are quite serious. It seems to me that if the Board of Trustees
had done what was proper from the beginning, which was to place the
dean on paid leave until the allegations against him were
investigated, and the GTS8 allowed to continue teaching, there
would have been much less disruption and turmoil at the seminary for
both students and faculty. If the allegations about the dean were
found to be baseless, then he could have returned to his position,
along with a mediator who would help mend relationships at the
seminary.
After more than a month, the faculty was reinstated only provisionally, not to their
status quo ante; they were required to negotiate the contracts of their "return" to the seminary individually, an unfair divide-and-conquer tactic; and they lost titles and tenure. Academic Dean Dierdre Good was demoted even before the one-day work stoppage.
The trustees called upon the law firm of Covington and Burling to investigate the allegations against Dean Dunkle, but no report was ever issued on the findings, and there was only the one statement from the Board that,
"...after
extensive discussion that there are not sufficient grounds for
terminating the Very Reverend Kurt Dunkle as President and Dean."
I find it quite telling that after investigations of both dean and faculty, the details of which little is known, the trustees so swiftly accepted the non-resignations of the GTS7 (formerly 8), terminated their employment, stripped them of titles and tenure, even as Dean and President Kurt Dunkle was permitted to remain in his positions of power, as the board decided after "extensive discussion" that there were no grounds for terminating the dean. In addition, the faculty and members of the Board are prohibited from discussing the details of their provisional acceptance back into the seminary community, which the faculty never left. Of what the faculty is guilty to deserve such punishment, we have no knowledge. How is this justice?
The burden of demonstrating to the wider world that justice has been done rests with those in power. Justice must not only
be served, but must also be
seen to be served. Commentary by the Chair of the Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees is not encouraging.
“I think the trustees felt, who are these people?” Bishop Sisk said. The actions of the Board of Trustees and the lack of transparency as to the reasoning behind them seem unjust. Without justice, the seminary itself is diminished as a Christian institution. Collateral damage extends to the institution of the Episcopal Church and remains, even now, an embarrassment to the church, and to me personally, as a member. I search for Gospel values in the decisions by the leadership of this Christian seminary, and I don't find them. How do their decisions build up the Kingdom of God?
The
Lombard Mennonite Peace Center will begin to facilitate mediation at the seminary beginning in December and continue into the following year. The faculty requested an ombudsperson to be present in the seminary Close when they resumed teaching, and I have heard that the greatly admired Bishop Frederick Borsch will be at GTS this week, available for any who wish to speak to him. I'm not certain he is called an ombudsman, but his will be a welcome presence.
The story was widely covered by various news sources, including
The New York Times, which
reports the story
here and
here.