Faculty vs. athletics: Fighting for control – Oregon Daily Emerald
Connor Johnson, a former longsnapper on the Oregon football team, said its a bummer how many athletes have to make decisions they dont want to make due to conflicts with sports.
Almost all the time, he said whether its being unable to enroll in certain majors or take classes that conflict with their practice schedules athletes are asked to put sports above their education.
It would be really nice to have the academic people looking out for the athletes so that theyre actually getting a decent education and what they were promised out of high school, Johnson said.
Johnson said he would be in favor of some faculty oversight when it comes to how the athletic department spends its $120 million budget. Because all the athletic departments decisions, he said, boil down to money.
There used to be a Senate committee tasked with overseeing the athletic budget, but it was abolished in November 2016. It was called the Intercollegiate Athletics Committee (IAC), and it became so ineffective that then-UO President Michael Gottfredson stopped requiring athletic department representatives to show up to meetings.
Several former IAC members described the meetings as contentious and antagonistic. A few particular faculty members, they said, behaved inappropriately and unprofessionally when athletic department representatives did not provide sufficient answers to their questions. Meetings sometimes escalated to shouting matches, after which people would leave upset, sometimes in tears.
Now, a new committee, the Intercollegiate Athletics Advisory Committee (IAAC), has taken the IACs place. It met for the first time on March 1, and University of Oregon President Michael Schill opened the meeting with a firm message to committee members:
Athletic department finances will not be a topic of discussion.
Tough questions and vague answers
The IAACs charge its stated duty is to advise the president on athletic department policies and practices that affect the academic performance and welfare of student-athletes. Its a much narrower version of the the IACs charge, which included advising the president and athletic director on the athletic departments budget. The old IAC charge also required the athletic department to consult the IAC before making decisions that could impact the landscape of athletics or the university at-large.
Faculty Athletics Representative Tim Gleason said the IACs charge was drastically wider and broader than is generally the case in committees at other Pac-12 and NCAA schools.
It had all kinds of things in it, Gleason said. The charge spoke as if the athletic department reported to the IAC, which it didnt and doesnt. The athletic department reports to the president, not the faculty.
(Mary Vertulfo/Emerald)
Biology professor Nathan Tublitz, who helped write the IAC charge, argues that any decision made at a university, including by the athletic department, impacts academics and thus should require faculty input. But he said the athletic department for years has made decisions that ran contrary to UOs academic values, such as moving some sporting events from weekends to school days to cash in on television contracts.
Tublitz said the new committees charge is watered down such that IAAC members cant ask questions about a range of important issues, reducing the facultys role in shared governance.
Its been muzzled and restricted to a very, very limited set of topics, Tublitz said. Unless Im mistaken, this is still an academic institution that has a sports team, not a sports team that happens to have a small academic sidelight.
Before Tublitz became IAC chair in 2011, Kurt Krueger, a former classified staff IAC member, said IAC meetings often consisted of presentations from the athletic department about the positive things it was doing for student athletes. Krueger recalled hearing about tutoring services at the Jaqua Center, the O Heroes volunteer program, athlete scholarships and graduate rates. He said the committee gained insight but didnt actually accomplish much.
That all changed when Tublitz became chair. He, economics professor Bill Harbaugh and a couple other faculty members began digging into athletic department finances and policies and asking tougher and tougher questions. They inquired about for-credit classes designed for student athletes but taught by athletic department personnel, bonds to pay for the new basketball arena and university subsidized student-athlete support services at the Jaqua Academic Center, including engraved Macbooks for each athlete and individual tutors for each of their classes.
The root of each of their questions, Tublitz said, was the more fundamental question, Why are you making a decision that is contrary to our values? Krueger said the athletic department representatives provided vague, not very solid answers. Tublitz and Harbaugh said the athletic department provided minimal answers or none at all.
The athletic department was extremely hard to deal with and extremely reluctant to release information, Harbaugh said. The committee had been dominated for years by people who were quite fond of the athletic department, until Nathan Tublitz and I and a few others started asking hard questions.
Ninety-five percent of the time the athletic department just listened and said, Thank you very much, goodbye. You could just see their eyes glaze over, Tublitz said. Theres no even semblance of listening. And thats what pisses people off.
UO Athletic Director Rob Mullens said the athletic department members were certainly trying to answer their questions.
We were doing the best that we could, thats for sure, Mullens said. We were providing the information that fit with the charge of the committee.
Unprofessionalism and inappropriate behavior
Many former IAC members said the way Harbaugh and Tublitz but particularly Harbaugh approached those discussions was not conducive to productive conversation. Human physiology professor Andy Karduna recalled shouting matches between certain faculty and athletic department representatives. Business professor Lynn Kahle said people often left meetings very upset and sometimes in tears.
Mullens said he became concerned about how his staff was being treated at meetings. Athletic department staffers told him they sometimes felt like they were being targeted, a message Mullens relayed to Gottfredson at their regular meetings.
There probably were some times when it crossed the line to being unprofessional, Mullens said. Some of those meetings I was the target, but that comes with the position.
Its been muzzled and restricted to a very, very limited set of topics Unless Im mistaken, this is still an academic institution that has a sports team, not a sports team that happens to have a small academic sidelight. UO biology professor Nathan Tublitz, who helped write the IAC charge.
Math professor Dev Sinha said Harbaugh and Tublitz behavior was characterized by sophomoric rudeness, scoffing and guffawing, and a very basic lack of human decency. He said they sometimes brought factually inaccurate information to discussions and used the committee as a vehicle to generate outrage. The unprofessionalism, he said, was all one-sided.
You know when somebody thinks that youre less than human. Thats sort of the basic dynamic, Sinha said. You know when somebody has no professional or even human respect for you, and thats still the attitude some of these folks have.
Harbaugh responded to Sinhas comments saying:
Duck athletics makes millions for the coaches and athletic department staff, but only if they can keep their unpaid athletes academically eligible. Given how much money and how much of the universitys reputation is at stake, the IAC and now the IAAC has to ask uncomfortable questions of the athletic department. So Im not surprised that they and their boosters reacted with personal attacks on me, Nathan Tublitz, and some of the other faculty on the IAC.
A parallel committee
The IAC meetings became unproductive to the point that in March 2014, the IAC chair at the time, Rob Illig, wrote in the IACs annual report to the Senate president that the committee was broken. He recommended withdrawing the administrations and athletic departments involvement, and said the main structural problem was that the IAC was trying to accomplish two competing goals.
It is attempting to be a watchdog committee, aimed at ensuring that the athletics department acts in the best interest of the UO community and does not become the tail that wags the dog. At the same time, it is attempting to be an advisory committee, seeking to influence the faculty athletics representative and athletic department as they make important and potentially controversial decisions, Illig wrote.
Because it is trying to do both, the IAC is accomplishing neither.
In response to Illigs report, President Gottfredson told athletic department representatives they no longer had to attend IAC meetings. Gottfredson then decided to establish a new group, the Presidents Advisory Group on Intercollegiate Athletics (PAGIA), that would run parallel to the IAC until the IAC could fix its structural problems.
We were doing the best that we could, thats for sure We were providing the information that fit with the charge of the committee. UO Athletic Director Rob Mullens.
The PAGIA was ineffective for different reasons. Because the president called the meetings, it only convened four or fives times in two and a half years, even though its charge required it to meet twice per academic quarter. Former PAGIA members cant remember the exact number of meetings, but they agree it wasnt often. Kahle say they met on an as-needed basis.
The PAGIA also excluded the Senate from the decision-making process. The president appointed his own faculty members, its meetings were held in private and its minutes were not made public.
Meanwhile, the IAC continued to meet regularly and athletic department representatives mostly refused to come. Karduna, who chaired the IAC during the 2015-16 school year, spent the whole year working to create a new committee with a revised charge that would serve as a compromise between the IAC and PAGIA.
A fresh start
In November 2016, Karduna brought his proposal for the IAAC to the Senate. The new committees charge would only focus on academic performance and welfare issues related to student-athletes, and the senate would get to select half the faculty members. The senate ended up passing it 30-6.
Harbaugh proposed a motion to keep the IAC around in a watchdog capacity, but the Senate voted it down narrowly, 20-18, thus ending the long-standing and troubled committee.
Now there is no senate committee providing faculty oversight on athletic department decisions. Harbaugh said its ridiculous that faculty shouldnt have a say over the athletic departments funding when the athletic department spends $120 million a year and the universitys entire education, research and general fund budget is only around $550 million.
The athletic department wants us to have no influence over any of those decisions, and thats not good for the university, Harbaugh said. Its good for the people collecting money for the athletic department, but not the for the university as a whole.
Karduna, who helped write the charge for and now chairs the IAAC, said although not all constituents are happy with the charge, at least it enables the faculty to have productive conversations about issues they can actually impact. Hes not against a faculty committee that examines athletic department finances, but said such a committee should not be under the same umbrella as one that deals with student-athlete academic performance and welfare. Sinha, Kahle and Gleason agreed.
When asked whether he thinks faculty should have a role in athletic department decisions, Rob Mullens did not answer the question.
Thats not for me to decide, Mullens said. My job is to run the athletic department.
Follow Kenny Jacoby on Twitter @kennyjacoby
Go here to read the rest:
Faculty vs. athletics: Fighting for control - Oregon Daily Emerald
- Media funding without control : Safeguarding editorial independence in publicly funded journalism-Part II - Mmegi Online - June 16th, 2026 [June 16th, 2026]
- Kangana Ranaut reveals why she took back control of her social media accounts from her team - The Shillong Times - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Firings at CBS' '60 Minutes' reflect the fight for media control in the age of Trump - NPR - June 5th, 2026 [June 5th, 2026]
- The Trumpers Are Taking Over the Media: We Can Do Something Other than Whine - cepr.net - June 5th, 2026 [June 5th, 2026]
- Commentary: In collision between money and news, we lose Llewellyn King - Jacksonville Journal-Courier - June 5th, 2026 [June 5th, 2026]
- Jimmy Kimmel on Trump: Our most out-of-control relative on social media - The Guardian - June 5th, 2026 [June 5th, 2026]
- Virgin Media O2s Digital Wellbeing Strategy: Helping you take back control of your time online - Virgin Media - June 5th, 2026 [June 5th, 2026]
- Estuary Series Green Hippo | Next-Gen Media Control Platform for Live Productions - Digital Studio India - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Nuns have always sat between freedom and control. Now theyre in the social media spotlight - The Conversation - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Explosions heard near Strait of Hormuz, local media says Bandar Abbas situation under control - The Economic Times - May 27th, 2026 [May 27th, 2026]
- Pest Control Company Accused of Running Over & Killing Stray Dog in Johor - Gempak - May 22nd, 2026 [May 22nd, 2026]
- Panasonic acquires Hive to expand immersive media and control capabilities - Inavate - May 20th, 2026 [May 20th, 2026]
- Belichicks family snaps after 24-year-old girlfriend files 18 LLCs and gets media control - MSN - May 20th, 2026 [May 20th, 2026]
- Governments May Shape What AI Chatbots Say by Shaping the Web They Learn From - UC San Diego Today - May 16th, 2026 [May 16th, 2026]
- State media control impacts the output of U.S.-based LLMs - Good Authority - May 16th, 2026 [May 16th, 2026]
- Media Links integrates Xscend IP Transport Platform with DataMiner to enhance visibility and control across multi-vendor networks - Prensario... - May 16th, 2026 [May 16th, 2026]
- State Influence on AI: Tracing the Impact of Media Control - Devdiscourse - May 16th, 2026 [May 16th, 2026]
- IRGC-linked media outlines plan to tax and control undersea internet cables in the Hormuz Strait Iran's mouthpiece calls for a cut of $10 trillion of... - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- Police consider new ways to 'control their narrative ' in 'depleted media landscape' - RNZ - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- Narratives At War: Media Framing, Discourse, And Control In The Iran Conflict Analysis - Eurasia Review - May 7th, 2026 [May 7th, 2026]
- No journalist will stay in jail without committing crime: Info minister - The Daily Star - May 3rd, 2026 [May 3rd, 2026]
- Todd Monken Press Conference: "The easiest thing to control is our effort" - Cleveland Browns - April 23rd, 2026 [April 23rd, 2026]
- Michael Jacksons nephew slams critics over biopic, says media no longer 'controls the narrative' - Latest news from Azerbaijan - April 23rd, 2026 [April 23rd, 2026]
- New law on social media in Azerbaijan: how the authorities are strengthening control over society - JAMnews - April 23rd, 2026 [April 23rd, 2026]
- Iran rebuffs Trump's plan for new round of peace talks, state media reports - CNBC - April 21st, 2026 [April 21st, 2026]
- Narrative at Arms: Framing, Discourse, and Media Control in the Iran War - Geopolitical Monitor - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- John Curley Says The Medias Blame Game Is Out of Control - MyNorthwest.com - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- Mass. Gov. Healey plan aims to limit out of control youth social media use - MassLive - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- Charlotte, NC Imam John Yahya Ederer: 9/11 Was All About Diverting Attention From The 'Evil' Of Zionism As Zionist Control Of The Narrative Through... - April 10th, 2026 [April 10th, 2026]
- From broadsheet editors to influencers: How has control over the media shifted? - The Boar - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- Speaker Papuashvili: UNM once again; same architects of torture, racketeering, and media control resurface with same agenda - 1TV.GE - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- Iranian media: Iran can control the Strait of Hormuz for several years - Apa.az - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- Michigan Gaming Control Board and King Media Win Gold Shorty Impact Award for "Don't Regret the Bet" Campaign - State of Michigan (.gov) - April 3rd, 2026 [April 3rd, 2026]
- Right-wing media figures have insisted Iran cannot be in control of the Strait of Hormuz. Trump just signaled he wants to end the war without... - April 3rd, 2026 [April 3rd, 2026]
- Iran train in Turkey with tight media control ahead of World Cup warm-ups - Reuters - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- 5 simple tech tips to take back control of your social media - Kurt the CyberGuy - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- How the US, Israel & Iran are controlling their media narratives - The New Arab - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Hegseth, Media Control, and the War on TruthJournalism Under Fire in 2026 - savageminds.substack.com - March 22nd, 2026 [March 22nd, 2026]
- The Ellisons Empire: Media Consolidation, Narrative Control, and the Threat to Democracy - Nonprofit Quarterly - March 18th, 2026 [March 18th, 2026]
- Be the one in control: Why are more countries leaning towards banning social media access for kids? - CNA - March 18th, 2026 [March 18th, 2026]
- TRUMP BRAGS About Getting Fascist Control of the Media in BONKERS Truth Social Post - Daily Kos - March 15th, 2026 [March 15th, 2026]
- Pete Hegseth Openly Yearns For Government Control of the Media, and Admits to Committing War Crimes - Daily Kos - March 15th, 2026 [March 15th, 2026]
- Media Control and NielsenIQ BookData to Publish BookTok Charts for the U.K. - Publishing Perspectives - March 13th, 2026 [March 13th, 2026]
- Big tech has defeated everything for 30 years, but for the first time faces something it can't control: a jury - Fortune - March 13th, 2026 [March 13th, 2026]
- Media: Strait of Hormuz tanker traffic crashes as Iran tightens control - Caliber.Az - March 11th, 2026 [March 11th, 2026]
- Aga Khan Exits Nation Media Group After 66 Years as Tanzanias Rostam Azizi Takes Control - Capitalfm.co.ke - March 11th, 2026 [March 11th, 2026]
- Committee to Protect Journalists Urges Taliban to Return Control of Rah-e-Farda TV to Its Owner - Hasht-e Subh Daily - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Tehran fires at Turkey, Nato shield. US media: ground offensive of thousands of Kurds begun - Il Sole 24 ORE - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Boyfriend, 20, accused of controlling who partner spoke to and her social media use - The Western Telegraph - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- Everything Larry and David Ellison Will Control If Paramount Buys Warner Bros. - WIRED - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- You have to wonder who is in control of our social media - Northern News - February 26th, 2026 [February 26th, 2026]
- Fast-growing esports group Veloce in $61M deal with SEGG Media - Stock Titan - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Australias political and media elites are losing control of the story - Pearls and Irritations - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- MindStir Media's The Hands-On Author: Taking Control of Your - openPR.com - February 9th, 2026 [February 9th, 2026]
- Exposed Moltbook Database Let Anyone Take Control of Any AI Agent on the Site - 404 Media - February 1st, 2026 [February 1st, 2026]
- analysis media and power Ellison, Trump and the TikTok deal in the USA With the takeover of control of TikTok in the USA, billionaire Larry Ellison's... - February 1st, 2026 [February 1st, 2026]
- Social media: I thought I was in control of the algorithm. Then came the dreams of blood-soaked streets - The Sydney Morning Herald - January 28th, 2026 [January 28th, 2026]
- CCM and UC Athletics partner on state-of-the-art live broadcast studio - uc.edu - January 28th, 2026 [January 28th, 2026]
- Following control of Syrian Interim Government | Internal Security arrests former media officials of SDF and former head of council - - January 28th, 2026 [January 28th, 2026]
- Media control, accused teacher and cancer incidence - Maldives Independent - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- Filipinos trust media most in addressing flood control mess | The wRap - Rappler - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Survey: Filipinos trust media on flood control scandal amid doubts over justice system - Daily Tribune - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Social media are helping cults to recruit and control members - The Economist - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- William has control of the media here's what's being hidden from us - The i Paper - December 31st, 2025 [December 31st, 2025]
- Information and State Control: Banning Social Media in South Asia - The London School of Economics and Political Science - December 27th, 2025 [December 27th, 2025]
- CBS and CNN Are Being Sacrificed to Trump - The Atlantic - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- The Rich Control the Media: Whining Is Not a Strategy - cepr.net - December 22nd, 2025 [December 22nd, 2025]
- The UK needs some media free of US control: Comcasts move for ITV starts to focus minds - The Guardian - December 16th, 2025 [December 16th, 2025]
- Scotland Office in 'Pravda-style bid to control media' with order to journalists - TheNational.scot - December 12th, 2025 [December 12th, 2025]
- Is there an alternative to Big Techs control of the social media space? - LSE Review of Books - The London School of Economics and Political Science - December 12th, 2025 [December 12th, 2025]
- Media-Ownership Reforms Are Key to Limiting Network Control - TVTechnology - December 10th, 2025 [December 10th, 2025]
- As local media scrutiny withers, message control flourishes - bayobserver.ca - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- Russia Boosts Propaganda Spending and Media Control in Occupied Regions 2026 - - December 2nd, 2025 [December 2nd, 2025]
- Creative Media Specializes in Lighting Control Installation in Alpharetta and Brookhaven, Georgia - Markets Financial Content - December 2nd, 2025 [December 2nd, 2025]
- Media: US plan suggests Russia will pay rent for control of Donbas - Apa.az - November 20th, 2025 [November 20th, 2025]
- Means of True Information Being Blocked: Sibal on 100th Episode of 'Dil Se' - The Quint - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Israel Approves First Reading of Death Penalty and Media Control Bills - ynews.digital - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Media Spinning Out of Control Again on Off-Year Elections - AMAC - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Netanyahu's Government Moves to Stifle Journalism and Take Control of the Israeli Media - Haaretz - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Media bill wont give government direct editorial control, but risks putting press in biased, moneyed hands - The Times of Israel - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]