For some reason, a widespread belief
exists that the president of a college or a university (or even a 2-year junior
college) deserves to live a life of luxury. No fewer than 30
higher education presidents are earning over a million dollars a year,
compensation that rightly should outrage families indebting themselves to pay
tuition.
The sad truth is that higher education has
gone from being a calling to a racket, in all too many cases. And the rot
extends from the top to the bottom of the status hierarchy. Arguably, higher
education is the biggest industry on the country, and certainly for many
families with children in college, it is the second most expensive purchase in
a lifetime, after a house. That pile of money draws all sorts of
scavengers.
Meet Dr. DeRionne Pollard, president of
Montgomery College, the biggest junior college in the state of Maryland:
Heather Hunter of the Daily
Caller reports on the luxury she spends on herself and her “wife.”
Dr. Pollard’s
current contract shows that she receives a $281,000 salary with a possible five
percent annual bonus. In addition, she has a $3,000 housing allowance each
month for her home. All of her work-related travel plus her wife’s travel costs
are covered.
Why are taxpayers paying for a spouse’s travel? And not just the backpacking sort of travel:
Why are taxpayers paying for a spouse’s travel? And not just the backpacking sort of travel:
NBC reported
on her questionable expense of spending $1,792 for a five-day hotel room at the
Marriott Wardman in northwest D.C. The hotel is only about 30 minutes from her
house.
Over 300 bucks a might to spare her the
ordeal of a 30 minute commute? How is that a justified expenditure for the
taxpayers of Maryland?
Records show
that she averages 13 trips per year and has traveled to cities like Napa,
California; Fort Lauderdale, Florida; Honolulu, Hawaii; Austin, Texas and other
cities. Since 2013, she spent $70,000 in her travel expenses.
She spent
more than $6,000 on upgrading plane seats for both herself and her wife. In
addition, they spent $3,700 for extra and overweight baggage. During the summer
of 2015, she spent more than $3,400 on airfare and upgrades to Honolulu and
Austin for conferences.
While in
Honolulu, Dr. Pollard spent $2,776 for a hotel room. While in Austin, she
racked up $2,753 for her hotel plus spent $80 for breakfast and bought two
dinners on the same night — one for $80 and another for $127.
Despite the
college’s payments on her leased Infiniti Q70, she reportedly uses a pricey car
service and in one instance, spent $292 to travel 15 miles for a radio
interview about “how to make community college more affordable.”
The NBC
I-Team reports that the “college is now paying about $10,000 per month to rent
yet another vehicle, this time an SUV, and pay for an off-duty police officer
to pick Dr. Pollard up at home and drive her to work each day… starting in
February, the college began paying $52 per hour for this armed driver to work
between 10-to-15 hours a day.”
Here is what I believe to be a picture of
the luxury-loving couple that flies first class, eats expensive meals, and
stays in luxury hotels. All in the name of "higher education."
Of course, Pollard defends her lavish living
style:
“I do travel
regularly to attend conferences hosted by organizations such as the American
Association of Community Colleges; Black, Brown & College Bound; and the
Association of Community College Trustees, among others. The topics of these
meetings have included issues relevant to our mission, such as closing the
achievement gap, economic and workforce development, institutional
transformation, contemporary issues in higher education, and much more. These
topics are critical to student success and require our attention,” she wrote.
And people like me, who think she is
abusing her position and the good will of taxpayers toward higher education
just don’t get it:
She maintains
that Montgomery College’s Board of Trustees has the “utmost confidence” in her
and her team.
“The Board
believes that the news story was based on an antiquated view of community
colleges and failed to appreciate such colleges’ complex, 21st century
mission,” Dr. Pollard responded.
Dr. Pollard calls herself "Dr."
because she has a PhD in “educational leadership and policy studies in higher
education from Loyola University Chicago.” Sounds pretty rigorous. I
wonder what her “contribution to knowledge” was in her dissertation? A
doctorate is supposed to indicate actually expanding the range of human
knowledge.
Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2017/01/junior_college_president_grotesquely_livin_large_at_taxpayer_expense.html#ixzz4UX1J4MjX
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http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2017/01/junior_college_president_grotesquely_livin_large_at_taxpayer_expense.html
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