AAUP Places MD Anderson on Censure List

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on email
Share on print

MD Anderson Cancer Center has been censured by the American Association of University Professors, an organization that defends academic freedom and shared governance.

The decision was made at AAUP’s annual meeting, which concluded June 13 in Washington, D.C. Founded in 1915, AAUP has 47,000 individual members and 300 chapters.

Several hundred AAUP members voted unanimously to censure Ronald DePinho’s administration, said Gregory Scholtz, AAUP associate secretary and director of the Department of Academic Freedom.

“There was no debate,” Scholtz said to The Cancer Letter.

The censure concludes an acrimonious, yearlong feud between the two institutions, which began in April 2014. At that time, DePinho and his administration’s refusal to provide justification for denying tenure renewals to Kapil Mehta and Zhengxin Wang triggered an AAUP investigation. MD Anderson’s Promotion and Tenure Committee had unanimously recommended both professors for renewal (The Cancer Letter, April 25, 2014).

MD Anderson will now be listed on AAUP’s censure list of over 50 institutions. There is no other top-tier cancer center on that list.

Three other institutions—University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, University of Southern Maine, and Felician College—were also censured at the annual meeting.

The decision to censure MD Anderson is based on the April 8 AAUP report, which found that DePinho’s administration acted in disregard of academic standards and the cancer center’s internal faculty appointment policy (The Cancer Letter, April 10).

“We believe MD Anderson’s time-tested system of offering renewable seven-year appointments to our faculty members not only promotes academic freedom but also fosters exceptional individual achievement and maintains the institution’s global impact on the cancer problem,” said DePinho in a statement.

“In addition, years of data demonstrate our consistent pattern of renewing faculty appointments in almost all cases. Our world-renowned physicians and researchers remain committed to accomplishing our mission to end cancer, and together we will continue to forge ahead with our critical work for the benefit of cancer patients everywhere.”

University of Texas System Chancellor Bill McRaven said: “As a specialized research-based cancer care institution with the singular mission of saving lives, MD Anderson’s term appointment process has worked exceptionally well to ensure the recruitment and retention of world class, high impact faculty.

“Its successful process has been in existence for decades and has been instrumental in keeping MD Anderson at the forefront of the world’s most formidable cancer centers. Moreover, MD Anderson’s practice of renewable, multiple-year appointments is in compliance with The Rules and Regulations of the Board of Regents of The University of Texas System,” McRaven said in a statement.

Instances of non-renewal of faculty appointments are rare due to the high number of preeminent scientists and doctors who have been successfully recruited and retained to dedicate their lives to the MD Anderson mission.”

Responding to the AAUP report at the time, MD Anderson officials characterized it as an effort on the part of a “labor union” to attract more members.

According to AAUP, the censure list is closely watched by about 240 higher education and academic organizations that endorse AAUP principles. Job postings and other related media from censured institutions published in that network would be accompanied by a footnote that reads, “The administration of this institution is on the AAUP censure list.”

In advance of the organization’s annual meeting, AAUP’s Committee A convened May 29 to make a recommendation to censure DePinho’s administration.

The full text of the committee’s statement follows:

The report of the investigating committee focuses on the cases of two long-serving full- time faculty members who were involuntarily separated from service when the cancer center’s president declined to renew their term appointments, despite unanimous recommendations favoring renewal from the faculty personnel committee and despite their evidently having met the requirements for reappointment.

Notwithstanding their many years of service, neither faculty member held an appointment with indefinite tenure. MD Anderson is one of two institutions in the fifteen-member University of Texas system exempt from the system’s tenure policy. In its place, the cancer center awards renewable seven-year term appointments, referred to in the institution’s policy documents as “term tenure.”

Both professors were denied a timely written statement of the reason for the nonrenewal of their appointments, and only one of them was afforded the opportunity to appeal the decision to a faculty body. Although the institution’s policies require that appeals of nonrenewal of term tenure be addressed exclusively to the president, an exception was made for one faculty member, who was permitted to file a preliminary appeal with a faculty committee. The appeals committee found in his favor, though an administrative officer concealed that information from the faculty member. His final appeal to the president was unsuccessful.

The other professor, in accordance with the institution’s policies, was not allowed to contest the decision through a faculty body. He declined to appeal to the president, concluding that it would be futile to expect a favorable review from the official who himself had made the nonreappointment decision.

During the period covered by the report, the administration had exerted increasing pressure on basic-science faculty members to obtain grants to cover larger portions of their salaries and on clinical faculty members to treat more patients, with what the faculty claimed were deleterious results for research and patient care. That period also saw an increasing frequency in presidential rejections of unanimous faculty personnel committee recommendations for appointment renewal, reducing the faculty’s confidence in the fairness of the reappointment process.

As a consequence, faculty members could be inclined to select lines of research for their fundability and predictable results. And they tended to censor their own discourse, especially in the years immediately preceding renewal decision.

The investigating committee also inquired into the administration’s removal of faculty status from a third faculty member because he lacked a Texas medical license. The professor’s initial letter of appointment made no mention of any such requirement, his chair had regularly assured him that a temporary license would suffice, he was not provided promised time to study for the licensing exam, and other similarly situated faculty members were not required to obtain such a license, leaving open the question of the real basis for the decision.

The investigating committee found that the administration acted in disregard of the Association’s Recommended Institutional Regulations on Academic Freedom and Tenure and of its own policies when it failed to furnish the two professors with written statements of the reasons for the decisions not to renew their appointments and when it failed to provide accurate licensure information to the third professor, leading to his loss of faculty status; of the Statement on Government of Colleges and Universities when it failed to provide compelling reasons stated in detail for rejecting the recommendations of the faculty personnel committee, when it unilaterally appointed department chairs, and when it failed to involve faculty in academic decisions; and of the 1940 Statement of Principles on Academic Freedom and Tenure, which calls for extending the procedural protections of tenure to full-time faculty members whose service exceeds seven years, when it failed to afford the two nonreappointed professors an adjudicative hearing before an elected faculty body in which the burden of demonstrating adequate cause for dismissal would rest with the administration.

Committee A recommends to the One Hundred and First Annual Meeting that the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center be added to the Association’s list of censured administrations.

YOU MAY BE INTERESTED IN

Acting Director Dr. Krzysztof Ptak’s words reverberated throughout the meeting room—and the heads of several of us—during the National Cancer Institute’s Office of Cancer Centers update on the final day of the 2024 Association of American Cancer Institutes/Cancer Center Administrators Forum Annual Meeting in Chicago.
“Bridge to Bahia” exhibit.Source: Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer CenterKaren Estrada, a survivor of acute myeloid leukemia, used visual art to communicate with her two boys while undergoing a bone marrow transplant at Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center. Because Estrada’s treatment required isolation, and her young children could not yet read and write, she sought out other creative vessels to foster closeness between them.
Matthew Bin Han Ong
Matthew Bin Han Ong

Never miss an issue!

Get alerts for our award-winning coverage in your inbox.

Login