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Durham Detour and a $288,000 party for Ammons

The local newspaper down in Tallahassee reports that James Ammons, the former boss here at N.C. Central University, had a heck of an inaugural bash down at Florida A & M University last week, to the tune of $288,000.

 The party, much like the $162,000 installation UNC Chapel Hill threw recently for new chancellor Holden Thorp, was paid for by private donations, not state money. Still, that's quite a party, isn't it?

 Ammons called his seven years in Durham a "detour" on his road to the presidency at his alma mater. One might remark that he left just in time, given the mess he'd be dealing with here if he had stayed in Durham. 

Ammons irony in NCCU/New Birth report

Late last week I wrote this story about the release of the UNC system's final report on the mess involving N.C. Central University and its unauthorized satellite campus at New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in Lithonia, Ga.

In the story, I wrote that the report didn't place specific blame; that's true, but it did name former Chancellor James Ammons at least once, in a section that points out how odd it seems that the creation of this campus did not follow proper guidelines.

The brief background: In 2004, NCCU created a series of undergraduate programs at the church, whose pastor is Eddie Long, a university trustee. Problem was, the programs were never approved by any of the various bodies who should have either voted on it or been told about it, including campus trustees; the UNC system's governing board, the Southern Association of Schools and Colleges' Commission on Colleges — which accredits NCCU — and the federal Department of Education, which doled out financial aid that made its way to students at the Georgia campus.

NCCU New Birth degrees valid

In case you missed it: N.C. Central University finally received some good news this week regarding the New Birth Missionary Baptist Church fiasco.

The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools notified the university Tuesday that the degrees granted to 25 students at the unauthorized suburban Atlanta campus are, in fact, valid.

That sound you hear is a collective sigh of relief being sighed over on Fayetteville Street.

Eddie Long, the NCCU trustee who runs the Lithonia, Ga. megachurch where the unauthorized series of programs was held for four years, attended this morning's NCCU Board of Trustees meeting via teleconference, not in person. Chancellor Charlie Nelms addressed he issue briefly, repeating his pledge to make the situation right by the students involved. Long did not add anything to that conversation.

Bowles on the New Birth saga

During UNC system governance board meetings Thursday and Friday, UNC system President Erskine Bowles gave blistering status reports on his investigation into the saga surrounding N.C. Central University and its unauthorized satellite campus in Lithonia, Ga. 

It is jarring to realize that NCCU is on the hook for the federal financial aid money it distributed to students in the program. Bowles is clearly not happy with the situation. I've posted some of his comments in other forums, but here is a transcript of exactly what he said Friday morning during a full board meeting of the UNC system's Board of Governors.

He did not mince words.  

 

A passing mention of NCCU's New Birth campus

N.C. Central University Chancellor Charlie Nelms said Friday his institution is still in talks with the UNC system about the repercussions from an unauthorized satellite campus NCCU recently stopped operating at a suburban Atlanta megachurch.


The saga surrounding the collection of degree programs NCCU offered for four years at New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in Lithonia, Ga. received just a passing mention Friday during at telephone conference meeting of the executive committee of the university's board of trustees.

NCCU's Atlanta campus - again

I've been writing a lot about the satellite campus in Georgia that N.C. Central University recently shuttered after running into accreditation problems.

But not quite everything makes the paper; thus, here are a couple bits and pieces from my notebook. (Throughout this post, you'll find links to everything I've written on this issue)

 

Ammons breaks silence - sort of

In reporting the story that ran Sunday about NCCU's unauthorized satellite campus at New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in suburban Atlanta, I tried several times to contact James Ammons, NCCU's former chancellor who is now president at Florida A & M University in Tallahassee.

Ammons never called or returned my emails requesting comment. He did comment, briefly, to a higher education trade publication called Inside Higher Ed. He didn't say much, but here's a link to the story that publication wrote on the New Birth issue.

And here are Ammons' comments.

"James H. Ammons, who was chancellor when the program was set up, recently left to become president of Florida A&M University. Via e-mail, Ammons said that while he knows that anything that happened administratively while he was chancellor was 'my responsibility,' he 'cannot recall all of the details regarding that particular program because I don’t get involved in the day-to-day operations of academic programs,' leaving such matters to the provost and faculty."

A win for Ammons

N.C. Central University's former chancellor had reason to celebrate this week.

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