New College alumni continue to express concern, following release of Trustee Spalding’s texts

Share
New College of Florida
New College of Florida, "cartoonized" picture by Flickr user Ray (CC-BY-NC-ND-2.0).

Recently released text messages suggest New College of Florida Trustee, Matthew Spalding, coordinated efforts behind the scenes to overhaul the institution’s leadership. Alumni have said this news raises legal and ethical concerns.

According to the Sarasota Herald-Tribune, Spalding texted several individuals to plan the motions he made during a Board of Trustees meeting on Jan. 31. These motions included moving towards hiring Richard Corcoran as interim president and Bill Galvano as general counsel for New College’s board.

Governor Ron DeSantis also appointed six new members to the institution’s Board of Trustees on Jan. 6, just weeks before Spalding’s motions.

Many New College alumni have expressed frustration and worry over these changes to the board. Some have formed groups to fight for the preservation of the college’s founding principles, including a new nonprofit called the Novo Collegian Alliance

Bill Rosenberg is a New College alum and a member of the Board of Directors for the Novo Collegian Alliance. 

He said Spalding’s text messages indicate that the board isn’t following Florida’s Sunshine laws.

Rosenberg and other concerned alumni are lobbying to senators who will review the Board of Trustees appointments in hopes they will oppose them.

“These trustees are not qualified for the offices they’ve been appointed to,” Rosenberg said. “There was no vetting. They were hoisted upon the existing board and the existing president with no consultation at all with the New College community. It simply happened.”

As of Thursday evening, New College of Florida had not responded to an emailed request for comment.

Here’s the latest about NCF via AP:

You may also like

Florida okays money for a Hardee County project

$6 million from Florida’s Job Growth Grant Fund will help...

SCOTUS protest
Florida issues abortion rules after six-week ban becomes law

Florida healthcare regulators released emergency rules related to treating medical...

The Scoop: Thu., May 2, 2024 Tampa Bay and Florida headlines by WMNF

Housing affordability One of the main issues Floridians face is...

UF higher education university
UF shutdown case will be heard at Florida Supreme Court on June 5

The potential class-action lawsuit is one of numerous similar cases...

Ways to listen

WMNF is listener-supported. That means we don't advertise like a commercial station, and we're not part of a university.

Ways to support

WMNF volunteers have fun providing a variety of needed services to keep your community radio station alive and kickin'.

Follow us on Instagram

It's The Music Thursday
Player position: