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Jumat, 20 April 2018

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Katharine "Kathy" Hamilton is a former Illinois elected official who previously served as the chairwoman of the Board of Trustees at the College of DuPage, a community college in the Chicago suburbs. She was chosen as chairwoman after the election of three "clean slate" candidates backed by Hamilton in April 2015. Hamilton resigned the position December 12, 2015.

Her term as a trustee of the college was marked with controversy for her, the college and the college's top administrators.

When the administration came under media scrutiny in 2014 for a number of incidents related to its spending practices, Hamilton made national headlines for trying to make public the details of the college's spending. She opposed a tuition hike; spoke out against the college's attempt to get a $20 million grant from the state; pushed for transparency following the exposure of the college president spending college funds on personal items; and openly criticized the college's spending and accounting practices. Following these events, she was formally censured by the college's board of trustees.

Following her censure, local and national media outlets published stories supporting Hamilton and chastising the college. The Chicago Tribune criticized the college president's actions and the board's censure of Hamilton. Forbes magazine praised her efforts to require public transparency of the college's finances. The Washington Times gave the college its Golden Hammer Award, which the newspapers uses to spotlight waste, fraud and abuse in government.

Subsequent to the Hamilton's censure, she continued her public efforts to implement fiscal responsibility and was the only member of the board to vote against a taxpayer-funded $760,000 early retirement buyout of the college president's contract. The buyout also became a widely covered event in the media and invoked negative reactions from the local community and several Illinois state legislators.


Video Kathy Hamilton



Tenure

Kathy Hamilton was elected by voters to the College of DuPage Board of Trustees on April 8, 2013. She received 51,595 votes, with the second-place winner getting 32,433 votes. On the board, she held the position of vice chairman until April 2015. Hamilton's six-year term expires in 2019.

On April 7, 2015, a local election was held for three of the board's six seats. Three candidates who campaigned under the banner "clean slate" won all three seats.[1] Hamilton publicly supported all three candidates' campaigns.

After the election, Hamilton's lawyer wrote a letter to the state attorney general and local prosecutor to ask for action to prevent the outgoing board from holding any meetings until the newly elected board members officially begin their tenure.

Hamilton was chosen as the new chairwoman of the board at the first board meeting after the election. The three returning board members were the only trustees to vote against Hamilton as chairwoman.

On April 20, Hamilton and her slate of newly elected trustees passed a vote to put college president Robert Breuder on administrative leave. His leave coincides with internal investigations being conducted by the board into various practices the school allegedly did in recent years.

Citing "personal reasons," Hamilton announced her resignation as chairwoman of the Board of Trustees at the College of DuPage on December 12, 2015.

Tuition increase

In February 2014, College of DuPage administrators asked the Board of Trustees to raise tuition by $6 per credit hour. Hamilton and other trustees opposed the increase. In response, administrators lowered their request to $4 per hour. Hamilton and two other trustees still opposed the increase and voted against it; the Board of Trustees appproved it by a margin of one vote. In her statement against the tuition hike, Hamilton said that the increase was unnecessary and irresponsible, referencing the college's $140 million cash reserve.

In June, a few months after becoming chairwoman, Hamilton announced a plan to lower tuition by $5 per credit and reduce the local tax levy by 5 percent. She told reporters that the college tuition has risen 18 times in 20 years and is the highest of any community college in Illinois.

State grant

In May 2014, College of DuPage president Robert Breuder wrote a private email to the trustees, in which he stated that they needed to come up with a reason to get a $20 million grant that the state had approved years earlier but had not yet disbursed to the college. Breuder wrote, "I needed to identify a project that would help release our state funding. My idea: a Teaching and Learning Center. . . . A building that focuses on teaching and learning is politically attractive; more so than let's say a student center, PE facility, etc." He also proposed a plan to apply political pressure to Illinois Governor Pat Quinn during Quinn's commencement address to graduating students. Breuder wrote in the email, "When I introduce Governor Quinn at commencement, I want to help our cause (obtaining the $20 million sooner rather than later) by thanking him for his commitment in front of 3,500 people. There are many voters in our district. Please keep November 4 in mind."

In June 2014, the Board of Trustees approved a $50 million classroom construction project, which included the $20 million grant from the state, as part of a $500 million expansion program. Hamilton was the only trustee to vote no. She wrote letters to several newspapers to share her concerns.

The Daily Herald, a local newspaper, published Hamilton's letter on July 8, 2014. In the letter, Hamilton wrote, "Recently, the COD board voted on a $50 million building for new classrooms. I was the only board member that opposed that investment. I felt the project warranted further analysis and definition of scope in terms of funding. . . . The request for additional classroom space should have included a complete assessment of current and future needs."

At the next Board of Trustees meeting after the letter was published, board chairman Erin Birt chastised Hamilton. By September 2014, the college president's email became public after a government watchdog group called For The Good of Illinois, run by Adam Andrzejewski, filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request. In September, Andrzejewski published an article in Forbes magazine criticizing Breuder and Board of Trustees and praising Hamilton. Governor Quinn called the incident "extremely alarming" and canceled the grant.

Imprest fund

After Andrzejewski filed the FOIA, he learned that the college president's office ran a special fund called an "imprest fund." Payments made from the fund had been hidden from the trustees and the public. The fund was used to pay for some of Breuder's personal expenses, including $27,931 for membership dues at a private shooting club, along with money for satellite phones for a trip to Africa, where Breuder shot and killed an African elephant. (The Forbes article published a photo of Breuder standing over the dead elephant).

In response to learning about the imprest fund, Hamilton successfully passed a transparency initiative that forces the college to publicly post on the Internet all payments made through the imprest fund.

Censure of Kathy Hamilton

In August 2014, the Board of Trustees formally censured Kathy Hamilton for inappropriate conduct. The censure stated that Hamilton publicly embarrassed board members; sent text messages from her phone during board meetings and refused to submit her text messages for public record; and that she had made inappropriate comments to board chairman Erin Birt at a public meeting.

The censure included the following language:

  • "[Hamilton] publicly embarrassed her fellow elected board members and the college administration."
  • "[Her] desire to communicate with the media, press and/or political publications rather than directly with the board has negatively affected the board and the college"
  • "On multiple occasions, Trustee Hamilton has publicly stated that only she is looking out for the taxpayers, erroneously implying that the remaining six (6) board members and college administrators are irresponsible and derelict in their duties."

The censure passed with two no votes and one abstention. Among Hamilton's supporters in voting against the censure was trustee Kim Savage, who had joined Hamilton in voting no against the tuition hike earlier in 2014.

Following the censure, the Chicago Tribune published an editorial that characterized the censure as "a teeny-bopper temper tantrum," criticized president Breuder and chairman Birt, and defended Hamilton's right to express her concerns to the media about her opposition to the classroom construction project. The editorial wrote, "Folks, this is called debate. Public bodies are supposed to have sharp, vigorous, full-throated debate. If COD officials want to secure state money again, they had better show they run a place that respects free speech, that tolerates dissent. In short, that they run a college."


Maps Kathy Hamilton



Personal life

Hamilton sits on the board of the Children's Dyslexia Center of Metropolitan Chicago and serves as director of a local ballet company. She is married with two children. Prior to serving in public office, she was a certified public accountant (CPA). She formerly worked in international corporate finance and holds an MBA in finance from New York University.


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References


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External links

  • Formal censure of Kathy Hamilton, College of DuPage Board of Trustees
  • List of College of DuPage Imprest Payments (April 2013 to August 2014)
  • PBS interview with Kathy Hamilton, trustee Joseph Wozniak, and Chicago Tribune reporter Jodi Cohen

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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