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- My life has again become hectic because I was fired today. I will include
- below the text of a short letter I've just written to interested parties at
- Stanford. I'll post something more in a few days. I had written up an article
- for Liberty Magazine that summarizes my battle with the university through
- today (I did one last rewrite to add in this afternoon's results). I'll post
- it as a follow-up message to this one. Here is the info letter:
-
- Well, they actually did it. At a meeting this afternoon with Dean Gibbons and
- Associate Dean Ken Down I was informed that I will no longer be working here
- after May 15th. They gave me one month's severance pay.
-
- I guess they paid attention to all of the debate over the advocacy issue, or
- perhaps they just came to their senses. In the end, they did exactly what I
- predicted in my letter to The Daily of two weeks ago. They expressed
- concern over the advocacy issue, but they fired me for the backpack and the
- alcohol incident.
-
- They mentioned at the meeting that they could reconsider if I were to promise
- to abide by the policy in the future. I asked whether they would reconsider if
- I just promised to abide by the alcohol part of the policy (not providing
- alcohol to minors) and they said no. I had previously told them that I'd be
- willing to make such a promise, but it's clear from their response that they
- claim that the backpack issue is sufficient for my termination.
-
- Which raises an interesting question. Am I being fired over the backpack? If
- so, then why didn't they fire me back in November? Why didn't they at least
- contact me? The Campus Report describes Susan Hoerger as saying that
- "Reges' statements in the Stanford Daily, printed on Nov. 8 and 9, 1990,
- prompted discussion but no action at that time." The university claims that
- government pressure and my advocacy are not the reasons they are firing me, but
- then why wait until now to do so? How could I have more publicly expressed the
- backpack issue than I did last November?
-
- The university had a prepared press release (printed on color paper no less)
- that they started circulating as soon as I went public (to their credit, they
- waited until I went public to release it). It has two inaccuracies. I am not
- guilty of "encouraging others to violate Stanford's drug and alcohol policy."
- This is a subtle point, but I think it's important. When I advised the student
- to try MDA, I didn't tell him to do so on campus (and it's not a violation of
- the policy to do so off campus). What I have told others is that I
- consider this an unjust policy, and therefore they should ignore it. I have
- advised people to make whatever choices they would have made in the absence of
- the policy. That's not quite the same thing as encouraging them to violate it.
- The second inaccuracy was that they said that my contract was due to expire at
- the end of June. According to University Guide Memo 22.8 (section 2.b.2),
- "Senior lecturers and lecturers holding salaried appointments for a term of one
- year shall be notified not later than March 15 if the appointment is not to be
- renewed." So I could reasonably expect to be employed for another year.
-
- I will be working up another article for The Stanford Daily this weekend.
- As soon as it's done, I'll leave copies outside my door. I'll also be working
- up the grievance that I intend to file. I think that one of my key points will
- center on consistency (are they consistently applying the policy).
-