Of wrongs and rights

Recently I wrote about the U.S. Supreme Court’s wrong-headed decision concerning campaign finance funding.  The U.S. Supreme Court is not the only court in the land that gets it wrong from time to time.  In the news today is a story about a major problem created by a wrong-headed decision by former Kanawha County Circuit Judge and current U.S. District Court Judge Irene Berger.

The story concerns the South Charleston Technology Park, about which I have written before.  The Governor and his friends have hatched a plan to save the Tech Park, in part by moving a significant number of state government offices there.  But Judge Berger ruled several years ago when the West Virginia Lottery Commission tried to move its offices to Teays Valley that the West Virginia Constitution, which declares the seat of government to be Charleston (Article 6, Section 20), prohibited such a move.  While technically in South Charleston, the Tech Park is literally feet, not even miles, from Charleston and a mere five-minute drive from the State Capitol Complex itself.

The Governor basically dared anyone to sue, but several Charleston politicians made it clear that they were ready to take that dare.  Then some Charleston politicians hatched a plan to annex a portion of the Technology Park, but the City of South Charleston balked.  All this craziness because of Judge Berger’s flawed ruling.

Stop and think for a minute:

  • At one extreme, no one could argue with a straight face that every single state government job should be housed within the four corners of Charleston.  After all, all major government agencies have offices scattered throughout the state, and the state’s citizens are better off as a result.
  • At the other extreme, it would be hard to argue that West Virginia’s elected state officials should be headquartered outside of the State Capitol Complex, much less Charleston.
  • Should statutorily-created Cabinet-level offices be required to be housed in Charleston?  No.  If the West Virginia Constitution’s framers did not see fit to require these offices, they almost surely wouldn’t view them as important enough to justify a requirement that they be housed in Charleston.  A clear, easy-to-apply standard that can be justified with a reasonably logical argument.
  • But do realize that the Lottery Commission itself is not a Cabinet-level office.  It is one level down organizationally under the auspices of the West Virginia Department of Revenue.  Just like the Division of Rehabilitation Services, headquartered in Institute, and the Division of Tourism, headquartered in South Charleston.  If Judge Berger’s ruling applies to the Lottery Commission, it logically applies to Rehab Services and Tourism, too.
  • Having said that, if I were a legislator, I would sponsor a bill that lists government agencies that can be headquartered outside of Charleston because the relevant provision of the West Virginia Constitution contains five important words: “unless otherwise provided by law.”
  • And having said that, I seriously wonder whether Judge Berger’s wrong-headed decision may have prevented state politicians from making a wrong-headed decision of their own to take over a Tech Park that’s unlikely to flourish under the best of circumstances – an opinion that many of my friends do not share, but which seems pretty obvious to me.
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Yet another development on the “Good Money from Not-So-Good Benefactors” front:  According to the Coal Tattoo blog, members of the West Virginia University student chapter of the Sierra Club presented a petition yesterday to President Clements signed by 1,100 faculty, staff, students and Morgantown residents urging him to reject future donations from coal CEOs Bob Murray and Don Blankenship and demanding that the faculty chair funded by Murray be named for the people who died in the Crandall Canyon Mining disaster, rather than the person whose negligence caused their deaths.

While I am generally sympathetic to the Sierra Club cause, I think their opposition to these gifts is wrong-headed.  In my perfect world, West Virginia University, which actually has a competitive advantage in the field of energy research, would become a leader in the alternative and renewable energy fields.  To do that, they need money from people in the energy industry – and for good or ill, that includes people like Murray and Blankenship, who at least understand the potential benefits of energy research, even if their statements about global warming and other issues are far afield.

It would be great if higher education institutions never took money from benefactors who did not-so-good things, but we wouldn’t have some of the world’s finest educational institutions without the benefit of some ill-gotten gains – Duke University (built by tobacco), Carnegie Mellon University, and Rockefeller University, just to name a few.

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What gathering storm?

Several weeks ago the Chronicle of Higher Education published an interesting article about the research of two professors from Rutgers University and Georgetown University into the supposed dearth of scientists and engineers being produced by American universities.

Everywhere you turn in the higher education world, you hear policy makers trumpeting the importance of producing more STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) graduates.  Indeed Rising Above the Gathering Storm, a significant report issued by the National Academies several years ago, argued that America was on the verge of losing its competitive edge because it was not producing enough STEM graduates and urged national goal-setting.

After reviewing thirty years of educational and labor data, however, the Rutgers and Georgetown researchers have concluded that we’re producing more than enough STEM graduates.  The problem, if there is any, is that fewer than half of STEM graduates work in STEM fields 10 years after they graduate.

I have a hunch this is an important study (I’m not saying it’s correct, just important) that will receive little additional attention as states like West Virginia charge headlong into STEM graduate program expansion.  I make this observation in part because no one seems to have paid any attention to published data that suggest that West Virginia loses an overwhelming number of its STEM graduates to other states, making West Virginia’s return on its hefty STEM investment very poor.

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Me talk football

It is good to see West Virginia University focusing on the institution’s impressive research efforts in its lead website news story today.  It seems Dr. Julian Bailes, a researcher with the Blanchette Rockefeller Neurosciences Institute at WVU, has had his research on the impact of football injuries recognized in a leading medical journal.  Which one, you ask?

Sports Brain (a)   The Journal of the American Medical Association?

(b)   The New England Journal of Medicine?

(c)   Brain: A Journal of Neurology?

(d)   The Journal of Neuroscience?

(e)   GQ?

If you guessed (e), you, of course, are correct.  In between articles titled “Why We’re Wild About Olivia Wilde: A Sexy Video and Exclusive Photos,” “I Kissed a Teenage Lesbian (and I Liked It)” and “Me Talk Presidential One Day” (I wonder which of these three links is destined to become my blog’s most clicked link ever) is an article titled “Game Brain” about Dr. Bailes’s research.

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If tomorrow you find yourself in a sixth dimension as vast as space and as timeless as infinity, where particles move faster than time and time machines allow you to travel to visit distant people and places, you’ve most likely entered, not the Twilight Zone, but the Morgantown Zone, where guest lecturer Ronald Mallett, a University of Connecticut physicist, will talk about the science(?) of time travel.

It is my understanding that West Virginia Mountaineer football coach Bill Stewart will be in attendance. He hopes to turn back time to Saturday night so that his team can have another chance to hold on to the football.

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