The conduct of Florida International University鈥檚 former President Mark Rosenberg was inappropriate, but an independent review stopped short of saying his conduct rose to the level of sexual harassment. An investigative report was delivered to the school鈥檚 Board of Trustees during a meeting Thursday.
Rosenberg resigned his position in January but remains a tenured faculty member at FIU, the nation鈥檚 fourth largest public university.
A female employee who worked underneath Rosenberg alleged that he told her he loved her, wanted to marry her and would take care of her. The employee said that he gave her gifts, asked to be her 鈥渓over鈥 and 鈥渃ompanion,鈥 and asked her to take out of town trips with him.
SA国际传谋 is committed to providing the trusted news and local reporting you rely on. Please keep SA国际传谋 strong with your support today. now. Thank you.
An outside law firm contracted by the university to investigate the incident found that Rosenberg鈥檚 actions were inappropriate and unprofessional, but stopped short of saying the behavior rose to the level of sexual harassment.
鈥淸I]t is clear here that the President acted in a manner that was unprofessional and that he crossed appropriate boundaries in his behavior towards and interactions with a female subordinate,鈥 reads the report compiled by firm Isicoff Ragatz.
鈥淕iven his position as President of a major educational institution, the substantial disparity in age and the obvious power dynamic that existed in the relationship, the President, at best, displayed extremely poor judgment,鈥 the report continues.
According to the report, Rosenberg was 鈥済enuinely remorseful鈥 about what happened and its effect on FIU. He has emphatically denied he ever used the term 鈥渓over鈥 with the employee, but acknowledged he asked her to be his 鈥渃ompanion,鈥 a relationship which he thought might include sex.
Rosenberg has gotten a divorce under Jewish religious law from his wife Rosalie, who suffers from dementia.
Attorney Eric Isicoff of the firm Isicoff Ragatz led the investigation. He told the board the review was extensive.
鈥淪even hundred pages of text messages. All emails between the principal parties involved,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 felt comfortable that after speaking with a number of people, reviewing the materials, that we had a very good understanding and a very good handle on what had occurred.鈥
Rosenberg is still a tenured faculty member at FIU. It鈥檚 up to the Faculty Advisory Board to decide what further action is needed, if any. Recommendations from the board could range from counseling to a reprimand, suspension or even termination.
Board of Trustees Chair Dean Colson said he鈥檚 eager to move on to the school鈥檚 next challenge: finding a new permanent leader.
鈥淔IU has zero tolerance for inappropriate conduct and will continue to uphold our inclusion and anti-harassment policies,鈥 Colson said. 鈥淣ow it鈥檚 time to focus on the future. We are starting to make preparations to launch a national search for our next president.鈥
During Thursday鈥檚 meeting, the trustees approved a one year employment agreement with Rosenberg鈥檚 successor, interim President Kenneth Jessell. The contract is slated to run through Jan. 20, 2023, unless the university finds its next top leader before then.
FIU is among a number of public universities in Florida searching for a new president as longtime leaders retire and resign. Colson acknowledged that he鈥檚 feeling pressure to move quickly at a time when other schools in the state are competing for candidates and search firms.
The board is slated to meet in late March or early April to approve a 15 member search committee and pick a search firm. FIU also plans to hold a town hall meeting before the end of the spring semester to get feedback on what qualities community members think the next president should have.