13°
12°
Overcast | Weather provided by KSTP.com
Campus

2 professors could be violating U policy


BY Jake Grovum
PUBLISHED: 04/24/2008

Husband-and-wife team François Sainfort and Julie Jacko, in allegedly retaining employment as professors at both the University of Minnesota and Georgia Tech, were in violation of policies at both institutions.

Previously, the University has taken a backseat to the Georgia attorney general's investigation, but news that Sainfort and Jacko could also be in violation of University policies may heighten the investigation here.

If the investigations in Georgia and Minnesota both find the professors to be fraudulent in their employment contracts, the University could dismiss them, per Board of Regents procedure.

Until late Wednesday, University general counsel Mark Rotenberg was unaware of institutional policies prohibiting double employment, saying that type of behavior was generally prohibited by "basic norms of honesty and fair dealing" in the University Code of Conduct.

After an initial interview, Rotenberg located a regents' procedure that prohibits full-time employment outside the University for all employees.

This isn't the first time a University professor has been implicated in double employment.

In 1995, professor Tzvee Zahavy was fired for working both at the University and the University of North Carolina-Charlotte. Before he was aware of the policy prohibiting double employment, Rotenberg said the University's handling of Zahavy was a precedent in dealing with so-called double-dipping professors.

"The Board of Regents and the administration of the University made it clear years ago that it would not tolerate undisclosed, simultaneous full-time employment," Rotenberg said.

University policy also prohibits employees involvement in outside commitments that "interfere with the performance of regular duties," regents rules state.

Sainfort currently is the head of the Division of Health Policy and Management at the University's School of Public Health. Jacko serves as the director of the Institute for Health Informatics through the School of Nursing.

Sainfort now earns $285,000 at the University and Jacko makes $216,000 - a total increase of about $100,000 from their Georgia Tech salaries.

Both Sainfort and Jacko signed employment contracts with Georgia Tech after beginning full-time employment at the University, according to their revocation notices from Georgia Tech.

The faculty members are suspected of double-billing their time and falsifying travel reimbursement documents and "other potentially illegal actions," according to a Georgia Tech news release.

The investigation has revealed $100,000 in "questionable activity," the news release states.

-Jake Grovum is a senior staff reporter.

Comments

The Minnesota Daily wants to host a forum for discussion regarding issues and stories regarding the University of Minnesota and surrounding communities. However, the online comments should not be used to threaten or defame. This is a place for people to be heard, and want to contribute to discussion. Those who persist to use expletives, inappropriate, racist, defamatory or abusive postings risk losing the privilege to post.

A career in education sure

A career in education sure has its perks and paybacks. It's not all too different from a career in politics.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <b> <i> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
Are you human?
Image CAPTCHA
Copy the characters (respecting upper/lower case) from the image.