billyjack wrote:If the American loses Houston, Memphis and Cincinnati, does it really matter?
2 were in C-USA three years ago, and the other was okay, but c'mon, Cincinnati is not enough of a player to collapse a conference.
UConn should just continue on for now and try to build the conference up.
Add UMass, Army football, and Rice. Academic prestige rises, and you can help grown some programs and re-energize some old rivalries.
12 in football.
10 in hoops.
Try to improve the conference instead of looking to bail.
NJRedman wrote:Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
If a Public university becomes a member of the Big East, the Public university’s copies of Minutes of important meetings (or excerpts thereof) may be subject to Freedom of Information requests, depending on the relevant legislature of the particular State in question. In Connecticut, the relevant legislature is 31 pages long, is complex, and its implementation has been the subject of numerous State Court challenges.
State of Connecticut - Freedom of Information Commission
THE CONNECTICUT FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT AS CODIFIED IN CHAPTER 14 OF CONNECTICUT GENERAL STATUTES (INCLUDING 2016 AMENDMENTS)
I'm pretty sure that's not how it works. You can ask for emails and other documents. A face to face meeting isn't covered under that.
The Hartford Courant wrote:
The Courant filed its complaint with the Freedom of Information Commission in July, and Courant reporter Matthew Kauffman argued the case before an FOI hearing officer last fall. The hearing officer ruled against the university and her report was accepted by the Commission.
At Wednesday's hearing and in a legal brief, UConn's attorney asked the Commission to reject the proposed decision and offered an unusual compromise in its place. UConn offered to admit that a portion of the executive session violated the Freedom of Information Act and offered to create minutes of the meeting – which the lawyer said eliminated the need for the Commission to make any specific conclusions of law about whether budget data could be withheld. The Courant opposed the proposal and it was rejected by the Commission.
In her Jan. 26 decision, hearing officer Lisa Fein Siegel wrote that UConn "sought to avoid having trustees ask sensitive questions in public, such as questions about eliminating academic programs or certain sports programs, reducing financial aid, or restructuring employee benefits, so that such questions would not 'become something that affects the reputation of the university.' "
Siegel called on UConn to create minutes of the closed-door meeting to "disclose what transpired ... to the same degree as would have been revealed by conducting the session in public."
American Athletic Conference wrote:
Media Day Central
NEWPORT, R.I. – American Athletic Conference commissioner Mike Aresco delivered the following remarks to introduce Tuesday’s portion of The American’s Summer Kickoff and Media Days at the Hyatt Regency Newport.
Associated Press wrote:
NEWPORT, R.I. — Everybody in the American Athletic Conference is prepared for the storm. Publicly, nobody is panicking.
The AAC held its annual gathering in New England to eat lobster, kick off its fourth football season and start talking about what happens if the conference loses members to Big 12 expansion.
"I cannot stand here this morning and ignore the recent Big 12 news regarding realignment," Commissioner Mike Aresco said during his State of the Conference address Tuesday. "Although I do want to address it at the outset, I'm not going to dwell on it."
The Big 12 offers a chance for two or maybe even four schools access to the pot of gold that comes with Power Five inclusion. And most of the 12 schools in the American have expressed interest either publicly or privately in joining. There are no secrets here.
Aresco said contingency plans to deal with possible departures have been discussed. He would not give details, but said the league has considered that it could lose as many as four members, dropping membership to eight.
"All things considered I think we'd like to be back at 12 if we lose some schools because it gives you more (television) inventory," Aresco said. The American is halfway through a six-year television deal with ESPN.
Read on . . .
BEX wrote:I wouldn't call the Big East AGM "secretive". It was a private meeting. All their members were there and were under no obligation to discuss League Business with anyone other than among themselves. If you had a meeting and were developing strategy for your business, why would you want to share it with the world when you didn't have to?
Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:NJRedman wrote:Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
If a Public university becomes a member of the Big East, the Public university’s copies of Minutes of important meetings (or excerpts thereof) may be subject to Freedom of Information requests, depending on the relevant legislature of the particular State in question. In Connecticut, the relevant legislature is 31 pages long, is complex, and its implementation has been the subject of numerous State Court challenges.
State of Connecticut - Freedom of Information Commission
THE CONNECTICUT FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT AS CODIFIED IN CHAPTER 14 OF CONNECTICUT GENERAL STATUTES (INCLUDING 2016 AMENDMENTS)
I'm pretty sure that's not how it works. You can ask for emails and other documents. A face to face meeting isn't covered under that.
A search of relevant articles suggests otherwise...
FOI Commission: UConn Violated Law With Closed-Door Budget Meeting - Hartford Courant - February 24, 2016The Hartford Courant wrote:
The Courant filed its complaint with the Freedom of Information Commission in July, and Courant reporter Matthew Kauffman argued the case before an FOI hearing officer last fall. The hearing officer ruled against the university and her report was accepted by the Commission.
At Wednesday's hearing and in a legal brief, UConn's attorney asked the Commission to reject the proposed decision and offered an unusual compromise in its place. UConn offered to admit that a portion of the executive session violated the Freedom of Information Act and offered to create minutes of the meeting – which the lawyer said eliminated the need for the Commission to make any specific conclusions of law about whether budget data could be withheld. The Courant opposed the proposal and it was rejected by the Commission.
In her Jan. 26 decision, hearing officer Lisa Fein Siegel wrote that UConn "sought to avoid having trustees ask sensitive questions in public, such as questions about eliminating academic programs or certain sports programs, reducing financial aid, or restructuring employee benefits, so that such questions would not 'become something that affects the reputation of the university.' "
Siegel called on UConn to create minutes of the closed-door meeting to "disclose what transpired ... to the same degree as would have been revealed by conducting the session in public."
I have no interest in arguing the specifics concerning the disclosure of Minutes of important meetings, other than to note that face to face meetings (and Minutes thereof) do not receive a blanket exemption from FOI requests in Connecticut.
The general points which I was attempting to convey are that state-run universities are legally required to publicly disclose far more information than private universities, and that decisions to withhold requested information are frequently challenged by the press.
pki1998 wrote:
If it was up to me, and UConn and Temple were available. We would add UConn, Temple, VCU and either Dayton or Saint Louis to get to 14 like the other power conferences.
BEX wrote:
I wouldn't call the Big East AGM "secretive". It was a private meeting.
BEX wrote:
All their members were there and were under no obligation to discuss League Business with anyone other than among themselves. If you had a meeting and were developing strategy for your business, why would you want to share it with the world when you didn't have to?
pki1998 wrote:
The idea that a FOI request would stop us from adding UConn is absurd. So the press can get our bylaws, and our meeting minutes. Who cares?
Representatives of the University of Connecticut Foundation made an impassioned argument at a legislative hearing Thursday that any law forcing them to open their records to the public — even if donors' name are excluded — would impede their efforts to raise money.
Daniel Toscano, a member of the foundation board and a donor, said the legislation under consideration, which would make the foundation subject to the state Freedom of Information Act, "will most definitely have a chilling effect on the philanthropy that is essential to building and maintaining a top-notch flagship university."
"As someone who has given significantly to UConn for more than a decade, I can attest to the fact that treating the foundation like a state agency will deter people like me from giving. Even if that is not your intention, I can assure you that it will be perceived very negatively by the very people you want and need to support this great institution."
A bill that would require more public disclosure from the University of Connecticut Foundation awaits action by the House after clearing the Senate earlier this week. The Senate approved the bill 27-8, but not before amending the proposal to remove the Connecticut State College and University system from having to comply.
If approved, the bill would require the UConn Foundation, the school’s nonprofit fundraising arm, to undergo a second audit and release the final report, and to disclose the name of everyone who donates beginning July 1, 2017.
NJRedman wrote:
UConn is worth 100 times more to the Big East than Dayton or any other candidate.
On April 1, 2016 sju88grad wrote:
Interesting Wall Street Journal article on the value of college basketball teams ... How Much Is Your College Basketball Team Worth?
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