Chair of UPEI's board of governors resigns after critical report, saying new leadership needed
CBC
The chair of the University of Prince Edward Island Board of Governors has resigned — one week after an independent report outlined major problems at the campus over the past decade.
"I care deeply about the University of Prince Edward Island, the students, the faculty, and the staff," Pat Sinnott said in a letter distributed to the campus community Wednesday.
"That said, it is clear to me that, at this time, new leadership is needed to address challenging issues."
The letter, dated June 21, said Sinnott was "stepping aside, effective today."
Sinnott had been chair of the body that oversees the university's finances and administration since June 1, 2015. He had been a member of the board since October of 2009.
UPEI sent out a statement to faculty, staff and students just before 5 p.m. on Wednesday, saying the institution's board "is committed to refreshing its membership as per the recommendation in the Rubin Thomlinson report."
That statement also said the board's Andrew Bartlett, another long-standing member, had also "indicated he will step aside as a member."
With the departures of Bartlett and Sinnott, the 26-person board will have seven vacancies. The university's statement said the rest of the board members "will elect a new chair at a meeting in the coming days."
It added: "The UPEI Board of Governors will further undertake a governance review to ensure members receive appropriate information to make evidence-based decisions that are in the best interest of the University community and aligned with the university's values: academic freedom and rigour, accountability and integrity, excellence, inclusion, equity, and reconciliation."
Late Wednesday afternoon, the university's website was still listing Sinnott, described as a Toronto-based retired executive, as board chair. Sinnott's LinkedIn profile says he worked at Canadian Tire for 19 years leading up to December 2012, and at Ernst & Young for 12 years before that.
Sinnott and Bartlett were the only two members of the current board who were part of the body between 2013 and 2015, a period singled out by the Rubin Thomlinson report.
That's when two women accused former president Alaa Abd-El-Aziz of sexual harassment, sparking an investigation that included some members of the board of governors. The complaints were eventually settled, with the women signing non-disclosure agreements.
Sinnott told CBC News last week that the board members who participated in the investigation told the rest of the board there was no reason why the president's contract should not be renewed in 2015.
The board went on to extend Abd-El-Aziz's contract in 2018 and 2021 as well.
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