Vantaggi
* Central location in a major city * Some staff and faculty are mission-driven and genuinely committed to students
Svantaggi
* Leadership is disorganized, and decision-making is opaque. * Structural changes are strategic but often appear retaliatory. * Pay is not competitive. Staff receive minimal raises despite growing workloads, while senior administrators receive large raises, create new executive roles, and alter benefits at staff expense. * Hiring and promotion lack transparency. Qualified internal candidates are often overlooked in favor of individuals with personal or institutional ties. In some cases, finalists were denied roles after rightfully pursuing legal claims against the university, raising equity concerns. * Leadership claims to value shared governance, but meaningful input is routinely dismissed. * Students, faculty, and staff who raise concerns about equity, misconduct, or accommodations are frequently ignored, marginalized, or in some cases terminated. * Public commitments to diversity, equity, and inclusion are inconsistently applied. Leadership appears to prioritize certain demographic groups, while other communities—including Native Americans—experience persistent marginalization. * Complaints of harassment, discrimination, or inappropriate conduct are mishandled. Individuals with longstanding misconduct records remain in roles or quietly transition out, while those who report them face negative career consequences. * Oversight mechanisms, including Human Resources and ombuds services, lack independence and protect leadership rather than staff or faculty. * Turnover is high, morale is low, and many long-tenured employees leave due to disillusionment with leadership, inequity, and toxic culture.