California

An Educator’s Head Rolls in California

An Educator’s Head Rolls in California 1

Effective immediately, Joseph I. Castro, chancellor of California State University, the nation’s largest university system, resigned because of allegations he mishandled sexual misconduct complaints involving a top administrator at Fresno State while he was serving there as campus president. “Joseph I. Castro’s announcement comes after the CSU Board of Trustees met for hours behind closed doors to decide whether to open an investigation into the head of the nearly 500,000-student system.” 

Castro stated he disagreed “with many aspects of recent media reports and the ensuing commentary,” but, in a press release, acknowledged “it has become clear to me that resigning at this time is necessary so that the CSU can maintain its focus squarely on its educational mission and the impactful work yet to be done,”  

Lawmakers and faculty had been calling for the CSU to open an internal investigation into the chancellor since early February, when USA TODAY reported Castro failed to respond to sexual harassment claims against a top administrator he had recruited to the campus. The probe comes years after a national reckoning around sexual harassment and assault on college campuses that forced many universities to strengthen their policies. 

The allegations assert that when Castro was president of Fresno State, USA Today reported, Castro did not punish the administrator, Frank Lamas, despite internal campus investigations that found Lamas responsible for sexual harassment, the news story found. Instead, Castro praised Lamas in performance reviews and endorsed him for a lifetime achievement award. 

The article states: “Three weeks before Castro was named chancellor in September 2020, Castro and Lamas entered a settlement agreement that barred Lamas from working for CSU. In return, Lamas was guaranteed $260,000, full benefits and a letter of recommendation from Castro to any other college jobs Lamas applied for, USA Today reported.” Castro apologized in an open letter to students and faculty at Cal State, saying he regretted offering Lamas the letter of recommendation. He added that Lamas was removed from campus immediately after a formal Title IX claim was filed against Lamas in 2019. 

Evidently, avoiding accountability for sexual misconduct is not uncommon. “Such behavior happens all the time,” CFA North Associate Vice President Meghan O’Donnell said in an interview Thursday. “It’s important for us to recognize that this is systemic,” she said, “and part of the problem is the fact that we have very little transparency or public input into the hiring of these senior level administrators.”

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