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Prairie State College plagued by accusations of nepotism, secret ballot

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"I think this was retaliatory," said Trustee Wendell Mosby, arguing that the move was a power play to discourage faculty who spoke out against the stepfather's hiring.

Mosby walked out in protest when the item was discussed at the October meeting, leaving the board one member shy of the quorum needed to vote.

The board passed the policy in December — and also took an unorthodox vote on whether to censure Mosby for his walkout.

Rather than taking a traditional roll-call vote, each trustee was given a slip of paper and instructed to write "aye" or "nay" as to whether Mosby should be punished. Trustee Kathleen Doyle asked the board's attorney if the process violated the Illinois Open Meetings Act. Doyle said she was told it was legal.

Three trustees — including Doyle — and about a half-dozen audience members described the process as a secret ballot because the way each trustee voted was not announced.

"Secret ballot, closed ballot, however you want to say it," Hill-Corley said. "No names."

The process violates the law, said Maryam Judar, an open government expert and community lawyer with the Citizen Advocacy Center in Elmhurst.

"That would be in contravention of the Open Meetings Act, which requires that votes be taken in public and not in secret," Judar said. "That includes being able to ascribe the votes to particular board members."

Board attorney Holly Tomchey defended the way the vote was taken.

"The vote was not conducted by secret ballot, but by written ballots which were each recorded," Tomchey said in a written statement. "The vote of the board was recorded as required by the Open Meetings Act."

Tomchey said the vote was 5-3 in favor of Mosby's censure, which stripped him of his travel budget for conferences. Agee referred all questions regarding the Open Meetings Act to the board attorney.

"This is not an area of the law that I practice. I am not going to comment as an expert on that," said Agee, a lawyer who specializes in municipal law, according to Prairie State's website.

Some faculty members expressed fear that questionable hiring practices and board skirmishes could dissuade talented faculty applicants and erode the quality of education for Prairie State's 12,000 students.

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