[sticklist] - Inquirer: Military academy alumni call for inquiry
Richard Forno
rforno at infowarrior.org
Thu Apr 23 10:47:39 UTC 2009
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Posted on Thu, Apr. 23, 2009
Military academy alumni call for inquiry
By Martha Woodall
Inquirer Staff Writer
http://www.philly.com/inquirer/home_region/20090423_Military_academy_alumni_call_for_inquiry.html
A long-simmering feud between a small group of alumni and the
administration of Valley Forge Military Academy and College has
erupted into a major battle as both sides hurl allegations and
threaten legal action.
After three years of attempting to take their complaints to the
school's trustees, the alumni group, known as the Valley Forge Old
Guard, plans to call on the state attorney general to investigate the
nonprofit that runs the school.
In letters scheduled to be delivered tomorrow to Gov. Rendell,
Attorney General Tom Corbett, and other state officials, the group
charges that top administrators and the board of trustees are
mismanaging private and state funds.
The alumni group blasts the school's leaders for increasing the amount
paid to top executives by 47 percent in one year and for spending more
than $1 million on legal fees for "frivolous" lawsuits against critics.
The alumni group, which has 93 members, also says that the school has
filed incomplete nonprofit tax forms with the IRS.
The trustees "are failing to exert the oversight that is required of
them as fiduciaries of the school and the foundation," said Art
Houston, a 1970 alum and Old Guard official.
John Miller, a school spokesman, called the allegations
"unconscionable" and "irresponsible."
"They are slanderous to the school; slanderous to the head of the
school," said Miller. "And rest assured, Valley Forge will soon file a
lawsuit against these individuals."
Miller added: "This little band of guys is clearly intent on
destroying the school. They would rather burn it down than not get
their way."
Under state law, the attorney general is responsible for ensuring that
assets of charitable trusts and nonprofit organizations are safeguarded.
Nils Frederiksen, a spokesman for Corbett, said the office reviews all
complaints. He declined to comment because the attorney general had
not yet received the Old Guard letter.
Last week, Valley Forge announced an ambitious plan to build a $32
million academic facility so the junior college could more than double
its enrollment in 2014.
Old Guard officers labeled the announcement a diversionary tactic.
"I would refer to it as 'spin,' to take eyes away from the real
questions the alumni are asking," said Alastair G. Crosbie, a 1990
graduate and a board member of the Old Guard.
The call for the state investigation is the latest salvo in a three-
year dispute between some alumni and the administration over the
management and future direction of Valley Forge.
The school was founded in 1928 as a private, all-male college-prep
boarding school. The two-year college later became coed. This year
there are 307 students from seventh grade through postgraduate at the
military academy and 219 cadets at the junior college.
The Old Guard said it gathered more than 1,000 signatures of alumni,
former trustees and faculty, and parents on petitions calling for the
removal of Charles A. "Tony" McGeorge as president. The petitions were
sent to school trustees this month.
In addition to the financial concerns, Old Guard members said they are
seeking McGeorge's ouster because he eliminated the junior ROTC
program, abandoned various military traditions, relaxed strict
disciplinary rules, and alienated many alumni.
Miller said neither McGeorge nor trustees chairman William R. Floyd
Jr. would comment on the Old Guard's complaint to the attorney general.
During an interview about the new building last week, Floyd dismissed
the petition.
"We have made it very clear that the board of trustees is 100 percent
behind Tony McGeorge," said Floyd, a 1963 graduate.
He pointed out that the Old Guard is not the official Valley Forge
alumni organization. Niles P. Dally, chairman of the Valley Forge
Military Academy Alumni Association, the official group, noted that
the alumni association has 8,000 members compared with the critic
group's 93.
"I am perplexed by their attitude, said Dally, a 1963 graduate. "If
the attorney general were to look into everything, he would find that
the school is being well-managed and there is no problem with money
except in the mind's eye of these individuals."
The Old Guard claims that staff changes since 2004 reflect a school in
turmoil. More than 160 staff and faculty have left, including six
commandants of cadets, four academy deans and five college deans.
Ninety-five cadets have departed since October, they said. Miller said
the number was 90 and included 16 who withdrew for financial reasons.
Old Guard members say they are troubled that Valley Forge's nonprofit
tax forms show money spent on executive salaries jumped in one year
from $341,113 paid to three executives in 2005-06 to $642,170 paid to
five executives in 2006-07. McGeorge's salary increased from $130,769
to $194,758.
Miller countered that two vacant positions were filled and said that a
chief financial officer was hired to replace a financial consultant.
In the letter to Corbett, the Old Guard suggests dissolving the
current board and replacing it with an interim board appointed by
Corbett.
Letters also are scheduled to be sent to legislators who voted in 2007
to designate Valley Forge the state's "official military college."
McGeorge has said the school hopes the designation will help the
college become the primary commissioning source for young officers in
the Pennsylvania National Guard. Using federal money, the state covers
the cost to commission guard officers.
Just under 8 percent of the school's revenues of $27.4 million in
2006-07 came from public funds, tax forms show.
"If they [trustees] went behind closed doors and talked to us years
ago, we would not be at this point," Crosbie said, referring to their
three-year effort to meet with trustees.
As an indication of the bitterness, Old Guard president Peter
Robinson, Crosbie, Houston and two other Old Guard leaders were barred
from campus last week. Floyd, the trustees chairman, told the men they
had been designated persona non grata and would be prohibited
indefinitely from entering the school's 120-acre campus, and excluded
from Valley Forge-sponsored events on campus or off.
In his letter, Floyd accused the Old Guard officers of sending a
threatening letter to McGeorge on March 23, improperly attending a
closed trustees meeting, and stalking and harassing parents who were
leaving a parents' association meeting.
"Your actions constitute a reckless disregard for VMA&C's reputation
and have damaged VFMA&C's ability to recruit and retain students,
impugned the professional reputations of various staff and board
members, and resulted in a significant loss of income to the
institution," Floyd wrote.
The Old Guard leaders have denied the allegations and said the March
23 letter had asked McGeorge to step down in June in response to the
group's petition.
The alumni group has been at odds with Valley Forge since July 2005,
when trustees named McGeorge president. A former health and marketing
executive, McGeorge is the school's first civilian president.
Contact staff writer Martha Woodall at 215-854-2789 or at martha.woodall at philly.news.com
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