Professors from across the country have long been lured to Florida’s public colleges and universities, with the educators attracted to the research opportunities, student bodies, and the warm weather.

But for a swath of liberal-leaning professors, many of them holding highly coveted tenured positions, they’ve felt increasingly out of place in the Sunshine State. And some of them are pointing to the conservative administration of Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis as the reason for their departures, according to The New York Times.

DeSantis, who was elected to the governorship in 2018 and was easily reelected last fall, has over the course of his tenure worked to put a conservative imprint on a state where moderation was once a driving force in state politics. In recent years, DeSantis has railed against the current process by which tenure is awarded, and with a largely compliant GOP-controlled legislature, he’s imposed conservative education reforms across the state.

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Holy fuck. Almost every state. Red state or blue state, doesn’t matter. Almost always the football coaches. Meanwhile, the person running the booth at the DMV takes home what, $20 an hour maybe?

      • root_beer
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        1 year ago

        Haha, about twenty years ago, I was working at a Honda dealership as a lot rat, bringing a used car in for an emissions check; there was a sign at the facility saying they were hiring, for competitive wages. I asked what they were paying, and the tech took a long drag on her cigarette and mumbled, “Minimum.”

        So the DMV clerk is probably not even making $20.

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I don’t know what DMV clerks make, but in general, low-end government jobs pay somewhat better than low-end jobs in other fields. They also usually come with at least decent, if not good, health insurance.

          So in that sense, even the worst job at the DMV is better than a lot of other jobs. But they still should be better paid, as should we all, and that certainly makes paying a football coach millions of dollars a year hard to justify. The “football makes lots of money” argument doesn’t wash for me. Not even for sports. I’m in Indiana. Basketball coaches should be the top paid sports coach positions if this is solely about making money. But it’s still football coaches. I can tell you as a former IU student who also grew up in Bloomington that IU basketball is much bigger than IU football. Someone can correct me if I’m wrong, but I’m pretty sure back in the 80s, Bob Knight wasn’t the highest-paid public employee despite being one of the most recognized coaches in the country.

          But I don’t think any sports coach should be the highest paid public employee, so that’s sort of moot.

      • ares35@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        college football at that level is revenue-generating; so it’s not really ‘taxpayer money’ that pays those salaries, but rather the income generated from the football program itself (tickets, advertising, licensing, broadcast fees, boosters, etc.). that income also usually subsidizes the school’s sports programs that don’t generate a profit–which is, like all of them, other than mens basketball, and in parts of the country, mens ice hockey.

      • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        If it makes you feel better… college football is big business. Schools make shit loads off the broadcast and advertising rights.

        (And then shaft the players that attract that dough under some argument if ‘sportsmanship’ or something.)

          • ares35@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            until we get the musk vs zuck cage match, there’s little by way of spectator entertainment from CEOs though.

          • BraveSirZaphod@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            I mean, this is a material and provable statement. I won’t pretend to have data, but it’s entirely possible at least that paying a football coach n dollars results in a return of 1.3n dollars.

            I don’t know if that’s true, and it very much could be good ol’ fashioned corruption, but it’s not inherently implausible, and if it is true, then the choice is either pay for the coach and use the additional revenue to fund other programs, sports and academic, or don’t, and have less money available for those other things.

            I get that the optics don’t exactly look great, but I wouldn’t really agree with telling the women’s lacrosse team that they’re being disbanded because we decided that paying a lot for a football coach was a bad look and now the total sports budget is down.

            Again, I’m not saying this is definitively what’s happening; I don’t have data or anything. But this is a legitimately plausible explanation for it. Of course, like I said, equally plausible is just plain corruption. I’d genuinely be curious in what the evidence says, to the extent that it exists.