Board member: Jindal didn’t direct LSU chief’s ouster

Members of the LSU Board of Supervisors and the Jindal administration began discussing the fate of former LSU System President John Lombardi months ago but the governor didn’t push the board to fire him, a board member said Monday.

Another board member said the perception that Gov. Bobby Jindal had his fingerprints on Lombardi’s firing will make it difficult for LSU to attract anyone other than a “yes-man” or a “puppet” to lead the system.

Lombardi replaced William Jenkins, 75, who is coming out of retirement to serve as interim head of LSU’s $3.5 billion network of four university campuses, a law school, two medical schools and 10 hospitals across the state.

Jenkins said Monday the board leadership contacted him early last week about coming out of retirement.

Lombardi’s career at LSU ended Friday after nearly five years when the LSU board voted 12-4 to fire him.

During the heated debate before the vote, Lombardi’s supporters on the board suggested his firing was secretly orchestrated by the governor.

Jindal did not answer questions on the issue last week.

His communications director, Kyle Plotkin, said in a prepared statement it was a decision for the LSU board.

On Monday, LSU Board member Steve Perry said Lombardi’s dismissal, which he voted for, wasn’t done behind closed doors.

Rather, he said, it took shape informally over the course of several months.

“This is the absolute truth,” Perry said. “A couple of us on the board had been talking with each other. The feeling that we were headed in the wrong direction really started to grow in January.”

Perry, of New Orleans, along with board member Bobby Yarborough, of Baton Rouge, and board Chairman Hank Danos, of Larose, all have said Lombardi’s sometimes-abrasive leadership style compromised his ability to build relationships with policymakers.

Lombardi turned heads while speaking to the state House Education Committee on Wednesday when he accused state lawmakers of “radically restructuring” how higher education is managed.

He was arguing against House Bill 395, which would shift control of how state funds are spent to the Louisiana Board of Regents and away from the management boards overseeing the Southern, LSU, University of Louisiana and Louisiana Community and Technical College systems.

Lombardi was arguing on behalf of the LSU board, but his cutting words toward legislators were counterproductive, Perry said.

“That was validation that we’d lost the ability to have significant influence with the Legislature at a time when it was really needed,” Perry said.

Jindal’s staff understood the frustration with Lombardi but urged the board members to be patient before making a decision on the president’s future, Perry said.

“I probably had five or six conversations with the administration over a long period. The respect I’ve been treated with by the administration is exactly what I wanted,” said Perry, who was appointed by Jindal in July. “They shared our discomfort with things at LSU.”

Perry is also one of six board members chosen to be on the committee to find Lombardi’s replacement.

He took offense to the suggestion by Lombardi supporters that Jindal will have the final say on leads LSU.

“That’s demeaning to those on the board. We all have a passion for higher education. I was picked because of my knowledge of higher education,” Perry said.

But LSU Board member Tony Falterman, who is not on the search committee, argued Monday that no credible candidate will want to come to LSU after seeing how Lombardi was treated.

Falterman, of Napoleonville, said he believes Lombardi’s opponents, including Jindal appointees to the LSU Board and members of the Flagship Coalition, a group of statewide business leaders formed last year to support the Baton Rouge campus, worked together to dismiss the president.

“The way the whole thing went down was horrible,” said Falterman, who was appointed by Gov. Kathleen Blanco and whose term on the LSU expires June 1.

“For board members to say publicly they were having problems with John, why didn’t they talk about it in front of the full board? The way these guys acted, who would want to come to LSU, unless they are a yes-man or a puppet?”


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Comments (13)


1) Comment by jvstice - 02/05/2012

Guess it just go to show you that if you put enuff lipstick on a pig, it can sing.

2) Comment by janiea - 01/05/2012

Yes, it was the lady from elderly affairs. After all was said and done they decided to leave it under the Governor's Affairs and not DHH. She got fired for being an advocate of what is right . As far as Jeff Saddow is concerned he is sitting up there in Shreveport waiting for that call that he will be taking Lombardi's place at LSU. Nothing like another brown shirt for JIndal . Doubt it happens he is only a Poly-Sci Professor.

3) Comment by BRmoderate - 01/05/2012

I'm sorry, was Lombardi supposed to go "Hat in hand" and say "please sir, may we have our budget back?" How much would that tactic have accomplished? It's not just Lombardi that has been given the boot lately. There was another high profile critic who was fired by Jindal because she spoke up against the governor. Forgive but I cannot remember what department but I think it had something to do with Elderly care... I believe that the most productive policies are ones arrived at through the compromise of differing opinion, why is that so hard to tolerate?

4) Comment by jobo - 01/05/2012

The comparisons to Huey Long are unfair--yes he was corrupt and dictatorial, but at least he did some good for the state. Jindal's legacy is cuts to education (he especially contrasts with Long here), privatization, and dismantling of social services.

5) Comment by Warp7 - 01/05/2012

Does some on the board actually expect the people of this state to believe that Little Hitler Jindal was not invoved, If so, I have a mansion in the middle of the Mississippi River for sale. So some did not like Lombardi, did not like the way he spoke to others (Jindals flunkies in the Legislature)' but you never discussed it at board meetings. Suddenly a meeting is called specifically to fire Lombardi and someone before the mtg starts says we have the votes to outs him. Sounds like discussions were held before the meeting was held. I guess little Hiitler has a Phd now and is going to run LSU personally. Looks like our state is taking a lot of steps backwards since Little Hitller and his brown shirts came I to into office. We have not seen this kind of control since the days of Huey Long. As one poster said, "Seig Heil Jindal!".

6) Comment by jobo - 01/05/2012

"Oh, it is pure coincidence that Jindal appointed us and that we happen to agree with him completely," said one board member. And Jeff Sadow, yes, we know you're a Jindal sycophant, as we've seen in the comments on other articles. I'm sure he's very proud of you.

7) Comment by Whatchange - 01/05/2012

@jeffsadow; great comment, but you could never get posters No.2-6 to take the blinders off long enough to see that.

8) Comment by jeffsadow - 01/05/2012

Funny how commenters here, with both sides of the argument having exactly the same quality of evidence (their own personal testimonies only) invest themselves totally in believing one side and not the other. It also should be noted that while the only four not to vote for Lombardi's ouster were all Blanco appointees, a few of the remaining Blanco appointees also voted for his ouster (reappointing any of them would be a surprise). That rather detracts from the conspiracy theory now, doesn't it?

9) Comment by spqr - 01/05/2012

Seig Heil! Jindal!

10) Comment by Maui09 - 01/05/2012

The little gov only wants "yes"men so Mr. Jenkins better settle in for the duration. It would be a suicide mission to present yourself as a candidate for president of LSU. Some desparate person may come along. I know I will not be buying any of a particular brand of sausage so as not support one member of the board. I wonder what Mr. Perry has interests in?

11) Comment by Ubetcha - 01/05/2012

Now just who do you think believes this? Slowly but surely the masses are seeing Jindal for what he really is!

12) Comment by SuzanneMS - 01/05/2012

Pull the other one. They said it themselves -- yes-men and puppets.

13) Comment by lovemykids - 01/05/2012

Yes men and puppets, just the type of minion Jindal wants. All hail the the political aspirations of Jindal.