FAMU Students Return to Classes With School in Turmoil
TALLAHASSEE, Fla.
After a year of scandals, investigations and financial difficulties at Florida A&M University, interim president Dr. Castell Bryant is intent on restoring the school’s respect.
Since she took over the school in January, Bryant’s been faced with a slew of problems. The athletics program conceded nearly 200 rules violations, two professors were collecting paychecks while working full time out of state, the National Science Foundation investigated misuse of grant money and more.
“For the first two or three months here, I did not get out of my car one morning that I did not have a new crisis waiting for me,” said Bryant. “I’ve really, really been bogged down with trying to fix the financial things that were already pointed out and were at a crisis level.”
Following dynamic growth through the 1990s when Dr. Frederick Humphries served as president, the last few years have been painful. Bryant believes the 2005-06 will be a make or break year at the state’s only public historical Black college and she’s determined not to see it break.
There has been plenty to fix. Bills were delinquent, some administrators were paid late because of accounting errors, and the former football coach was told to stay home last fall because there wasn’t enough money to recruit players.