Could Paiva Weed be the Next President of RIC?

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

Could Paiva Weed be the Next President of RIC?

With a vacancy emerging at the President’s office at Rhode Island College, top State House aides have told GoLocalProv that State Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed is a leading candidate to replace ousted President Nancy Carriuolo, in a move reminiscent of Billy Bulger's assumption of the Presidency of the University of Massachusetts.

Paiva Weed, who pushed through the legislation to collapse the two then-separate education boards into the all-powerful Board of Education, has an interest and a track record in education. But, such a move directly from the Senate Chamber to the Presidency of RIC may not be legal. 

“I do not believe that a sitting member of the Assembly could take a position as president of a Rhode Island state college or university because of the Ethics Commission's revolving door ban,” said John Marion with Common Cause Rhode Island. “That sort of scenario is exactly why the revolving door exists, to prevent elected officials from taking advantage of their office to gain the upper leg in state employment.”

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Greg Pare, spokesperson for Paiva Weed, said he “could not comment on rumors” on Sunday. 

RIC’s current President Dr. Nancy Carriuolo announced her resignation in December, and will vacate the position following commencement in May. Carriuolo had served as RIC President since 2008, and had previously been Deputy Commissioner and Chief Academic Officer at the then-Rhode Island Office of Higher Education.

The Council on Postsecondary Education said it planned to begin search efforts for a new president starting in the new year, and noted that there will be an opportunity for the RIC community to offer their input in the search process — and that there are plans to schedule a forum on campus when students and faculty return for the spring semester.

Revolving Door 

Paiva Weed, who is a retired lawyer, was first elected to the Rhode Island Senate in 1992, was named Chair of the Judiciary Committee in 1997, and was selected as Senate Majority Leader in 2004. Paiva Weed was elected Senate President in 2008, make her the first woman to hold the post in the history of the state.  

If Paiva Weed were to make a move to RIC, the parallels to Bulger, who was the long serving President of the Massachusetts Senate before becoming President of the University of Massachusetts, would be unavoidable. Bulger was ultimately forced to resign from the position after refused to testify in a 2003 Congressional hearing regarding his brother James "Whitey" Bulger, Jr.

Historian and former Common Cause Executive Directer H. Philip West Jr.  spoke to the “revolving door” statutes in Rhode Island — and times when it had been thwarted. 

“I don’t think a state legislator could 'seek or accept' a position as president of a state college within a year,” said West. “Here’s a quick sketch of the history of both the Ethics Commission’s 1991 revolving door ban on state legislators taking state positions and of the law passed by the legislature in 1992:"

In November 1991, the Rhode Island Ethics Commission adopted the Revolving Door prohibition, 36-14-5007, which barred members of the General Assembly from seeking or accepting any “full time state employment, not held at the time of the member’s election, while serving in the General Assembly and for a period of one (1) year after leaving legislative office…”

In July 1992, the General Assembly enacted and Governor Sundlun signed the Revolving Door Law, 36-14-5 (n) and (o), which barred state elected officials and senior staff from seeking or accepting state employment for one year after leaving their appointive or elective posts. Both of these statutory provisions were carefully crafted to allow service as “senior policy-making, discretionary, or confidential positions,” or as department directors that would last only while a governor remained in office. Both included explicit permission for the Ethics Commission to authorize exceptions “where such exception would not create an appearance of impropriety.”

In November 1993, the Rhode Island Supreme Court unanimously upheld both the Ethics Commission’s regulation and the subsequent law enacted by the General Assembly. The justices emphasized the fact that these revolving door rules properly address “the imbroglio of public officials who use their present positions and contacts as unfair bargaining tactics in gaining future employment with the state or a municipality.”

Clearly, any of the colleges are “state agencies” under 36-14-2(8)(i). Any applicant would need to go to the commission for an advisory opinion, as outlined under 36-15-5(n)(4). You remember that the commission gave permission for Richard Licht and Tim Williamson to seek judicial positions. I doubt, however, that they would agree to a legislator moving directly to the RIC presidency.

Marion noted another recent example of an elected official who took a position with a public university — and the scrutiny it received.

“There was a very high profile case in Indiana where the sitting governor was appointed the president of Purdue University, which is a state school,” said Marion. “If you Google “Mitch Daniels and Purdue” you'll see broad editorial condemnation of the move.”

Former Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels was appointed as the President of Purdue while still in office in 2012; he began his tenure at the university in January 2013. 


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