IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Donor rescinds pledge after poor job review

The chancellor of the University of Nevada, Reno, says he and his family will no longer consider donating $3 million to the school after a regent’s negative comments in his job performance evaluation.
/ Source: The Associated Press

The chancellor of the University of Nevada, Reno, says he and his family will no longer consider donating $3 million to the school after a regent’s negative comments in his job performance evaluation.

John Rogers said he had talked to UNR President Milton Glick earlier this summer about making the donation to help build a new math and science center, but the talks ended after a regent questioned his integrity.

“Nobody is going to call me a crook. ... So we are not going forward with talks about this donation,” Rogers said, adding his wife and other family members were “absolutely outraged” by the comments.

In his June 22 written evaluation, regent Ron Knecht wrote that Rogers’ claims of being “totally honest and known for his integrity” were false, and that “he is known primarily as a self-absorbed, self-indulgent bully and tyrant, given to rashly going off at little or no provocation.”

Knecht said his criticism wasn’t personal.

“I think it is illogical and immature to take out on the faculty and students and public institutions his disappointment and unhappiness with my tough but fair evaluation of his performance,” he said.

Rogers, who resigned for a day after earlier this year in a dispute with a different regent, said Friday that he would stay until his contract is up June 30, 2009.

“I’m in for the long run,” Rogers said. “At the same time, I’m not going to take a flogging from Ron Knecht every time there’s a meeting and then say, ‘Well, I’m so pleased about that. Thank you, sir, and I’ll give you more money.”’