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First Haridopolos, now Lynn
By LUCY MORGAN
Times Senior Correspondent
TALLAHASSEE — At a time when Florida’s universities are facing millions of dollars in budget cuts, Florida State University has hired a prominent state senator to coordinate a new reading program in her home county.
Sen. Evelyn Lynn, R-Ormond Beach, is being paid $120,000 a year to work on a program she helped create and fund.
Lynn also happens to be chairwoman of the Senate’s Higher Education Appropriations Committee, with great influence over university budgets.
“It’s just a coincidence,’’ said FSU President T.K. Wetherell, a former House speaker and appropriations chair who is widely known for his wily political dealings with the Legislature.
“I see no conflict considering we have no money this year,’’ Lynn said when asked if the new job is appropriate for a lawmaker with so much influence over university budgets.
The job makes Lynn a “triple dipper.’’ She draws a $3,100 a month retirement check that she earned as a career educator in Volusia County, her $31,000 a year legislative salary, and $120,000 a year from FSU.
Lynn, 78, has a doctorate in education from the University of
Florida and was a teacher, reading and language arts supervisor and
assistant superintendent for curriculum and instruction in Volusia
County before retiring in 1989.
Lynn is the second senator hired by one of the state’s major
universities this year, the latest example of part-time jobs given to
lawmakers by public institutions with budgets that depend on the
Legislature.
The University of Florida hired Sen. Mike Haridopolos, R-Melbourne,
chairman of the Senate Finance and Tax Committee. He is paid $75,000 a
year as a lecturer, a salary more in line with those paid to tenured
professors.
Haridopolos, 38, has a masters degree, the minimum requirement for
lecturers at UF, and is working on his doctorate. His hiring has caused
an uproar among some UF faculty members who say budget cuts are forcing
the university to hire fewer instructors and deal with larger class
sizes.
Both senators were hired without an open search for other candidates
for the jobs, and both are allowed time off during legislative sessions.
Lynn started work at FSU in late September 2007. She said she is
taking unpaid leave time during March and April to tend to legislative
duties, but will still handle some job responsibilities on weekends and
during free time.
She said the job is likely to be a one-year assignment just to help
FSU get a reading research outreach center established at Daytona Beach
Community College.
Lynn helped create the reading program when she was chairwoman of
the Senate’s elementary and secondary education committee in 2006. Then
last year, as chair of the higher ed appropriations committee, she
pushed to budget $1-million for the FSU center.
Wetherell says the university needed someone who could help get
access to schools in Volusia County, and he knew of Lynn’s past
experience.
“Plus she is from Daytona and I know her, I take care of my Daytona
people,’’ Wetherell joked. He is a Daytona Beach native and worked at
the Daytona Beach college while he served in the Legislature from 1980
to 1992.
“It certainly gives the appearance of a problem,’’ said Ben Wilcox, executive director of Common Cause, the citizens group.
“The Legislature has very weak conflict of interest standards. To
the general public or anyone looking at it from an objective point of
view, it doesn’t look good. It looks like her position helped her get
this job.’’
Lucy Morgan can be reached at lmorgan@sptimes.com or (850) 224-7263.
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