State rep defends Chipola job
— Floridan File Photo
State Rep. Marti Coley, left, is seen with Chipola College President Gene Prough during a past press conference at the college. Coley says her job at Chipola and her role as a legislator are not a conflict of interest.
Floridan Staff Writer
Published: January 9, 2009
Rep. Marti Coley, R-Dist. 7, has no plans to give up her $60,000 job at Chipola College, unlike fellow state legislator and Speaker of the House Ray Sansom, who resigned his post at another college amid criticism about his dual role.
The legislator said she sees no conflict in her two jobs and she’s puzzled by the air of criticism surrounding legislators who also work at Florida colleges.
Coley had worked as an adjunct professor at Chipola for two decades before taking the job she now holds there — special assistant of business and community affairs. Her pay started at $45,000 when she took the postion, but she got a 33 percent raise in July of this year, bringing her salary to $60,000.
Her job entails, among other things, fund-raising activities for the Chipola honors program and the school at large.
But Coley says her efforts in that regard do not include actively soliciting the acquisition of state grants as a legislator.
“I have never been directly involved in any state grants (for Chipola). I couldn’t name any state grant they’ve got,” she said.
She also points out that her employment with Chipola began “long before I ever thought of being a legislator.” She doesn’t believe her job is in conflict or constitutes a violation of ethics.
Coley worked part-time at Chipola as an adjunct professor for more than 20 years before taking her new position in late 2006. The new job started about a year-and-a-half after she was appointed by the governor to serve out the term of her late husband, David Coley.
She subsequently was elected to serve a second term and is paid just under $30,000 a year in that role.
Adjunct professors are typically paid $1,200 to $1,600 per course, per semester, and Coley normally taught two or three courses a term before switching to the full-time position at Chipola. She got her associate of arts degree at Chipola back in 1981, and holds a bachelor of science degree in English education from Florida State University. She also studied English education at Murray State University in Kentucky.
Coley said her husband’s death made it necessary for her to start working full-time, and that she was set to take a full-time classroom position at Chipola when the school offered her the new job.
She said it was both an economic factor and a personal reason that led her to take this particular job.
Had she taken the classroom position, she indicated, she couldn’t have finished out her husband’s legislative term.
“I couldn’t let David’s seat just go,” she said.
As for speculation that her double service puts Chipola at special advantage come budget time in the legislature, Coley said that’s just not so.
She readily admits to advocating for the school she works for — she sees it as part of her job as a representative of the district where Chipola is located — but said her work on the school’s behalf is above-board and really begins after funding requests have made their way through a certain process.
As a legislator, she said, it would be her duty to advocate for the college, whether she was employed by Chipola or not.
“I represent nine counties, and any entity in that community is going to get 100 percent effort from me in the legislature. Even with budget cuts, we have a very large budget and that money is going somewhere,” she said.
“Do we want it all to go to South Florida? Certainly, if Chipola is in line for money from a certain source allocated for use in education, I’m going to push as hard as I can for them to be in the budget. Why would people be upset if I’m advocating for any entity in my district?” she said. “One of my key interests is with economic development, and Chipola plays a huge role in Jackson County’s economy.”
She also talked about how she handles the two demanding jobs, and pointed out that legislators were never meant to be full-time.
Coley said she is on campus a lot more these days, and she sometimes puts in time there on weekends. Working the two jobs is a balancing act, she said, but not a conflict of interest.
“If I’m not in session, or off campus at some event related to my job, I’m at Chipola,” Coley said. “Often, especially if I know I will be out of the office some during the week, I’ll go up there on Sunday afternoon or Saturday morning. I was there last weekend, as a matter of fact.”
She said she doesn’t understand why people would criticize her situation.
Former state Rep. Robert Trammell is also on the Chipola payroll, although he is set to retire in June from his $57,787 position as special assistant for development and alumni affairs.
In a written response to inquiries about these employees, Chipola College President Gene Prough expressed his continuing support of Coley and Trammell in their respective roles at the college.
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Reader Reactions
It’s the Chamber’s (another interesting organization) First Friday event - their Political Forum - Rep. Brad Drake, Rep. Marti Coley, and Senator Al Lawson will be there to answer questions. Look under Community Events in the Floridan. It will give you all the details.
Have you all heard, O’Daniel is pulling a typical Chipola Administration ploy! He wants money to create a Chipola Athletic Hall of Fame! Does he think selling t-shirts is going to build the kind monument he wants for the Glory of Chipola Athletics? Maybe he wants to put our last basketball coach in it. Of course, that sterling Chipola coach is doing prison time for NCAA fraud violations. Well, well… NCAA fraud…DUI…see a pattern here.
Hasn’t O’Daniel figured out nobody wants to fund HIS job let alone his monument.
While we are talking about funding, nobody wants to fund Coley, Trammel and Harris, either. Does he think asking for more will get people to back off?
By the way, what forum is happening Feb. 6th? Where is it and what is the time? Some of us are not aware of this happening and for what purpose it is being held?
They’re going to need that $135,000 to hire a nursing consultant after low board passing rates get the nursing program put on probation.
JB, I’m sure you’re right about that though Ms. Coley was conspicuously absent from Chipola’s festivities last night. And I’m not sure that any layoffs will be necessary…they essentially “laid off” five nursing instructors last summer/fall (through pay cuts) and have only replaced two of them. Even at Chipola’s poor salaries, that’s got to be a ~$135,000/year savings! And a guy from the vocational math dept left when it was downsized so add that to the pile. So this money ought to be there somewhere unless it has gone into someone else’s paycheck or paid for someone’s trip to see the basketball team play.
I would think that Ms. Coley would be happy to answer properly phrased questions such as; “In light of the recent economic down-turn and proposed budget cuts for our colleges, don’t you think that the top-heavy administration at Chipola could be reduced before additional teaching staff are laid off?“ Seems like a fair question to me.
I was told that the state is cutting Chipola’s budget by hundreds of thousands of dollars. If this is true, it seems as if they started getting rid of the people that are not beneficial to Chipola such as Coley, O’Daniel, Trammell, Harris, etc. they could cut that some. If nothing else cut some of the athletics. Education is much more important!
I looked on the Florida House of Representatives web sight and Marti’s occupation states that she is a teacher. In the highlights it states that she has taught English Prep courses at Chipola for the last sixteen years.
There is a forum that is taking place on Feb, 6th. Do you think Marti will mind if questions are ask in regards to Chipola???
Hey Everybody,
It sure is nice to have other bloggers bringing up facts and figures. I heard from my friends at the college that Ms. Coley is mighty nervous about an Ethics Complaint. Maybe she will quit,or give back her raise and save everybody the bother. It is my understanding from reading the Florida Commission on Ethics info pages that past legislators can also have Ethics Complaints filed against them. That leaves Trammell wide open for a complaint.
Evidently, Ray Sansom has taken a leave of absence from being Speaker of the House to defend HIS grand jury/ Florida Commission on Ethics charges.
To change topics, I, too, heard some folks in the Admin Bldg were rudely accusing some of the faculty of being bloggers! My, my ...guilty consciences you suppose? Of course, it might be an attempt at INTIMIDATION. They have used that tactic on many folks at Chipola. The President’s favorite “Give Them the Bad News Girl” on campus uses intimidation all the time (you all know who I am referring to, don’t you?).
Well, I am sad to report I have not been able to get in touch with Glen McGhee. Maybe next week. Gettin’ back to the Florida Commission on Ethics complaint(s), I heard a rumor that it is being talked about by more than a few persons on campus. We’ll see!
My friends, it takes COURAGE to speak out. KUDOS to those who are no longer going to let this dirt be brushed under the rug.
P.S. What other boards are you referring to Not Surprised?
Hey, if someone is going to the State Ethics Commission will you take a list of other boards and institutions that should be investigated in Jackson County. LOOK at how members of these boards are appointed and WHO IT IS that has the most influence in Tallahassee to get who they want on these boards. You don’t have to look hard. There are several boards around here that need to be investigated so while the State Ethics Commission is here they might as well investigate them all. Sorry “good old boys and girls”, it is NOT “politics as usual”. And you will be held accountable for your under the table, behind closed door behavior. There are enough citizens living in Jackson County now that were not born and raised here and are not afraid of you. They will demand that “your kind of politics” not be allowed to continue in order to get what you think you rightly deserve even if it means destroying others in the process - which many of you have been more than capable of doing in the past. New day guys!
True, Nolefan. I didn’t know that Trammel was still on salary or that Louis Harris was already on payroll. And I had forgotten about O Daniel having to pay that money back for double dipping. I also heard that things were pretty heated on Indian Circle last week with some faculty being questioned about being “so and so” on this blog. I guess the new Chipola contract has a clause that forbids blogging!
The good ole boys n gals will be posing for pictures for the Floridan when the college is crumbling down around them! And the folks in the community will be saying “What could have happened? Only fine Christian people were running that place.“ Or that’s what they thought until they started reading this commentary. People in the community are learning more about Chipola through these comments than they have ever learned from reading the Floridan or at least it seems that way from the conversations this is generating.

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