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āDisinvitationā Off-Season Special: Pasadena C.C. Pays Re-Invited Speaker So He Doesnāt Sue

Torch readers might remember that last spring was a mess when it came to commencement speakers on college campuses. Left and right (pun intended), distinguished would-be guests were disinvited from, re-invited to, and pressured to back out of speaking engagements. One such incident took place at Pasadena City College (PCC), where Academy Award-winning screenwriter Dustin Lance Black was disinvited and then re-invited as commencement speaker. Black graciously accepted his re-invitation, saying he was happy to āmove forward and put the focus where it should beāon the students.ā
As Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS reported back in May, members of PCCās Board of Trustees grew concerned about having Black speak after discovering that explicit photos of him had been posted online. A college administrator, on the other hand, that Blackās invitation was an error to begin with.
Either way, the through a Public Records Act request that along with gaining significant negative publicity, PCC is paying a more literal, quantifiable priceāapproximately $26,000āin exchange for Black agreeing not to sue the college.
According to the Times, āEduardo Cairo, president of the schoolās Academic Senate, which represents faculty interests, said the payment was a ācomplete misuse of public funds.āā Itās understandable that PCC community members would be upset over this result, and they (and California taxpayers) should speak out to ensure that PCC doesnāt have to take this sort of step again. After all, if Black had decided to sue, it might have cost even more.
Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS hopes to see colleges and universities welcome even controversial speakers in the coming year, at the very least after the invitations have already been sent out.
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