Student newspaper says secret negotiations leading to 'Silent Sam' deal broke NC law
The University of North Carolina Board of Governors violated the state's open meetings laws by secretly negotiating and approving a deal to dispose of a controversial Confederate monument from the UNC-Chapel Hill campus, according to a lawsuit filed Tuesday.
Posted — UpdatedDTH Media Corp., which publishes The Daily Tar Heel student newspaper on the Chapel Hill campus, wants a court to void two agreements between the Board of Governors and the state chapter of the Sons of Confederate Veterans.
Under an agreement Baddour approved on Nov. 27, the SCV agreed to take ownership of the "Silent Sam" statue, which stood for more than a century on the UNC-Chapel Hill campus before protesters toppled it in August 2018, and build a center to preserve it. The university agreed to put $2.5 million into a trust to help defray the costs of the new center.
Twenty-two of the 24 board members were on the conference call, and at least one person on the eight-member committee opposed the deal. The minutes of the closed session show that Thom Goolsby, a former state senator who had criticized the protesters who pulled the statue down and demanded that it be put back on campus, voted against the settlement. Another committee member, Tom Fetzer, a former Raleigh mayor and North Carolina Republican Party director, was noted in the minutes as not being on the call when the vote was taken.
"The manner in which the meeting was noticed and conducted effectively prevented any member of the public, including those who may have attended the meeting, from understanding its purpose or outcome, much less raising questions or objections," the DTH lawsuit states.
About 45 minutes after the board adjourned, the SCV filed a lawsuit against UNC over "Silent Sam," and Baddour had approved a consent agreement between the two sides within five minutes.
"The contents of the [SCV lawsuit and consent agreement] and the timing of their respective filings indicate that they were negotiated and drafted well in advance of their approval," the DTH lawsuit states
The lawsuit notes that no records of any meeting by the Board of Governors members who negotiated the deal have been produced, even though meeting notices and minutes are required of the group as a public body under state law.
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