Pride Practice Facility: Denials and Deceit

  • The County Commissioner who  bragged six months ago that he “brokered a deal with WVU and Mylan Park” now claims: “There was never a deal.”
  • The WVU Dean behind the Mylan Park scheme now claims credit for finding The Pride an on-campus location. But how involved was he?
  • WVU blocks Vernissage efforts to find answers to ongoing questions.

Exclusive:  A Vernissage Magazine Investigation – Part 8

(Editor’s note: This Saturday, April 27, West Virginia University will hold its annual Gold-Blue Spring Football Game. Members of the WVU Alumni Band will perform at the game. The Alumni Band organization was one of the driving forces behind the campaign to build WVU’s Pride of West Virginia Marching Band a new, state-of-the-art practice facility.

After several articles in this ongoing investigation were published – and as a result of significant donor and alumni outcry – the university administration scrapped a controversial plan use $1.25 million in private contributions to build an artificial turf football field for the privately-owned and politically-connected Mylan Park recreation complex. Those funds had been solicited for construction of an on-campus practice facility for the Pride of West Virginia Marching Band.

As one university professor stated, “A move to Mylan Park would have destroyed the marching band.”

Although the Mylan Park scheme has been scuttled, Vernissage Magazine believes that continued investigation is in the public interest. The goal: to shed light on the activities and motivations of those complicit in the scheme that threatened a treasured state institution.)

 

On March 25, 2024, WVU announced the cancellation of its plan to use $1.25 million in donor funds to build an artificial turf field at privately-owned Mylan Park. The plan had raise the ire of scores of donors, because the money was solicited with the promise that their contributions would be used to build an on-campus practice facility for the Pride of West Virginia marching band.

The WVU statement announcing the scuttling of the scheme promises: “We want to assure you those and future gifts will be used as originally intended.”

WVU now pledges to abide by its promise to build the Pride Practice Facility on the university campus. The new location is WVU’s Med Fields recreation complex, adjacent to the university Medical Center.

The day after that announcement, on March 26, County Commissioner Tom Bloom posted on his social media site, for the first time publicly addressing the controversy over the Mylan Park scheme in which he was instrumental.

In his post, Bloom denied that a deal with Mylan Park ever existed:

“No money was transferred, there was never a deal,” Bloom wrote, “and all of this could have been easily rectified if they called the WVU Foundation and asked if the money was there. I can only guess that the people did not want the truth because it did not make a good story.”

Bloom said that when he met with WVU Dean Keith Jackson on August 22, 2023, “I was informed that Hawley Field was a non-starter. That WVU was not willing to give the land to the band for its exclusive use.”

But the fact is Hawley Field – the former baseball stadium site that the WVU Athletic Department pledged to The Pride for its practice facility – was never intended to be exclusive to the band. Numerous university documents state that the new practice field was always meant to be shared. The very first announcement of the Pride Practice Facility in November of 2019 states: “When the band is not practicing, the facility will be open to WVU Athletics and the College of Physical Activity and Sport Sciences.” The university’s original planning document notes: “The playing field will be multi-purpose and WVU Athletics will share use of the field when the marching band is not using it.”

Bloom further claimed that Jackson, “sought out my guidance knowing my background with the band and knowing that I knew all of the parties at Mylan Park. He (Jackson) basically asked me if I could put the two of them together to explore this possibility… between WVU, the Band and Mylan Park, this was my sole involvement.”

But documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act show that, in fact, it was Bloom himself – along with his fellow county commissioners – who met with Mylan Park Board members on August 28 of last year.

Keith Jackson was not present at the meeting.

In his March 26 post Bloom claimed, “Locating the field at Mylan Park was in no way my idea.”

Yet immediately after the August 28 meeting, Bloom contacted Jackson. In an email obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, Bloom wrote: “I brought up an idea about the band being out at Mylan… All of this was done behind closed doors.”

Bloom says that when, on October 20, 2023, he announced to alumni and donors, “I brokered a deal with WVU and Mylan Park” people did not understand the meaning of the word ‘brokered’. He claims he meant only that he arranged to get the parties together: “This was all that I did. Several weeks later,” Bloom now claims, “they contacted me to look at the Mylan field and they explained their concept.”

But emails obtained through the Freedom of Information Act show that Bloom met with Mylan Park board members, not “several weeks later’, but in fact just six days after his meeting with Jackson.

Despite his current claim that arranging a meeting was his “sole involvement”, the documents obtained by Vernissage Magazine show Bloom was extensively involved in planning the field that those complicit in the scheme intended to build at Mylan Park. Bloom exchanged numerous emails with Jackson, Mylan Park officials, and others about the planned field location, the field dimensions, and the potential use of nearby existing Mylan Park pavilions. He even sent Jackson, Mylan Park Board President Ron Justice, and WVU Director of Bands Scott Tobias an MP4 drone video of the Mylan Park field site: “I was wondering if you could use them or we could share them, once an announcement is made,” Bloom wrote. “This is a huge file, but I have a flash drive with about ten videos. Tell me what you think.”

There are sixty-six comments on Bloom’s March 26 social media post. Many of those who commented found his claims disingenuous.

Sean Sawyer called Bloom’s post, “Political spin, only because of community pressure to do the right thing,” he wrote, “the right thing is being done.”

“I understand CYA when I see it,” Shaun Moyers commented, “and this is most definitely it.”

Marissa Ridenour was among several individuals who took issue with Bloom’s claims: “There was never a deal, and all of this could have been easily rectified if they called the WVU Foundation and asked if the money was there,” she repeated, and then she wrote, “Funny how there are so many people saying that they tried to ask questions at Homecoming and they were silenced by you.”

“Lots of people asked,” commented Sandy Sibray, “and it took FOIA to get what little facts that have been available. If all that was needed was to ask, then why were so many of us stonewalled? Many people called the WVU Foundation … but the details were always evaded.”

“Yeah,” added Jennifer Beach, “nice try but many, many of us called the Foundation and got crickets.”

“There is the crux of the problem,” wrote Aaron Dean. “We did ask questions, only to be told next to nothing, or even asked “What makes you think you deserve those answers.” And yes, I still have the screen shot of that.”

Others questioned Bloom’s statements that there was “never a deal”, that “no money was transferred. And said they certainly were aware of the definition of the word “brokered”.

“Brokered…” Craig Campbell wrote, “implies more than just arranging a meeting between two groups that certainly have figured out a way to meet without a middleman.”

“If there was no deal, why did you announce it at Homecoming?” Beach asked. “If there was no deal, why all this stonewalling and name-calling?”

Band alumna Alicia Mazon concurred, remarking: “A lot of us were at Homecoming. Maybe you misunderstood how you presented this whole thing and told us to be grateful. If anyone spoke up, you yelled louder.”

“How can you say there wasn’t any type of deal when it was announced to alumni?” asked Kate Eakins. “It’s like going to a bank with a gun out and saying you’re going to rob the place, but you didn’t get the money so there wasn’t a fault committed since money didn’t change hands. You guys did wrong, you guys got publicly called out.”

“What a load of garbage Bloom wrote.” Zach Bloom (no relation) commented on an alumni site. “He’s just trying to cover himself, and it looks horrible since we all know the truth.”

Mazon commented: “Did Tom black out the whole Homecoming message he presented? I was there. He screamed at anyone who tried to ask a question. He said we should be grateful.”

Others called Bloom’s claim that “no money was transferred” a stalking horse.

The truth is that the WVU Foundation stated from the very beginning that the donated funds would not be transferred to Mylan Park. On November 3, 2023, WVU Foundation CEO Cynthia Roth wrote, in response to a Vernissage Magazine inquiry: “The funds will be disbursed for the construction of the WVU owned practice facility and will not be diverted to the Mylan Park Foundation or any other intermediary foundation.”

“To say the anger was about where the cash actually ended up is a misdirect,” commented donor A.S. “It was about what the cash was being SPENT on. We all know the cash remained with the Foundation. But what we had questions about was about the ownership and control of the physical asset that was to be built with that cash. Money changing hands was never the issue. The issue was WVU building a field at Mylan Park, and the fact that Mylan Park would use it as an athletic field.”

Jeffrey Carver commented on the overall lack of transparency in the Mylan plan. Donated funds were targeted, tax-exempt organizations were involved, and elected public officials and public employees were behind the plan. Yet the details were shrouded in secrecy despite repeated requests for information from donors: “All this combines to paint a picture (real or perceived) that there was something hinky going on,” he wrote. “This yet another lesson for those people in power to remain transparent, which seems to be something that has not been learned.”

Band alumni Justin Click summed up the comments of many, writing:

“Oh Tom… I’m so ashamed of who you’ve become. You got caught in a dirty deal. Don’t make it worse by trying to spin this and insult our intelligence. Bow out gracefully and don’t make this any worse by acting like we’re all stupid. You announced this at Homecoming in front of EVERYONE. There are press releases… official public statements from the university… and Mylan Park themselves! We live in the digital age Tom, EVERYTHING is on camera and there’s no way you can make all of us forget your behavior, actions, and language. You’ve stabbed us all in the back once already, don’t make it worse by calling us all stupid as you spit in our eyes…”

“Ashamed is putting it lightly,” added Dylan Johnson. “He’s a complete embarrassment to the county and himself,” adding the hashtag, “#voteanybodybutbloom2024.”

At the end of the comments thread on Bloom’s social media page, alumni Sean Sawyer wrote:

“Tom Bloom, please do not ghost this discussion. Reasonable requests are being made for you to make further comment, and not one that starts with “it’s all everybody else’s fault and I’m the hero.” You owe us all that much…now’s your chance…”

Tom Bloom did not respond to a single comment.

 

False Heroes and Praise for Mylan Park

In his March 25 letter to Pride of West Virginia supporters, WVU Dean Keith Jackson wrote: “After an October announcement outlining plans to shift the project to Mylan Park, we listened to concerns about the move to an off-campus location. Since then, I have met with various stakeholders and worked with the University to seek out a suitable on-campus site… The Med Fields, which were not previously available due to potential development, located next to Mountaineer Station on the Health Sciences Campus have been identified as the best option.”

Jackson, who has consistently refused to respond to donor or media questions about the Mylan Park scheme, thanked Mylan Park, “for its continued support and for being a tremendous community partner.”

In his letter, Jackson claimed, “I have met with stakeholders and listened to concerns and worked with the university to seek out a suitable on-campus location.”

WVU refused to fulfill a Vernissage Freedom of Information request asking for documentation about the identity of those stakeholders, why the Med Fields suddenly became available, when the renewed effort to find an on-campus location for the Pride Practice Facility began, and who was involved in seeking out the new site.

But Vernissage Magazine did obtain the minutes of the WVU Planning Committee meeting at which the Pride Practice Facility move to the on-campus Med Fields site was approved.

Dean Keith Jackson did not attend the meeting.

 

No Questionable Deed Goes Unrewarded…

In a late March discussion on the social site Reddit, a poster commented about reports of members of The Pride being ordered to not talk about the Mylan Park move (‘Students Shamed and Silenced”, Vernissage Magazine, March 22, 2024).

“The silencing of the students really infuriated me,” wrote the original poster.

Wrote another: “What these administrators did is not only against university policy, but also is illegal.”

“As a recent grad,” yet another wrote, “I can’t say I’m surprised.”

According to an email obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, WVU’s Director of Bands shamed and humiliated students who openly expressed concerns about the Mylan Park plan. “…students,” the author wrote in a complaint to Keith Jackson, “were told they were an embarrassment to their school and state by their Director of Bands.”

WVU’s Director of Bands is Scott Tobias. Newly obtained documents show that Tobias was involved in the initial August 22, 2023, meeting with Keith Jackson, Tom Bloom, and WVU Foundation staffer Jennifer Jordan, in which the scheme to divert donated funds to benefit Mylan Park was hatched. “It’s on the calendar,” Tobias wrote to Jackson, Bloom, and Jordan in an email on August 16.

In discussion about the silencing and humiliation of outspoken band members, Tobias became the subject of derision from commenters.

“Scott Tobias is one of the worst things to have ever happened to the School of Music,” wrote Reddit commenter Tubadude2.

“Can’t disagree,” acknowledged Kjbtetrick, the original poster of the thread.

Scott Tobias – 2024 Bandmaster of the Year

On April 24, WVU announced that Scott Tobias was named the 2024 West Virginia Bandmaster of the Year by the regional chapter of the honorary fraternity of band directors.

 

Finale

The Pride of West Virginia has once again been promised an on-campus site for its planned state-of-the-art practice facility.

WVU pledges, henceforth, to use donations to the Pride Practice Facility for the purpose for which they were solicited, and that donors expect.

Many of those complicit in the scheme to divert Pride contributions to benefit the Mylan Park Foundation – including Dean Keith Jackson – remain silent about their motives.

But many questions remain:

    • Who and what initiated the scheme to use The Pride’s funds at Mylan Park?
    • What was the involvement of the WVU Athletic Department, which had pledged Hawley Field to the marching band? Did the Athletic Department go back on the promise of the Hawley Field site to The Pride? If so, why?
    • What oversight does the WVU Foundation have over its University Relations staff members, one of whom was intimately involved in the plot to redirect restricted donor funds to Mylan Park?
    • Why are high-ranking WVU administrators permitted to sit on the boards of organizations that do extensive business with West Virginia University? And where do their loyalties lie?
    • Why is WVU – a university that is tens of millions of dollars in debt, slashing entire degree programs, and laying off scores of respected educators – so keen on focusing on and investing in ‘community involvement’ with a private recreational center to the exclusion of the university’s primary mission of affordable education?
    • And, last but by no means least, was the attempt to plunder the Pride of West Virginia’s donated funds just the tip of an iceberg of a broader scheme to pillage the coffers of WVU for the benefit of private interests?

In March and early April, Vernissage Magazine filed a series of Freedom of Information requests seeking answers to some of these questions. The requests were near completely denied by WVU attorneys. Initial FOI requests filed in November 2023 yielded scores of documents. The most recent requests produced fewer than a dozen pages.

“It seems apparent,” as Rich McGervey commented on Tom Bloom’s social post, “no matter who made the decision, a decision was made without consulting a majority of the interested parties, especially the band members, and it’s now taken how many months for the facts to come out… which hints more and more at people doing a CYA!”

When the Alumni Band plays at WVU’s Gold-Blue Game this weekend, band supporters and alumni members will be within a few dozen yards of the Med Fields site where the university now pledges to build the long-promised on-campus Pride Practice Facility.

If Tom Bloom attends, he may find some Alumni Band members not nearly as enamored by his charm as they once were.

“As a county commissioner, I was a fan of his until his true colors came out,” one alum recently wrote in an online chat. “I hope political ads are no longer permitted…”

“The political drum needs to go,” another commented. “He’s been doing it for years, even though the Athletic Department rules say no political advertising. The Commissioner needs to get with the program and start following the rules.”

Some alumni were far less generous: “He should be banned from the Alumni Band,” one suggested.

“Regardless of personal feelings,” another replied, “I don’t think he can actually be banned… After all, he is a dues-paying member.”

“If he doesn’t get banned,” wrote a third, “that drum promoting himself should never see the light of day at another Alumni Band event.”

Upcoming in Vernissage Magazine:

    • New Freedom of Information requests are filed, but now WVU refuses to cooperate. What might the university administration be hiding?
    • Conflicts and Influence – What is the Mylan Park Foundation? What connection do its board members have to private partnership projects with WVU and the WVU Foundation?

The investigation continues…

Upload a PDF of this Article: Pride and Prevarication Part 8 – Denials and Deceit

Pride and Prevarication – Part 8 – Denials and Deceit © 2024 by Vernissage LLC – John D. McPherson is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 

 

 

 

Pride Practice Facility: Et Tu Bloom? Betrayal by a Trusted Ally

  • Donors want answers from the university. But the man who ‘brokered a deal’ asks: “Why do they have to give answers to you?
  • Commissioner says Mylan Park is “becoming WVU’s new campus.”

Exclusive:  A Vernissage Magazine Investigation – Part 7

(Editor’s note: This article was prepared prior to the March 25, 2024, announcement that WVU has scrapped its plan to move the Pride of West Virginia marching band practice facility to privately-owned Mylan Park. After several articles in this investigation were published – and as a result of significant donor and alumni outcry – the university administration found space on the WVU campus to build the promised, state-of-the-art Pride Practice Facility. However, Vernissage Magazine believes that the information obtained in the development of this and upcoming articles in this series is in the public interest, as it sheds light on the activities of those involved in the Mylan Park scheme.)

In the 1970s, Tom Bloom was one of the student leaders of the West Virginia University marching band. His beats on a big bass drum sent the band into motion. Band members counted them to their step-off: ‘Bloom, Bloom… Bloom-Bloom-Bloom.’

With blue eyes and a broad smile, Bloom’s charm was an inspiration to his fellow band members.

Over the years, as he advanced from school counselor to Morgantown City Councilman to President of the Monongalia County Commission, the former bass drummer was always considered a staunch supporter of WVU’s Pride of West Virginia marching band.

So, it was surprising to many band alumni that they would come to view Tom Bloom as the man who betrayed The Pride.

The Alumni Band organization has, for years, been a driving force behind the effort to build a state-of-the-art marching band practice facility on the WVU campus, one that would equal or surpass those of rival universities. Many Alumni Band members donated to the fund created to build the facility..

Yet on October 20, 2023, Tom Bloom announced at the group’s Homecoming gathering that he had “brokered a deal” to use the band’s $1.25 million in private contributions to build an artificial turf field at Mylan Park, a privately-owner recreation center located nearly five miles away from campus. On the Alumni band social media site, Bloom had been promoting that “exciting news” would come out at the group’s homecoming event.

But far from being excited, many alumni felt victimized by what they perceived as misuse of their donations. Some called it a ‘bait and switch’ scheme, saying they had contributed based on explicit promises that the practice facility would be built on the Evansdale Campus site of Hawley Field, the former WVU baseball stadium, and that the facility would look like the renderings they had been shown in donor solicitations.

Studies: Route to Mylan Par is “deficient”

Band members and alumni alike worry that moving The Pride’s late-afternoon, four-day-a-week practices to a site so far from campus will hurt the band, especially since the University is not providing the more than 300 band members transportation to Mylan Park. Instead, students are expected to drive on their own or carpool the winding, two-lane roads to the complex.

Alumni and parents of band students worry about the potential hazards and liability of carpooling.

“The location of this facility is only going to build barriers to participation,” said one alumni. “Students shouldn’t have to travel these roads in cars to get to a class. They shouldn’t have to have a car on campus all day just so they can get to their last class in the middle of nowhere.”

“This is maddening,” echoed Nathan Burdette, “People will be shut out of the pride if they don’t have financial means.”

A major concern of many is the dangerous inadequacy of the secondary roads leading to Mylan Park, especially in late autumn darkness and inclement weather. A 2012 traffic study found the primary route to the park – Chaplin Hill Road – was “deficient” even then, burdened well beyond its capacity, with a history of “a significant number of crashes.”

People like Tom Bloom. He is charismatic. Some alumni, however, resent the way he has used his membership in the Alumni Band for his own political gain.

Bloom and his billboard bass drum

For example, he regularly plasters large ‘Re-elect Bloom’ stickers on his drum during performances.

“I take issue with the campaign signs on his bass drum,” Aaron Dean wrote in an alumni chatroom after the announcement. “Even before all this, I had a problem with that.”

“I do too,” Shaun Moyers responded. “Makes it appear that he is endorsed by the Alumni Band.”

Wrote another: “That bass drum promoting himself should never see the light of day at another Alumni Band event…”

Bloom has repeatedly insisted that he acted on his own – not as a county commissioner – when he brokered the deal between WVU and Mylan Park. He has also consistently maintained that the Monongalia County Commission was not involved in the Mylan Park scheme.

Records show that both statements are untrue:

    • Emails obtained through the Freedom of Information Act show that Bloom was acting as a County Commissioner when first approached to discuss moving the Pride Practice Facility.
    • Those emails show that days later, all three Monongalia County Commissioners met with Mylan Park Foundation directors and WVU administrators in what Bloom described as a “behind-closed-doors” meeting where the Mylan Park scheme was concocted.

 

Entangled Interests: County Commissioners, WVU and Mylan Park

Documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act show that Bloom was contacted on August 9, 2023, by WVU College of Creative Arts Dean Keith Jackson. They arranged to meet, along with WVU Foundation staff member Jennifer Jordan, on August 22. The emails arranging the meeting – obtained by Vernissage Magazine through the Freedom of Information Act – specifically state that Bloom would attend “…as County Commissioner.”

On August 28, all three Monongalia County Commissioners, WVU Vice President and Director of Athletics Wren Baker, and WVU’s Director of Local Government Relations Ron Justice gathered in an unannounced meeting of commissioners. In an email immediately after that meeting, obtained by Vernissage Magazine, Bloom wrote to Jackson:

“We discussed several issues and I brought up an idea about the band field being out at Mylan. Please call me… Ron and I came up with an idea that everyone thought would be a good proposal. I am excited to talk with you. All of this was done behind closed doors.”

Wren Baker, County Commissioner Sean Sikora, and Ron Justice are all members of the Mylan Park Foundation Board of Directors. Justice is the board’s President.

Bloom and Jackson have publicly stated their reasons why the Pride of West Virginia Practice Facility can’t be built on the site that was promised to band members and donors.

A Vernissage Magazine review of WVU records indicates that the reasons given are dubious.

  • Bloom and Jackson have both stated that The Pride would not have priority usage at the originally promised on-campus site. But WVU internal documents clearly state that the band would be priority user of the facility.
  • Bloom stated the on-campus site was not guaranteed to have stadium lights. WVU internal documents include lighting in the initial construction costs.
  • Bloom claimed an on-campus field would cost “over $2.5 million.” WVU internal documents and field construction contractors estimate the current cost at roughly $1.15 million or less, well within the Pride’s donated funding.
  • Jackson claimed there were drainage issues at the promised on-campus location. Yet WVU internal documents show no evidence of concern over drainage. In fact, construction records for the planned on-campus facility include adequate drainage in the contract proposal. Donor solicitations say the first phase of the facility includes drainage installation. The Mylan Park site, however, has serious drainage issues.
  • Jackson has claimed the location of the promised on-campus facility didn’t have enough space. But WVU internal records and plans developed for the university by an independent architectural firm clearly demonstrate that the on-campus site has adequate space for all phases of the planned, state-of-the-art complex.

Bloom and Jackson have failed to respond to requests for documentation of their assertions.

University records and public statements made by Mylan Park Foundation board members show that Mylan Park has long wanted to have a new artificial turf football field, but has been unable to find funding.

Why would County Commissioner Tom Bloom be the one chosen to “broker a deal” to move the Pride of West Virginia’s planned practice football field to Mylan Park, and use the band’s $1.25 million in private donations to build it?

Public records show that Tom Bloom has close ties to several Mylan Park Foundation directors, including Mylan Park Board President Ron Justice, and Directors Susan Riddle and Sean Sikora.

Bloom and Sikora have served together on the Monongalia County Commission since 2016. Sikora took over from Bloom as president of the commission at the beginning of this year.

Ron Justice and Susan Riddle both spoke publicly in the fall of 2023 about Mylan Park’s need to find a way to finance a new artificial turf athletic field to keep the park competitive with other regional sports complexes.

Prior to the Mylan Park scheme becoming public, Ron Justice told a radio interviewer that the Foundation was, “…seeing another opportunity (to finance a new field), and – I can’t let the cat out of the bag too quick – but to potentially realize that additional field in the near future.”

Records obtained through the Freedom of Information Act show that in the weeks prior to that statement, Justice was already engaging in email conversations with Bloom, as well as Jackson, Jordan, WVU Director of Bands Scott Tobias, and other Mylan Park board directors, about the design and installation of a new field at Mylan Park, to be paid for with The Pride’s donated funds.

Susan Riddle

Days after Bloom announced WVU’s intent to use the Pride Practice Facility Fund to build an artificial turf field at Mylan Park, Mylan board director Susan Riddle was interviewed on a radio talk show. “Through use of the Pride of West Virginia’s money,” Riddle said, “We will go from one multipurpose field to two multipurpose fields. It’s a gamechanger for us.”

In an email to Jackson entitled ‘concern of band field’, Bloom wrote about having issues with upset donors and noted: “Susan Riddle was on the radio promoting the project.”

 

The Mylan Park Connections

Susan Riddle, while serving on the Mylan Park board, is also President and Chief Executive Officer of the local Mountaineer Country Convention and Visitors Bureau.  Public records show County Commissioner Tom Bloom is on Riddle’s Mountaineer Country Board of Directors.

Prior to becoming county commissioner, Bloom served alongside Ron Justice for a decade on the Morgantown City Council. Bloom was first elected Monongalia County Commissioner in 2012. According to records on file with the Monongalia County Clerk’s Office, Bloom’s campaign treasurer was Ross Justice, who, according to Democratic Party insiders and county public records, is the son of the Mylan Park Board President.

In a 2019 interview with the Morgantown Dominion Post newspaper, Bloom stated that one of his first missions as a county commissioner was to meet with WVU’s athletic director to discuss why University recreational facilities weren’t open to community members.

“We didn’t want the community closed out,” Bloom told the newspaper.

That meeting led to the University eventually moving its swimming and track facilities to Mylan Park. The $35 million aquatic center and $7 million track complex at Mylan Park are both – as will be the Pride of West Virginia’s artificial turf practice field – available for use by the community and amateur sporting events. An FAQ page posted on the WVU band website after the Mylan Park announcement states that The Pride’s donor-funded field will be available to sports teams and local marching bands: “Allowing controlled use of the field by approved groups is a gesture of good will and community engagement.” Mylan Park and WVU officials have failed to respond to Vernissage Magazine inquiries asking whether the band – which is paying to build the field – will receive any income from rental fees paid to Mylan Park.

When WVU announced building its aquatic and track complex at Mylan Park, then-Athletic Director Shane Lyons – who public records show held a seat on the Mylan Park Foundation Board of Directors – noted: “WVU already has a strong annual financial commitment in Mylan Park facilities and this partnership will enhance that financial base as the primary tenant…”

Another WVU release about the aquatic and track complex noted: “Total funding for the Mylan Park complex…will primarily come from rental agreements with WVU.” The release also quoted an unnamed Mylan Park Foundation Board member, who said of the aquatic and track complex: “It’s going to be a game-changer,” and would enhance the park’s ability to lure customers from across the region. It is the same statement Susan Riddle made after it was announced WVU would use the band’s money to build the artificial turf field that Mylan Park has long wanted.

In his public comments since announcing that he “brokered a deal” to use the WVU marching band’s contributions to fund the new athletic field at Mylan Park, Bloom has consistently stated that Monongalia County was in no way involved in the scheme. Yet documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act show all three commissioners attended the “behind-closed-doors” meeting where the Mylan Park scheme was initiated.

In an October 25, 2023, email obtained by Vernissage Magazine through the Freedom of Information Act, Bloom discussed donors who were complaining that using band funds at Mylan Park is a misuse of their contributions. He wrote to Jackson, Jordan, and Tobias: “This is the same problem the County faced when we moved the swimming complex and track out to Mylan Park.”

In news article after news article about Mylan Park, County Commissioner Tom Bloom features prominently.

Bloom spoke at the ceremony announcing construction of WVU’s aquatic center at Mylan Park. He thanked those involved, including his colleagues at the County Commission, the Convention and Visitors Bureau for which he is a board member, the Mylan Park Foundation, and WVU; all of which also feature prominently in the marching band practice field scheme.

Bloom participated in the 2022 groundbreaking for a six-million-dollar Mylan Park bike racing facility built with government funds. At the groundbreaking, in which Justice, Riddle, and WVU President E. Gordon Gee also participated, Bloom said the collaboration, “…goes to the entire concept that we are promoting, that Mylan Park will be for everyone.”

When Monongalia County Commissioners endorsed pursuit of a grant for a $150 million highway interchange, Commissioner Bloom noted that the final product of the highway project will be a new four-lane corridor to Mylan Park.

Bloom even guested on a local TV news program, talking about Mylan Park’s programs to teach second graders how to swim.

Bloom’s long-time connections to Mylan Park did not go unnoticed to donors unhappy about contributions that were solicited for an on-campus practice site being diverted to build an athletic field at Mylan Park: “It has Tom Bloom written all over it,” wrote one donor in a now-deleted post on an Alumni Band social media site. “Dude has spent the last decade working on Mylan Park.”

 

“Why Do They Have to Give Answers to You?”

The week after announcing the Pride Practice Facility Fund would be used to build a field at Mylan Park, Bloom entered an Alumni Band chatroom, confronting alumni complaining about what they believe is misuse of donor funds.

Many alumni in the chat protested that donors were not getting answers from the University or the WVU Foundation about what, exactly, would be included in the facility at Mylan Park, or what plans were in place to ensure band students would be able to get to their new, remote practice site safely and affordably.

The chatroom conversation which follows has been edited for clarity.

“We – the alumni – were solicited for funds to build the facility,” wrote Krista Tetrick. “We have a right to know exactly what our money is being used for and the details associated with that use. Whether the powers-that-be like it or not, we are stakeholders in this project.”

Aaron Dean added: “We’ve got no idea about what’s going on or who to believe.”

“Why do they have to give answers to you?” Bloom asked.

“Your initial post said you were the one to broker the deal,” Dean replied. “As an elected official, and as this is a development project in Monongalia County, should we not be able to ask these questions to you and/or the Monongalia County Commission as well?”

“County Commission was never involved,” Bloom claimed.

“We want answers to valid questions. We want what’s best for the WVU band,” wrote Katrina Roop.

“You gave money to the Foundation for a new band field, and that is what they’re planning to do.” said Bloom.

“We’ve heard several times, including from the Dean (Keith Jackson), ‘the money was being donated for a field and that’s what it’s being used for’,” wrote Chris Carpenter, who, like many donors, contended contributions to the WVU Foundation’s Pride Practice Facility Fund should legally be restricted to the on-campus site for which they were solicited. “That’s astoundingly ignorant for any group soliciting donations. Reading the plain text of the State Code,” Carpenter wrote, “violating that standard means one is guilty of fraud.”

“This is my last response,” replied Bloom. “Have you thought that the reason they did not want to answer every question is because of the incorrect and volatile false comments that have been spread? Again, please look at your donation. It went to the WVU Foundation for a band field.”

“No,” Carpenter replied, “that did not cross my mind. It would seem that’d be a reason to answer them and clear things up, not let misunderstandings persist and jeopardize your relationship with your donor base. Don’t pretend that donors are the ones in the wrong here. It’s Insulting.”

“Students shouldn’t have to settle This is just bad business and everyone knows it,” wrote Dylan Johnson. Added Carpenter: “Ultimately I’m focused on the band.”

“Just because the ‘details’ are not made public does not mean they are not resolved,” Bloom wrote.

“Everyone has been quiet since this announcement went out,” Taylor Kinney said. “No information has been given, other than this deal was done behind closed doors.”

“The bottom line,” added another donor, “is that Mylan Park is benefitting from the alumni donations.”

“It’s becoming very clear,” Bloom replied, “that Mylan Park facilities are becoming WVU’s new campus. I hope you have a great day.” [Leaves Chat]

“Well,” said Dean, “Mr. Bloom basically said we didn’t deserve these answers, when he was pressed on it. So…

“He basically was so excited about this deal until the donors got upset,” wrote Sean Moyers. “Then he decided to back away and is declining to answer legitimate questions. Typical politician.”

 

“More band crap…”

After engaging disgruntled donors in the chatroom, Bloom emailed portions of the conversation to WVU Dean Keith Jackson and Mylan Park President Ron Justice, writing: “Just a sampling of the individuals who continue to cause problems.”

The subject heading of Bloom’s email was “more band crap.”

 

 

Tom Bloom did not respond to questions from Vernissage Magazine. He failed to respond to Vernissage Magazine’s offer to comment on the content of this article.

Wren Baker and Ron Justice, through a University Spokesperson, declined to answer questions from Vernissage or provide comments for this article.

Susan Riddle also failed to respond to inquiries from Vernissage Magazine.

 

In the next Vernissage Magazine article:

  • The County Commissioner behind the Mylan Park scheme breaks his silence… and now claims there was never a deal with Mylan Park.
  • People, he says, don’t understand the meaning of the word ‘brokered’, and they “did not want the truth because it did not make a good story.”

Download a PDF of this Article: Pride and Prevarication Part 7 – Et Tu Bloom

 

Pride and Prevarication Part 7 – Et Tu Bloom © 2024 by Vernissage LLC – John D. McPherson is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 

 

Pride Practice Facility: The Dean of Deceit – Answers Don’t Add Up

  • The Dean of the College of Creative Arts tells donors why the marching band practice facility they supported can’t be built on-campus.
  • Every reason he gives conflicts with official records.

Exclusive:  A Vernissage Magazine Investigation – Part 6

(Editor’s note: This article was prepared prior to the March 25, 2024, announcement that WVU has scrapped its plan to move the Pride of West Virginia marching band practice facility to privately-owned Mylan Park. After several articles in this investigation were published – and as a result of significant donor and alumni outcry – the university administration found space on the WVU campus to build the promised, state-of-the-art Pride Practice Facility. However, Vernissage Magazine believes that the information obtained in the development of this and upcoming articles in this series is in the public interest, as it sheds light on the activities of those involved in the Mylan Park scheme.)

 

The Pride of West Virginia at the Oct. 2021 groundbreaking for their promised on-campus practice facility

In October of 2021, West Virginia University broke ground for the new Pride of West Virginia Practice Facility, a state-of-the art marching band practice complex on the Evansdale campus. It was the culmination of a long-time dream – and years of fundraising – by alumni and friends of the WVU Pride of West Virginia Marching Band.

At the podium, College of Creative Arts Dean Keith Jackson raved about the importance of the Pride marching band to the University, and to the state:

“I know the most visible part of our college is the Pride,” Dean Jackson said. “I know for the state of West Virginia, the best ambassadors for our state are the Pride.”

The first phase of the Pride Practice Facility – the artificial turf replica of WVU’s Mountaineer field with lights and director’s tower – was supposed to be completed on the site of Hawley Field, WVU’s former baseball stadium, by fall of 2022. But construction never began.

Then, at Homecoming on October 20, 2023, band members and alumni were told that it never would.

Instead, the Pride’s artificial turf field would be built at Mylan Park, a privately-owned facility that serves as a community recreation complex. Mylan Park is nearly five miles away from campus.

Student members of the band were concerned about the off-campus location, and the fact that they were being told to car-pool to their distant new practice site. Documents obtained by Vernissage Magazine show that band members who complained in the wake of that announcement were humiliated by College of Creative Arts staff; and, shortly afterward, student band members were forbidden from speaking out in opposition to the Mylan Park move, despite the fact that such restrictions violate West Virginia state law.

Many alumni and donors, who raised approximately $1.25 million to privately fund the facility, felt betrayed by the Mylan Park move. This was not the state-of-the-art facility to which they had donated; not the facility they’d seen in numerous architectural renderings in the donor solicitations urging them to contribute.

“Donors were told one thing to get them to give money and then are being delivered something else,” said alum Shaun Moyers. “Classic bait-and-switch.”

Documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act reveal that, since mid- 2023, Jackson, university administrators, a WVU Foundation staff member, and members of the Monongalia County Commission, conspired to redirect the funds that contributors gave to build an on-campus practice facility for WVU’s marching band, and instead use that money to build an artificial turf football field that Mylan Park has long wanted, but has been unable to finance. Two of the university administrators involved in initiating the scheme, Athletic Director Wren Baker and University Director of Local Affairs Ron Justice, hold seats on the Board of Directors of the Mylan Park Foundation. Justice is the Foundation’s president.

Meanwhile, Dean Jackson and WVU’s College of Creative Arts development director Jennifer Jordan – the WVU Foundation staff member involved in the scheme – continued actively soliciting donations for the promised on-campus band practice facility, fully aware that those contributions would be used to benefit Mylan Park, and not the purpose for which the donations were being solicited.

“I think it is an egregious slap in the face towards the people who donated the money,” said donor Sandy Sibray, “that the University and Foundation continued to promote and accept the concept as we all understood it to be at the old baseball facility. I think this is approaching fraud.”

 

Questions, But No Answers

Alumni and donors had questions and concerns. Lots of them.

Why is the planned practice facility for the West Virginia University marching band being moved so far away from its planned location? How would students get there? How will the need to leave campus early to get to Mylan Park affect students who must take late-afternoon classes required by their degree programs?

Student marching band members had many of the same concerns. But Vernissage interviews with students, as well as documents obtained by Vernissage Magazine, reveal that after a few Pride members publicly expressed their apprehensions to the campus newspaper, band members were ordered not to speak out.

Suddenly, and for some reason, members of the Pride of West Virginia went from being the most visible, best ambassadors for the state, to inconvenient persona non grata. And WVU College of Creative Arts Dean Keith Jackson, one of the key figures behind the Mylan Park scheme, has consistently dodged questioners seeking complete, documentable answers as to why.

In the first days after the announcement that the planned facility was being relocated, Monongalia County Commission President Tom Bloom – a 70s-era band alumnus who claimed that he “brokered a deal with WVU and Mylan Park” for the move, and who worked with Jackson and others to facilitate the scheme – engaged upset donors in an online chatroom:

 

“Tom, how about providing some information,” asked donor Katrina Roop, “since you stated you helped broker this deal? We want answers to valid questions.”

“You have every right to ask questions,” Bloom replied, “and those answers will come from the Music Department.”

Alumni donor Aaron Dean then states: “The Music Department either can’t or won’t give satisfactory answers. This change in venue has greatly eroded many alumni’s’ trust in the Band Office; I’m not seeing an effort being made to address our concerns and rebuild that trust.”

Others chimed in with unanswered questions and concerns. Bloom grew frustrated: “I strongly urge you to contact the Music Department,” he wrote.

“We have,” replied donor Mark Dean. “And they don’t have answers, either.”

 

From the beginning, the few explanations given by Jackson, Bloom, and others involved in the scheme to use the band’s donor funds to benefit Mylan Park have been riddled with statements that are inconsistent with information in official documents, and even their own prior statements.

 

Answers That Don’t Fit Facts

The evening of October 21, 2023, County Commission President Tom Bloom, buffeted by alumni and donor questions following his own attempt to explain the practice facility move, sent an email to Jackson: “We do need to get that informational letter out.”

Three days later, on October 24, Dean Keith Jackson issued a letter via the College of Creative Arts news release site: “Dear Pride Supporter,” it began, “Last week we announced an important update for the planned location of the Pride Practice Field…”

In a nine-paragraph letter of 539 words, Jackson devotes one-third of one paragraph, exactly 31 words, to providing his reasons why the Pride Practice Facility cannot be built at Hawley Field, the on-campus site that was promised to donors in numerous solicitations: “Priority usage could not be guaranteed,” he wrote. “There were concerns with drainage from the site into neighboring areas. And there were doubts we would have enough space to build the storage facility.”

 

“Concerns with Drainage”

Despite repeated requests from alumni, donors, and media, no documentation of drainage issues at the site promised in donor solicitations has ever been presented. Jackson has refused to respond to inquiries seeking verifiable records of any concerns regarding drainage at Hawley Field.

Many alumni and donors don’t buy it.

“How can a Division 1 baseball field be used for 41 years and then suddenly develop ‘drainage issues’ when the band wants to use the site?” asks alumnus Mark McCollum. “Were there drainage issues during all those baseball seasons?”

McCollum has a point. ‘Rule 1, Section 4 – Drainage’ of the National Collegiate Athletic Association’s (NCAA) baseball regulations require that baseball fields be constructed and graded in such a way as to facilitate proper drainage.

Contrary to Jackson’s statement, numerous documents obtained by Vernissage Magazine indicate that there are no serious drainage issues at the Hawley Field site.

In January 2021, College of Creative Arts Communications Specialist Bernadette Marie posted a donor solicitation on the WVU Alumni Band Social Page in preparation for the WVU Foundation’s Day of Giving fundraising drive. In the solicitation, Marie describes the first phase of the planned Pride Practice Facility construction on the Hawley Field site: “The first phase includes demolition of Hawley Field, drainage installation, repositioning of the lights, placement of the band tower, and laying the turf.”

College of Creative Arts “Day of Giving” donor solicitation, noting drainage installation

In March of 2021, WVU’s Procurement, Contracting & Payment Services Department issued a bid for the construction of the Pride Practice Facility on the promised Hawley Field site. The document does not mention drainage concerns. In fact, the construction procurement document builds standard drainage requirements into the construction package: “The architect engineer should plan to evaluate all utilities to determine requirements and design all supporting utilities (including stormwater…)”

 

“Enough Space”

Another of Jackson’s assertions was that the Hawley Field site is too small to build the entire planned practice facility: “…there were doubts we would have enough space to build the storage facility.”

One of the conceptual layouts mentioned in the university’s RFP

However, WVU’s own request for construction proposals states otherwise. According to the document: “A conceptual layout was completed by (an architectural firm) in order to determine the project feasibility…” The document notes that there is room enough on the Hawley Field site for, “…an artificial turf field, lights, conductor tower, storage facility, covered pavilion, a donor honor wall and driveway with a small parking area.” That site description includes everything illustrated in architectural renderings that WVU and the WVU Foundation used to solicit donor contributions.

“If (lack of space) was the ‘real reason’,” asked one donor, “why wasn’t it presented to us initially? Was ‘lack of space’ something someone just thought up, and thought that it might sell? It is sad. The trust is broken.”

 

“Priority Usage”

Jackson’s third claimed reason for the move is that at the Hawley Field site, “priority usage could not be guaranteed.”

But WVU records categorically state otherwise. The university’s own request for bids package states that the marching band would be priority user of the promised Hawley Field location: “The playing field will be multi-purpose and WVU Athletics will share use of the field when the marching band is not using it.”

WVU’s very first announcement of intent to build the Pride Practice Facility, dated Nov. 11, 2019, states: “When the band is not practicing, the facility will be open to WVU Athletics and the College of Physical Activity and Sport Sciences.”

Donor solicitations on the WVU College of Creative Arts website also stated explicitly that the Pride Practice Facility would be “a dedicated rehearsal space on the Evansdale Campus,” and, with the help of ‘generous alumni’, “we’ll give our band a home they can call their own.”

A 2021 WVU Foundation ‘Day of Giving’ fundraising solicitation refers to the Hawley Field site as “a permanent and dedicated facility” for the band. That solicitation quotes Jackson: “The Mountaineer Marching Band is an essential element of WVU’s character and pride and we are eager to provide them with the space they deserve.” The solicitation is Illustrated with architectural renderings of the planned facility on the Hawley Field site, with the WVU Coliseum in the background.

Jackson (lower right) in a WVU YouTube Video

College of Creative Arts administrators are also on record saying that the marching band would have priority at the promised on-campus site. In 2021, Jackson and WVU Director of Athletic Bands Cheldon Williams were interviewed by WVU Alumni Association Director of Marketing and Communications Andrew Sealy and Director of Alumni Engagement Meredith Balas. The interview was posted on the WVU Alumni Association’s YouTube site to solicit funds for the envisioned Pride Practice Facility.

In the interview, Williams – who is director of the Pride – states that the fact the band will have priority at the Hawley Field location will give them “a sense of belonging.”

“This new field will give these students a sense of pride and give them a sense of ownership in a place where they belong,” Williams said, “and it’s only dedicated to them.”

Dean Keith Jackson is side-by-side on-screen with Williams, nodding in agreement.

Additionally, documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act reveal that the Pride of West Virginia will have to share the field built at Mylan Park. That field will be rented out for community athletic events and tournaments. On October 22, 2023, County Commissioner Tom Bloom sent an email to Keith Jackson, discussing alumni and donor objections to the Mylan Park plan. In the email, Bloom states that donors were complaining that Mylan Park, “is going to make money because the community might be able to use (the field). They truly believed that this field would be used (by the marching band), and then just sit there.”

WVU and Mylan Park officials refused to answer Vernissage Magazine questions about whether the Pride of West Virginia will receive any portion of the fees Mylan Park receives for renting out the athletic field built with the band’s private donations.

Of the three reasons that College of Creative Arts Dean Keith Jackson gave for moving the Pride Practice Facility to Mylan Park, all are directly contradicted by West Virginia University documents, statements made by Jackson and other administrators, and by numerous university and WVU Foundation solicitations made to prospective donors.

In summary: every single one of the reasons College of Creative Arts Dean Keith Jackson presented to donors to try to justify the diversion of $1.25 million contributed to build an on-campus practice facility is directly contradicted by official WVU documents, as well as other verifiable university sources:

  • Drainage Issues: WVU internal documents show no drainage issues at Hawley Field, and University construction plans include adequate drainage in the first phase of facility construction. Jackson and the University have refused to produce documentation of alleged drainage concerns.
  • Lack of Space: WVU internal documents and Pride Practice Facility feasibility and architectural plans demonstrate adequate space at Hawley Field for all phases of the promised Pride Practice Facility.
  • Priority Usage: WVU internal documents, University media announcements, University and WVU Foundation donor solicitations and marketing material, and public statements made by marching band administrators all clearly demonstrate the Pride would be the priority user of the promised Hawley Field facility.

In the wake of the decision to use The Pride’s $1.25 million in contributions to build a field at Mylan Park, the WVU Foundation – which is legally responsible for proper use of donations – raised no objection. In November of 2023, Vernissage Magazine asked WVU Foundation President and CEO Cindi Roth about the legality of funding the Mylan Park field. In letter dated November 3, Roth’s responded, “funds that have been donated for the purpose of constructing a new marching band facility will indeed be used for that purpose. The funds will be disbursed for the construction of the WVU owned practice facility and will not be diverted to the Mylan Park Foundation or any other intermediary.”

In other words, the WVU Foundation will pay directly for the field at Mylan Field.

Asked how the Foundation could justify redirecting donations that were solicited explicitly for an on-campus Pride Practice Facility, Roth responded by simply  parroting Jackson’s assertions. Roth wrote: “As the University continued to plan for a new practice facility, several issues evolved with the on-campus site. Priority usage, drainage issues and space concerns led the leadership team to look for a new space…”

Roth then pointed to the College of Creative Arts website: “See the WVU Pride Practice Facility FAQ for this and other information about the project and the benefits of locating this facility at Mylan Park.”

Donors, however, were more far skeptical than Roth of Jackson’s justifications.

“I swear the more that comes out about this the less impressed I am,” wrote alumni Shaun Moyers in an alumni chatroom after reading Jackson’s letter. “It seems like the administration is just throwing shit against the wall and hoping that it will stick. Still seems shady as hell.”

 

‘Sooner’ is Three Years Later

In his “Letter from the Dean” Keith Jackson states that because of the alleged issues at Hawley Field, “The University approached Mylan Park with the option of building the practice field and facility there. After several conversations, the decision was made to enter into the partnership agreement,” with Mylan Park.

On October 24, 2023, an online FAQ was posted on the College of Creative Arts Band website, replacing the page that was soliciting funds for the on-campus Pride Practice Facility. The FAQ states that a groundbreaking for the Mylan Park field will be held in early 2024, noting: “…this project will be completed by August 2024, allowing the band to practice on the turf-field much sooner than anticipated.”

Keith Jackson made the same statement in his letter, writing that the artificial turf field would be ready for the band, “…much sooner than anticipated.”

But documents obtained by Vernissage Magazine through the Freedom of Information Act reveal that WVU had already collected enough money to build the promised on-campus practice field three years ago. In March of 2021, WVU’s construction services reported: “WVU has secured enough funds to construct Phase 1 of the project, which includes the practice field, with lights and band tower.”

That same month, Jackson posted a message to Alumni Band members, thanking them for their support of the Pride Practice Facility during the WVU Foundation’s ‘Day of Giving’ fundraising drive:

“We have been overwhelmed with the outpouring of love you showed for the band this week…” Jackson wrote. “What I can tell you with certainty is thanks to your support on Wednesday, we met the goal that was established by University leadership to hold a groundbreaking this fall. And that, my friends, is reason to celebrate!”

The WVU Foundation’s Roth at the 2021 Hawley Field Groundbreaking

That groundbreaking for the promised Pride Practice Facility was held on the Evansdale Campus on October 3, 2021. College of Creative Arts Dean Keith Jackson spoke at that event. So did Cindi Roth, President and CEO of the WVU Foundation, and WVU President Gordon Gee. According to media reports, both Gee and Roth told the assembled crowd about how terrific they thought the marching band is, and why it truly deserves to be called “The Pride of West Virginia”.

Roth told those in attendance that The Pride of West Virginia should have its new field by the fall of 2022. “Mountaineers come through,” Roth said to the crowd. “But there’s nothing like bandsmen and bandswomen. They are so passionate.”

Now many of those bandsmen and bandswomen – present and past – want to know why Cindi Roth’s WVU Foundation, College of Creative Arts Dean Keith Jackson, members of WVU’s administration, and the Monongalia County Commission, are working together to divert the band’s donated funds to benefit Mylan Park, without regard for how the move might affect the Pride of West Virginia.

“The passion here is real,” said alumna Mary Ann Burbank. “The bait and switch is absurd.”

The documents obtained by Vernissage Magazine show that as recently as spring of 2023, University Administrators were still planning to hold a second groundbreaking on the Hawley Field site. On March 24, 2023, WVU Vice Provost Paul Kreider wrote an email to WVU Foundation Executive Vice President and Chief Development Officer B.J. Davisson. Under the heading, ‘RE: Pride Practice Facility’ Kreider wrote: “We have a ceremonial groundbreaking that is being scheduled. Keith (Jackson) is working with Facilities folks to schedule.”

That same month, the WVU Foundation featured the promised on-campus Pride Practice Facility in its 2023 spring ‘Day of Giving’ fundraising campaign. So many donors contributed to the Pride Practice Facility on that one day that they unlocked a special challenge, providing an additional $40,000 for the promised on- campus complex for the benefit of, in the Foundation’s words: “our deserving band students.”

Kreider and several other WVU officials refused to answer a series of Vernissage Magazine questions about why that planned 2023 groundbreaking was never held, or why the Pride Practice Facility, in just four months’ time, became a football field at Mylan Park built with the Pride’s donated funds.

Officials of both WVU and the WVU Foundation refused to answer Vernissage questions about why, after the October 2021 groundbreaking, construction on the promised Hawley Field site never started, even though the project was – according to internal university documents – “fully funded.”

WVU employees who were assigned to manage construction of the Pride Practice Facility also refused, through a university spokesperson, to respond to Vernissage Magazine questions about why the Pride Practice Facility was never built, even though their own department records clearly indicate that the university had collected enough money to fund the project.

“The absolute silence from the people in administrative positions is deafening,” donor Nick Crites wrote in the alumni chatroom, “The fact is there has been absolutely no one to step forward and answer our laundry list of questions should tell you that something is not quite above board here.”

Keith Jackson and Tom Bloom did not respond to questions from Vernissage Magazine. Neither individual responded when provided the opportunity to comment on the contents of this article.

In January 2024, Keith Jackson was named dean of the new College of Creative Arts and Media, which will combine the College of Creative Arts and the Reed College of Media. West Virginia University administrators have refused to answer questions about Dean Keith Jackson’s involvement in the scheme to divert $1.25 million in WVU donor contributions to benefit the privately-owned Mylan Park.

 

In the next Vernissage Magazine article:

  • Donors have serious questions for those planning to use their contributions at Mylan Park. County Commissioner Tom Bloom responds: “Why do they have to give answers to you?”
  • Dean Keith Jackson calls building a field for Mylan Park, “a gesture of good will and community engagement.”

Download a PDF of this article: Pride and Prevarication Part 6 – The Dean of Deceit.docx

Pride and Prevarication – Part 6 -The Dean of Deceit © 2024 by Vernissage LLC – John D. McPherson is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0