The one defense for the search firm that is beginning to grate is the "it's
only $5o-100K" defense.
It's thinking like that has driven the cost of college to what it is -- way, way out of whack. 50K here, 100K there and pretty soon it adds up to real money -- and anyone paying off a college loan, paying for someone's college now, or saving for college knows that very well. And at UConn, student activity fees cover a pretty big part of the athletic budget, enough to put
UConn among the national leaders in that category.
It's the donors, ticket buyers -- and fee-paying students -- who are subsidizing this search. I don't have a problem with UConn's activity fee, but I think Warde has an extra-special responsibility to spend responsibly given how much students are underwriting his budget. Vet his top candidates, responsible. This other "opening doors, reaching out, keeping stuff below the radar" stuff, not so much.
Unless Bob Burton or somebody similar wants to pony up Parker's fee, maybe Warde ought to skip it this time -- or take a 10-20 percent pay cut this year to cover Parker's fee. (Given his strong relationship with Parker, it seems like he should have no problem making it back down the road).
This whole "we gotta use a search firm" thing is a very small symptom of a much, much larger problem in campus bureaucracies, especially big-time athletic bureaucracies. Spending money with little thought to where it's coming from. Some smart people figured out there was good coin to be made, and something that barely existed 15 years now has been sold to be indispensable. Gotta give that selling job credit, they've certainly swayed a lot of people here.