Frankly, if Shelley Meyer didn't follow through with her promise to let her husband know about the abuse she saw with her own eyes, the court of "public opinion," will no doubt get to that as well. It always does.
As nurse she is obligated to report it. This will not only have an impact on her role as adjunct faculty, it could affect her license as well. (not that she needs either) I'm sure her position is nothing more than fluff and a way to funnel money to the Meyer family.
@BamaFan334, Come on tell us how you really feel!He on this then he should be gone! Right?
I personally think so. No sport or team should be above human decency. It pisses me off what happened at Penn State, it pisses me off what happened at Baylor, it pisses me off that someone like Meyer had knowledge of these things at Florida and let it still happen, and it pisses me off he is doing it again at another program. I just wish they would treat everything the same way they would treat it if it were their own family having to endure these instances. He gonna pat the guy on the back that beats one of his daughter's and still keep him close and act as if nothing ever happened?
I look at this as being similar to being a teacher. If a teacher suspects abuse, we can no longer simply pass the word onto the counselor and then the counselor contact DHR. If we fail to call, we are subject to being fired. Urban falls in with this. He can't deny knowing anything, when he dealt with it in '09 at Florida. He knew that there was a history. As an employee to a public institution of learning, he has an obligation to report. No plausible deniability!!!!!
@BamaFan334, Come on tell us how you really feel!He on this then he should be gone! Right?
I personally think so. No sport or team should be above human decency. It pisses me off what happened at Penn State, it pisses me off what happened at Baylor, it pisses me off that someone like Meyer had knowledge of these things at Florida and let it still happen, and it pisses me off he is doing it again at another program. I just wish they would treat everything the same way they would treat it if it were their own family having to endure these instances. He gonna pat the guy on the back that beats one of his daughter's and still keep him close and act as if nothing ever happened?
I look at this as being similar to being a teacher. If a teacher suspects abuse, we can no longer simply pass the word onto the counselor and then the counselor contact DHR. If we fail to call, we are subject to being fired. Urban falls in with this. He can't deny knowing anything, when he dealt with it in '09 at Florida. He knew that there was a history. As an employee to a public institution of learning, he has an obligation to report. No plausible deniability!!!!!
Just went through this training yesterday... And I'm not a teacher, just a HS coach.
We are obligated by law to report to our superior if there is physical or sexual abuse SUSPECTED. Not proven.
Also defended by the law if said suspicions are not reality.
"Position of Trust" is the label given to those of us working in schools. Not going to say I know it's the same for those working in Universities... My guess is that universities have some type of protocal/training related to the reporting process.
I look at this as being similar to being a teacher. If a teacher suspects abuse, we can no longer simply pass the word onto the counselor and then the counselor contact DHR. If we fail to call, we are subject to being fired. Urban falls in with this. He can't deny knowing anything, when he dealt with it in '09 at Florida. He knew that there was a history. As an employee to a public institution of learning, he has an obligation to report. No plausible deniability!!!!!
Just went through this training yesterday... And I'm not a teacher, just a HS coach.
We are obligated by law to report to our superior if there is physical or sexual abuse SUSPECTED. Not proven.
Also defended by the law if said suspicions are not reality.
"Position of Trust" is the label given to those of us working in schools. Not going to say I know it's the same for those working in Universities... My guess is that universities have some type of protocal/training related to the reporting process.
I should follow up this is in regards to the athletes/kids we are working with. Nothing really said about whether our co worker was beating his old lady... But looks like there was some language in Urby's contract about that stuff
I would say Mr Hinnen is laying it on a little heavy regarding Jon Taylor.

It's the use of Title IX that bothers me. The fact he lied about it is another part of the whole story.Urban had a new addendum added to his contract, that he clearly violated. He knew of, or reasonably should've known of the domestic violence taking place. He then lied about it, days after Smith was fired (and Smith was fired 15 minutes after McMurphy broke the story about the 2015 incident, which Meyer said was "made up").
I don't see it being legal to release Meyer under the Title IX umbrella if she isn't under the "Ohio State community." Title IX is about protection from ... it's not a prosecutor tool. She is a victim, but not one of Ohio State's compliance with Title IX.
The Penn State reference wasn't mine. It was one thrown out--almost as if it was a talking point--when they were discussing the societal impact (yes, *that's* what we watch ESPN for.)I'm not sure what your implications are, other than disagreeing with the magnitude of this transgression in that you don't believe it should be compared to Penn St. OK, that's kind of missing the larger point.
I agree, and disagree with the comparison. It's true in the sense it's a black eye for Meyer and Ohio State today. I disagree with trying to compare it to Penn State in any shape or form. Except one.
The NCAA had no business in the Penn State affair.
I'm having a hard time seeing how this is linked with Title IX (IF I'm supposed to take Title IX for what it is intended--equal treatment for people within a University's community.)
How do you feel that's the case when she's not employed by OSU and she's not a student at OSU? Marriage doesn't make her a part of the purview of Title IX.But I think that this particular victim WAS part of the University community,
This is conditional, isn't it? IE: If she's not treating her injuries, or if it's not in a hospital setting. I know there's a code of ethics here but how does it apply to situations where the individual isn't seeking medical help? Or, the victim isn't in a medical setting? Would she not have to be approached in the role of a RN versus that of a "friend?"As nurse she is obligated to report it. This will not only have an impact on her role as adjunct faculty, it could affect her license as well. (not that she needs either) I'm sure her position is nothing more than fluff and a way to funnel money to the Meyer family.
This is conditional, isn't it? IE: If she's not treating her injuries, or if it's not in a hospital setting. I know there's a code of ethics here but how does it apply to situations where the individual isn't seeking medical help? Or, the victim isn't in a medical setting? Would she not have to be approached in the role of a RN versus that of a "friend?"As nurse she is obligated to report it. This will not only have an impact on her role as adjunct faculty, it could affect her license as well. (not that she needs either) I'm sure her position is nothing more than fluff and a way to funnel money to the Meyer family.
Therein is a lot of what's going on here.Now whether there's the "be a good person" responsibility or common sense approach that this should be confronted or not is a different subject.
According to a legal health care expert in Ohio, Shelley Meyerās status as a registered nurse does not obligate her to report domestic violence allegations to police. If Courtney Smith was her patient, she could not legally report the allegations to police. Since she was not her patient, thereās neither a prohibition or obligation to report.As nurse she is obligated to report it. This will not only have an impact on her role as adjunct faculty, it could affect her license as well. (not that she needs either) I'm sure her position is nothing more than fluff and a way to funnel money to the Meyer family.
According to a legal health care expert in Ohio, Shelley Meyerās status as a registered nurse does not obligate her to report domestic violence allegations to police. If Courtney Smith was her patient, she could not legally report the allegations to police. Since she was not her patient, thereās neither a prohibition or obligation to report.As nurse she is obligated to report it. This will not only have an impact on her role as adjunct faculty, it could affect her license as well. (not that she needs either) I'm sure her position is nothing more than fluff and a way to funnel money to the Meyer family.
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