Jim Fiore

Jim Fiore
Born James D. Fiore Jr.
August 13, 1968
Long Beach, NY
Nationality American
Alma mater Hofstra University
Occupation CEO
Employer Dynamic Sports Management

James D. Fiore Jr. (born August 13, 1968) is an American, who has worked in education since 1999. He served as the Senior Associate Director of Athletics at Princeton University until 2003, before taking on the role of Director of Athletics at Stony Brook University from 2003 to 2013.[1]

During his time at the University, Fiore oversaw the financial measures that balanced the athletic budget yearly since 2005 and grown the department from $9 million to over $24 million in the 2010-11 academic year. He was also responsible for the improvement of various sports facilities at the university.

He controversially left his role at Stony Brook University in 2013 amid allegations of sexual harassment and other contractual issues. An independent New York State investigation ruled that none of the accusations about Fiore were sustained. Since then, no case has ever been proven that Fiore committed the crimes he was accused of by the individual. ESPN reported that Stony Brook University used a buyout rather than termination of cause to end its connection with Fiore.

Early life

Jim Fiore is a native of Long Beach, NY. Fiore graduated from Long Beach High School and went on to earn his Bachelor of Arts degree from Hofstra University, where he played free safety for the football team (1988–90).[2] He continued his education at Springfield College earning a M.Ed in Athletic Administration in 1994. While at Springfield, Fiore received an Athletic Administration Fellowship (1992–94) allowing him to intern and work with Directors of Athletics while pursuing his education.

Administrative career

From 1999 to 2003 he held the position Senior Associate Director of Athletics at Princeton University. He was assistant athletic director Dartmouth College from 1995 until 1999, after having been a compliance intern at Fordham University.[3]

Stony Brook (2003-2013)

As athletic Director of Stony Brook University, Fiore oversaw the financial measures that balanced the athletic budget yearly since 2005 and grown the Department from $9 million to over $24 million in 2010-11 academic year.[4] In his tenure, the athletic department captured significant donations from the alumni community, and funding from the state which allowed Stony Brook to upgrade most of its facilities. Facility upgrades include: a $1.5 million renovation of Pritchard Gymnasium in 2008, $21.1 million renovation of the Stony Brook University Arena set for completion in 2014,[5][6] a new strength & conditioning center completed in 2012 privately funded by a $4.3 million gift from alumnus Glenn Dubin,[7] a $1 million overhaul of the baseball facility funded in large part by alumnus Joe Nathan,[8][9] a $3 million overhaul of University Track completed in July 2011,[10] a Student-athlete development center funded by a $1.2 million gift by alumnus Stuart Goldstein in 2008,[11] and a reconstruction of the University Tennis Complex. A $10 million renovation of University Swimming Pool was set for completion in 2013, but was not completed. The pool was closed, and the renovation defunded, leaving both the men's and women's teams on indefinite hiatus.[12]

The University received a single complaint within the athletic department. Yet despite an independent investigation conducted by the New York State of Office of Labor Relations, no contract violation or violation of SUNY policy, regulation or statute was sustained. Fiore was paid nearly $800,000. His contract permitted termination for cause if such grounds existed.[13] "We got a single complaint within the athletic department from one university employee. We took the complaint seriously and acted promptly to understand and respond to the issues raised," Stony Brook spokeswoman Lauren Sheprow said. "The university takes all claims of discrimination and sexual harassment seriously and reviews them in a timely manner."[14]

However, excerpts from an investigative article by espnW (November 26, 2013) state the following - Fiore routinely sent inappropriate text messages from his university phone to female staff members and student-athletes, sources said. Multiple sources confirmed that Fiore would make casual threats, reminding female student-athletes that he could take away their scholarships if he wanted. He also allegedly touched female student-athletes in inappropriate ways, such as massaging their shoulders and, in one instance, rubbing the inner thigh of an athlete who was rehabilitating a leg injury, according to sources. "The way he carried himself around female athletes made us very uncomfortable," said one former student-athlete at Stony Brook. "If we saw him in the hallway, we would turn the other way or hide in the bathroom. What made it difficult was that he was the athletic director, so you couldn't say, 'Back off.'" Another source said that Fiore seemed to target younger staff members: "He thrived on these types of power plays." Numerous women who have worked within the Stony Brook athletic department said they often walked a circuitous route to their offices to avoid passing the suite where Fiore's office was located. Sources close to the athletic department said that senior staff members, including Woodruff and Larsen, were afraid of Fiore. "In this field, you're not going to get another job if you say something isn't right," one source said. "That drove a lot of people to silence." According to one document, which was not ruled upon, Stony Brook failed to interview key female coaches, staff and administrators when conducting its internal investigation into Fiore's alleged misconduct. (Source: ESPN) [15]

He was handed a letter that formalized the termination in the form of a buyout of the remaining 31 months of his contract for nearly $800,000.[16] No specific reason for the decision was given to Fiore, and there was no communication from Stanley. No negotiations were involved in the buyout, which is reportedly being paid as a lump sum, because the university was acting under SUNY Board of Trustees Policy Article XI, Title D, Section 6 (g) (1), which states, in part: "Except in cases of discipline or retrenchment, in the event the University elects to terminate a term appointment before the expiration of the term, the University shall compensate the individual up to the maximum of the time remaining on the term appointment. "The policy speaks for itself," SBU media relations officer Lauren M. Sheprow said in an email to Newsday. Sheprow declined requests to interview Stanley and interim athletic director Donna Woodruff.[17] Stony Brook University has been the beneficiary of over $200 million since 2005 donated by James Simons (a hedge fund billionaire and former Stony Brook professor), and so in absence of official word it has been reasoned that Fiore was paid off the remainder of his contract to avoid legal wrangling potentially resulting in delay of his termination and lingering embarrassment to the university with accusations piling up, including molestation, retaliation, and harassment of subordinates, as according to the ESPN article[15] with Fiore at the helm "The environment within the athletic department was hostile, toxic even."

Contradicting Fiore's posture that he was let go for convenience, not cause, at the opening of the renovated Stony Brook Arena in 2014, the chief project of Fiore's tenure, his name was not mentioned by any speaker, including Stanley (the university president who had fired him). Nonetheless, on his self promotional page at "Dynamic Sports Management", a Long Island, NY Lacrosse organization, where he is partner and CEO, Fiore boasted of not only having raised $25 million for the Stony Brook Arena but also to have designed it.[18]

Personal

Fiore was married to Lisa Fiore. They have a child named Michael. Fiore's father (Jim Fiore Sr) was a police officer and football coach in Long Beach, NY; he lost his battle with cancer in 2012. Fiore's mother, Roberta Fiore, is the founder and trustee of the Long Beach Historical Society.

See also

References

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