How North Idaho College’s accreditation fell under threat

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Nick Swayne is the president of North Idaho College. He’s been president of the Coeur d’Alene community college since March 2023 — or, depending on your perspective, since August 2022. 

That discrepancy is because Swayne was placed on administrative leave for undisclosed reasons by the college’s trustee board in December 2022 and replaced with an interim president. Then, he sued the board to get his job back. 

“I came here to be the president, not sit in my house and collect a paycheck,” he said in an interview.

Swayne’s personal saga is just one aspect of the dysfunction that has been plaguing North Idaho College’s board and has threatened its accreditation. Multiple lawsuits over the board’s behavior, along with no-confidence votes from college employees and frequent turnover in leadership, also caught the eye of the institution’s accreditor, the Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities. 

The NWCCU has placed the North Idaho College on show-cause order — the last step before the agency can pull accreditation and has given officials until April 2025 to fix key issues.

Losing accreditation is a death sentence for most colleges, which rely on this seal of approval to receive federal financial aid. More than one-third of the college’s students, 38%, received Pell Grants in the 2021-22 academic year, and 28% received federal student loans, according to government data. 

However, Swayne and others say the campus community is cautiously optimistic that the college will be able to overcome its past to remain an accredited anchor institution in northern Idaho. 

A culture war unfolds

Over the past year, North Idaho College was sanctioned by its accreditor, had its debt downgraded over “governance and management dysfunction,” and was ordered by a court to reinstate Swayne. The institution has also been juggling lawsuits, including the board’s appeal of Swayne’s case. 

The cost of lawyers, board training and administrative leave payments has reached tens of thousands of dollars

Many in the North Idaho College community say the issues that have brought the institution to this point are, at their core, ideological. The situation has drawn comparisons to that at the New School of Florida, where staunch conservatives have sought to remake the institution by pushing back against “woke” doctrine.

In November 2020, nonpartisan elections for North Idaho College trustee positions ended with a political bloc of conservatives taking the majority. Only a few months later, local human rights task forces sent a complaint to the college’s accreditor, asking for an investigation. 

One of the organizations — the Kootenai County Task Force on Human Relations —formed in the 1980s, when the Aryan Nations used Kootenai County, Idaho, as its headquarters. But in 2021, the task force instead took aim at the chair of North Idaho College’s governing board, a member of the Republican bloc named Todd Banducci. The task forces accused Banducci of aggressive behavior and of stifling academic freedom

He had told a student via email that he hoped to help with getting a grade changed that the student received over a class presentation on abortion.

“I’m battling the NIC ‘deep state’ on an almost daily basis,” Banducci wrote in an email to a student in January 2021. “The liberal progressives are quite deeply entrenched.” 

In response to an emailed request for comment, Banducci wrote, “I won’t give credence to the various fabrications, falsehoods, & fictions that have been viciously used against me.” Other board members did not respond to requests for comment.

In September 2021, the board voted to fire then-President Rick MacLennan without cause. No stated reason was given for the dismissal, but trustees had bristled at MacLennan’s decisions to implement mask mandates in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Shortly after, the board promoted North Idaho College’s wrestling coach, Michael Sebaaly, who has a doctorate in educational leadership, to interim president. 

According to MacLennan, his firing spurred an exodus of top officials.

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