97-03-21 Mary Schiavo, Former FAA Inspector, Joins Faculty FORMER U.S. TRANSPORTATION INSPECTOR GENERAL JOINS FACULTY COLUMBUS -- The Ohio State University's new Enarson Professor of Public Policy and Management hopes to inspire students to follow in her footsteps and take action against government waste and corruption. Mary Fackler Schiavo will begin her teaching assignments as 1997 Enarson Executive in Residence spring quarter. A former Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Transportation, with oversight authority over the FAA, Schiavo gained national attention for blowing the whistle on lax FAA enforcement and inspections, and for revealing safety problems at VALUJET and other airlines. She also demonstrated many problems with airline and airport security and recovered millions of dollars in claims against manufacturers of bogus airline parts. Frustrated by an unwillingness in Washington to bring change to the FAA, Schiavo has written a soon-to-be-released book that documents problems and crimes in the aviation industry. It will be excerpted on 60 Minutes on March 23 and in Time Magazine on March 24. "We are excited to bring Professor Schiavo to Ohio State," said C. Ronald Huff, director of the School of Public Policy and Management. "She has a wealth of experience in government and will be a memorable teacher." A native of northwest Ohio, Schiavo attended Ohio State University twice--obtaining her pilot's license and completing her freshman and sophomore classes in 1973-74. She completed her bachelor's degree at Harvard and returned to Ohio State to earn a master's degree in public administration in 1977. She received her law degree from New York University in 1980. Schiavo has been named a White House Fellow and an OSU University Fellow. During her one-year tenure as Enarson Professor, Schiavo will teach five courses, including a course on practical politics and how politics affects the works of government. She will also teach 'Ethics for Public Officials' and 'Hands-on Common Sense Management' and will deliver several other lectures and workshops. "The FAA makes a perfect case study", says Schiavo. "While in Washington, it was my job to help improve the FAA. I testified before Congress about the same problems again and again: airline inspection, airline security. Nothing was much changed. The FAA is supposed to be a safety agency but they look the other way. So I wrote this book and blew the whistle on them. Something has got to get through to them. Perhaps the public can." Schiavo believes there are many similar issues that deserve attention and hopes to teach her students to take a stand against waste and corruption. "Who better than the fresh minds at Ohio State to do it," she says. "I had a wonderful whirlwind first year of college here," says Schiavo. "It is my first love." She also says the timing of her return--as it relates to the fortunes of the football team--is no coincidence. "The last time I was here, they won the Rose Bowl. Now that they've won it again, I can come back." The Enarson Executive-in-Residence is an endowment initiated by former Ohio State President Harold Enarson (who was a Professor of Public Policy and Management) and his wife, Audrey. The Enarson Professorship is a position offered to a recognized professional with extensive government experience. Schiavo is the third Enarson Professor, succeeding former state budget directors Bill Shkurti and Lee Walker. # CONTACT: Amy Murray, University Communications, 292-8385, or Mary Schiavo (pronounced Ski-AH-voe), (614) 292-7468 (after March 31). Ms. Schiavo will be traveling next week to promote her book; contact can be arranged through Amy Murray, 292-8385. [Submitted by: Ruth Gerstner (gerstner.2@osu.edu) Fri, 21 Mar 1997 16:34:18 -0500] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.