Home Christian News Princeton Theological Seminary Students, Alumni Seek Ouster of Trustee Chair

Princeton Theological Seminary Students, Alumni Seek Ouster of Trustee Chair

Princeton Theological Seminary
The original building of the Princeton Theological Seminary, patterned after Nassau Hall, and designed by John McComb, Jr. Built in 1814. Djkeddie, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

(RNS) — Princeton Theological Seminary students and alumni have called on the educational institution’s leaders to oust the chair of its trustee board because of his ties to a company that charges high fees for inmates to communicate with people outside prison walls.

“We, the undersigned students and alumni of Princeton Theological Seminary, demand the immediate removal of Michael Fisch from the Board of Trustees, as well as the adoption of deliberate and transparent policies on appointing and maintaining board members who reflect the anti-slavery theological commitments of the seminary,” reads their letter to President Jonathan Lee Walton and the board of trustees.

The March 14 letter was released by Worth Rises, an organization focused on “dismantling the prison industry,” and included more than 300 signatures.

Fisch is a founder of American Securities, a private equity company that owns ViaPath, a large prison telecommunications company. Such companies, the letter writers say, “charge as much as $15 per 15-minute phone call, essentially monopolizing commissions extracted from impoverished families and captive consumers.”

A spokesperson for American Securities, which also owns household appliance companies, declined to comment when asked for a response from the company or from Fisch, a managing director of its investment team.

Princeton Theological Seminary declined to comment on American Securities but provided a statement from Walton, who became the seminary’s first Black president on Jan. 1.

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“I recognize the complicated web of injustice we face in our society and believe that Princeton Theological Seminary can and should be a leader in addressing injustice in all its forms. As an institution, we must continue to strive for greater transparency and ethical responsibility including shared governance,” he stated.

“As I continue to embrace my new role as President, I look forward to ongoing engagement with the Seminary community across various issues with deeper reflection and action.”

On its website, ViaPath describes its mission as “to help break the cycle of incarceration through transformative technology and services for incarcerated individuals, their support network, correctional agencies, and returning citizens.”

Princeton alumni and students — including some who have worked with imprisoned people and their families as chaplains, counselors and social workers — say the company gains profits more than it improves connections for people in prison.