The Spark of Controversy at Mott Community College
In the heart of Flint, Michigan, Mott Community College—a public two-year institution serving over 6,000 students annually—finds itself at the center of a heated debate over religious expression in higher education. The controversy erupted publicly in early 2026 when allegations surfaced that President Shaunda Richardson-Snell had engaged in proselytizing, or actively seeking to convert others to Christianity, during official college events and interactions. This has ignited discussions on governance, the boundaries of personal faith in public roles, and the delicate balance required in taxpayer-funded institutions.
Mott Community College, established in 1923, has long been a cornerstone for affordable education in Genesee County, offering associate degrees, workforce training, and pathways to four-year universities. With a diverse student body reflecting Flint's industrial heritage and resilient community spirit, the college emphasizes inclusivity. Yet, recent events have tested that commitment, drawing national attention from organizations like Americans United for Separation of Church and State.
Detailed Allegations Against the President
The core complaint stems from multiple reported incidents beginning in October 2024. One pivotal event occurred during the college's annual Peace and Dignity Ceremony on Indigenous Peoples' Day. Wayne Wilson, a member of the Navajo Nation from Arizona and co-founder of the event, shared his experiences surviving a Christian-run federal Indian boarding school—sites notorious for cultural erasure and abuse. Following his remarks, Richardson-Snell allegedly approached him privately and asked if he had "been saved and accepted Jesus as his lord and savior." This question, critics argue, reopened historical wounds and leveraged her authority inappropriately.
Other accounts include a conversation with a student discussing artificial intelligence, where she reportedly referenced the "one truth" tied to her beliefs and warned of a global struggle involving the devil. Additionally, during negotiations with the faculty union president over a collective bargaining agreement, she allegedly stated that "God was on her side." Reports also mention her reciting the Lord's Prayer after the Pledge of Allegiance at public board meetings, though this practice predates her tenure.
These interactions, while brief, have been framed by detractors as creating an environment where non-Christians feel marginalized, potentially influencing professional dynamics like grievances or evaluations.
The Board of Trustees' Response and Special Meeting
Faculty concerns first reached human resources in October 2024, prompting an internal investigation by board attorney Carey DeWitt. Citing the Supreme Court's Kennedy v. Bremerton School District (2022)—which protected a coach's personal prayer—the attorney concluded no violation of the Establishment Clause (prohibiting government endorsement of religion) or Free Exercise Clause occurred. A response reaffirmed policies protecting religious expression while urging caution.
In December 2025, Americans United sent a formal letter demanding the behavior cease, warning of constitutional breaches. Three trustees called a special board meeting on February 18, 2026, attended by about 75 people. President Richardson-Snell was absent due to a conference. Public comment lasted two hours, split evenly. The board entered closed session, emerging to postpone action on Trustee Santino Guerra's draft statement—affirming religious freedom alongside inclusivity—until February 23. Trustee John H. Daly plans to propose an independent probe.
Voices from the Community: Divided Perspectives
Public testimony revealed deep divisions. Supporters, including local ministers like Miosha Robinson from Good Church, argued: "There is no separation of faith and self. What was done was an expression of who she is." Lou Penton emphasized constitutional rights: "People have died for that freedom." Katherine Bussard of Salt & Light Global invoked free speech: "The answer is never censorship. It’s more free speech."
Opponents, such as retired professor Celia Perez Booth, decried insensitivity: "How can we trust you when you use your position to disrespect us?" Faculty union president Brian Littleton called it "off-putting," stressing authority's limits. Former trustee Michael Freeman demanded transparency: "If violations occurred, she should resign." Parent Elizabeth Jordan highlighted role differentiation: "This is public conduct at a college event."
- Pro: Protected personal expression, no coercion.
- Con: Power imbalance erodes neutrality.
This split mirrors broader tensions in Flint's recovering community.
Photo by Peniel Padre on Unsplash
Legal Framework: Navigating Establishment Clause Challenges
Public colleges must adhere to the First Amendment's dual protections: Free Exercise (right to practice faith) and Establishment Clause (no government favoritism). Employees enjoy speech rights as private citizens but face limits in official capacities to avoid endorsing religion. The Lemon test (purpose, effect, entanglement) historically guided, but recent rulings like Kennedy prioritize history and context.ACLU guidelines affirm student proselytizing but caution staff.
At Mott, the attorney's reliance on Kennedy views interactions as personal, not coercive. Critics invoke cases like school prayer bans, arguing presidential authority amplifies endorsement.
President Richardson-Snell's Background and Hiring
Shaunda Richardson-Snell, a Flint native, brings corporate prowess: executive roles in finance at General Motors, Delphi (through bankruptcy), Trinity Health, and TI Fluid Systems. Holding an MBA, she transitioned to Mott as interim president in July 2024 amid the prior president's contentious exit, made permanent in May 2025 without a national search—a decision fueling governance critiques. Her local ties and advocacy for Mott students were praised, but lack of higher education experience drew fire.
As principal of Aquila Advisors, she emphasizes empowerment, aligning with supporters' views of her faith-driven leadership.
Mott's Governance History and Ongoing Challenges
Mott has weathered turbulence: Former President Beverly Walker-Griffea's 2024 departure amid board conflicts, including a $300,000 payout. Board meetings often chaotic, with transparency lapses. The recall effort against trustees highlights entrenched issues. This proselytizing row exacerbates calls for reform, questioning hiring processes and accountability.Explore leadership roles in higher ed amid such debates.
National Context: Similar Cases in U.S. Higher Education
While rare for presidents, parallels exist: coaches proselytizing (protected post-Kennedy), faculty prayers, student Bible clubs (ACLU-defended). Community colleges face scrutiny over chaplains or events. Policies urge neutrality: no official endorsement, but personal expression allowed if non-coercive. Mott's case tests post-2022 jurisprudence.
Photo by Carina Maria on Unsplash
Implications for Community Colleges and Future Outlook
This debate underscores risks: eroded trust, lawsuits, accreditation woes. Solutions include clear policies, training on religious expression, diverse hiring. For Mott, Feb 23 meeting looms—possible statement, probe. Broader: reinforces need for inclusive governance in public higher ed.
Stakeholders urge training: define proselytizing (persistent conversion attempts), step-by-step: assess context, intent, impact. Concrete examples from ACLU guides aid compliance.
- Benefits of policies: fosters dialogue, prevents litigation.
- Risks: chilling speech, division.
Stakeholder Perspectives and Actionable Insights
Experts like Ian Smith (Americans United) warn of exclusion signals. Opinion writers like Kaitlyn Buss decry selective diversity: "Diversity stops at religion?"
Statistics: 30% U.S. community college students identify religious; policies balance rights. Future: potential Supreme Court clarity, but local resolution key.Read full Inside Higher Ed coverage.
Engage via Rate My Professor or explore community college jobs. For admins, higher ed executive jobs demand nuanced leadership.