I'm part of the community at a small private non-profit school. (Harrisburg University of Science and Technology) The school is new, only gaining accreditation a few years ago. We have a total enrollment of around 300 students with less than 10 full-time faculty and a pile of "corporate faculty" (adjuncts.)
When the full-time faculty were hired, they were told they had an initial one year contract, then they would be offered multi-year contracts thereafter. This was verbal and not in writing. The institution does not offer tenure as part of its "innovative new approach to higher education". The president is fond of bragging about this to the public, he has said more than once that the faculty get contracts rather than tenure. Jeff Selingo blogged about it:
http://chronicle.com/blogs/next/2011/10/20/where-will-innovation-begin/ The president said "the institution offers 12-month contracts, and is now considering multiyear contracts."
5+ years have gone by and the school has simply refused to offer multi-year contracts to any of the faculty. Hence, the faculty have sought out legal advice and learned that they probably don't even have contracts, but they might. They get a statement of benefits every year, they are told that the faculty handbook is their contract (this is not in writing, but what the provost tells them). The faculty handbook does not contain a disclaimer saying it isn't a contract and it does contain language such as "must" and "will" rather than just aspirational language such as "should". However, Pennsylvania is an "at-will" state, it seems it's pretty hard to overcome that presumption. It seems the biggest problem is that they don't have a written contract that spells out the terms of their employment.
Have any of you experienced anything like this? Advice?
Note: In the interest of full disclosure, I'm the school's harshest critic. I write a watchdog blog about the institution. But this is an honest question, the faculty need your advice.