EPISODE · Aug 1, 2025 · 2 MIN
What Texas A&M is doing to comply with a governor's executive order regarding "foreign adversaries"
from WTAW - Interviews · host Bryan Broadcasting
This podcast contains comments from the July 14, 2025 Texas A&M faculty senate meeting.In November 2024, the governor issued an executive order banning state agencies, including state universities, from doing business with five countries and a politician he described as "foreign adversaries".At the July meeting of the Texas A&M faculty senate, members hear the results of a committee that developed how to carry out what is nicknamed G-A 48.Click HERE to read and download executive order G-A 48.Click HERE to read and download presentation materials from the July 14, 2025 Texas A&M faculty senate meeting.A&M compliance officer Jason Boyle said he is not personally optimistic of any changes being made to the ban applying to China, Russia, Iran, North Korea, and Cuba and the Venezuelan politician Nicolás Maduro.Boyle also said one obstacle in finalizing the university's policy was getting consistency with other A&M system agencies.Seven areas that are covered in G-A 48 are:Certification that vendors are not listed on an adversaries listNo personnel can accept gifts from a foreign adversary entity or travel for TAMU purposes to a foreign adversary countryApplicants must attest they are not connected to a foreign adversaryNotification of personal travel to a country on the foreign adversary listEnsuring personnel that have access to critical infrastructure can maintain security and do not have criminal history or connections to foreign adversariesThe reporting of foreign gift and contract disclosures to the Texas Higher Education Coordinating BoardThe prohibition of faculty and employees taking part in recruitment programs from foreign adversary nations
What this episode covers
This podcast contains comments from the July 14, 2025 Texas A&M faculty senate meeting.In November 2024, the governor issued an executive order banning state agencies, including state universities, from doing business with five countries and a politician he described as "foreign adversaries".At the July meeting of the Texas A&M faculty senate, members hear the results of a committee that developed how to carry out what is nicknamed G-A 48.Click HERE to read and download executive order G-A 48.Click HERE to read and download presentation materials from the July 14, 2025 Texas A&M faculty senate meeting.A&M compliance officer Jason Boyle said he is not personally optimistic of any changes being made to the ban applying to China, Russia, Iran, North Korea, and Cuba and the Venezuelan politician Nicolás Maduro.Boyle also said one obstacle in finalizing the university's policy was getting consistency with other A&M system agencies.Seven areas that are covered in G-A 48 are:Certification that vendors are not listed on an adversaries listNo personnel can accept gifts from a foreign adversary entity or travel for TAMU purposes to a foreign adversary countryApplicants must attest they are not connected to a foreign adversaryNotification of personal travel to a country on the foreign adversary listEnsuring personnel that have access to critical infrastructure can maintain security and do not have criminal history or connections to foreign adversariesThe reporting of foreign gift and contract disclosures to the Texas Higher Education Coordinating BoardThe prohibition of faculty and employees taking part in recruitment programs from foreign adversary nations
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What Texas A&M is doing to comply with a governor's executive order regarding "foreign adversaries"
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