Whoa, UT on the board! UT was my undergraduate alma mater and I really wanna jump in on this convo.
I really only heard one or two inappropriate faculty rumours as an undergrad, but they were there and it was a weird environment. I think a lot of it springs from the fact that a lot of my lecturers and teachers were really young. Of course, most of these people are graduate students and that blurs the lines and makes it complicated, but it also seems like grad students didn't get a lot of pedagogical training. If I'm not mistaken, there is no intense teaching seminar like some other graduate schools. Also, UT went under a massive legislative funding hit, most likely because of it's political sway (blue school, red state... not great.) For this reason, nobody - from professors to admin - is getting hired, and a lot of programs, namely liberal arts, are being super cut. Yay, Texas! Finally, UT is a giant - I mean giant - school. The largest concentration of French classes is, of course, in the core beginning and intermediate classes. Grad students don't ever seem to stray out of these classes, which is typical, but can stink if you're wanting to more speciality TA. UT also started making the shift to online beginner and intermediate classes, which might either appease you or turn you off.
But UT does have one really big strength, and it's linguistics. UT's program doesn't really boast a singular "strength" when you look at their site, but I had some phenomenal linguistics classes as an undergrad, and I'm not even a linguist. French linguistics faculty is much larger at UT. One professor I had is kicking ass with media linguistics and teaching materials all over the nation. You can do literature or culture, but there's really only one professor per era and they are indeed packed with meetings and other students. One of the literature professors advised me and he was absolutely phenomenal, but I always felt for the guy because he always seemed to have a line out his door. Africa/Francophonie professors and 1960s-on is almost completely non-existant, but a lot of people do Arabic/French linguistics. Essentially, If you're into linguistics, UT isn't a bad option, it seems way more flexible. Repeating what tom said, the professors who are good (most of them) are outstanding. But again, you may have to deal with the massive shortage UT is facing.
ETA: HOLY GOD 24% retention @misterdog?! I had no idea it was that low! I did hear some candidates left, but wow...