Tag Archives: University presidents

Montgomery College, in Maryland, Puts President on Leave for Rest of His Term

The Chronicle: Montgomery College, in Maryland, Puts President on Leave for Rest of His Term
Maryland’s Montgomery College Puts President on Leave

Brian K. Johnson, president of Montgomery College, has been placed on administrative leave with pay, the chairman of the Maryland institution’s Board of Trustees said after emerging from a four-hour closed-door meeting of the board on Thursday night.

U. of Illinois Chancellor Apologizes to Faculty

The Chronicle: U. of Illinois Chancellor Apologizes to Faculty

Richard Herman, the embattled chancellor of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, delivered a remorseful apology to the university’s Faculty Senate today over his role in the “clout” scandal, according to The News-Gazette, a local newspaper. Faculty members, who reportedly applauded after Mr. Herman’s speech, postponed their scheduled vote on a resolution calling for his resignation and that of B. Joseph White, the university system’s president.

Faculty Members at 2-Year College in Md. Vote No Confidence in President

The Chronicle: Faculty Members at 2-Year College in Md. Vote No Confidence in President

Professors at Montgomery College voted no confidence late Thursday in Brian K. Johnson, president of the prominent Maryland community college since 2007. About half the college’s full-time faculty members overwhelmingly passed a resolution criticizing Mr. Johnson’s leadership and alleging that he has consistently skipped important meetings and events.

Hartnell board cuts president’s salary

The Californian: Hartnell board cuts president’s salary

Hartnell College President Phoebe Helm and other administrators took a cut in pay Tuesday following a closed session vote by the board of trustees. The board approved a 10 percent salary reduction for Helm and 5 percent cut for administrators and other nonunion staff.

Wheeling Jesuit U fires president

Wheeling Register-News: WJU President Fired

Following closed door meetings this week, the Wheeling Jesuit University Board of Trustees has fired university president the Rev. Julio Giulietti, who has been at the helm since 2007.

According to reliable sources, the WJU Board of Directors had failed to reach a two-thirds majority vote to oust Giulietti, the university’s eighth president in its 55-year history. According to sources, the Board of Directors has 17-18 members. Sources added that the two-thirds majority was nearly achieved.

Zimpher’s early take on SUNY

Inside Higher Ed: An Early Take on SUNY

Nancy L. Zimpher, who became chancellor of the State University of New York on June 1, pledged to visit each of the 64 campuses within her first 100 days in office. She’s approaching the halfway mark of campuses — and took a brief detour to Washington this week to attend a meeting of the Coalition of Urban Serving Universities, a group she chairs.

UNLV prez demoted

Las Vegas Sun: For his lobbying, Ashley demoted
Regents: He was out of line to press budget issues

David Ashley knew going into Friday’s face-off with regents that he would have to defend his communication skills, his level of involvement in the community and possibly even how he handled his headstrong wife.

Greensboro College pres quits under fire

Greensboro News-Record: Williams retires as president of Greensboro College

Craven Williams, who helped revive an ailing Greensboro College when he became president in 1993 but in recent years watched the Methodist-affiliated school sink into mounting debt, abruptly retired Tuesday.

Less than two weeks after Williams, 69, dismissed suggestions that he step down, the college announced his retirement in a campus news release. It is effective immediately, according to a college spokeswoman.

Head of Aid Group Charged

Inside Higher Ed: Head of Aid Group Charged

Philip Day charged with felonies related to previous job as chancellor of City College of San Francisco, where he is accused of diverting funds to political activities.

College presidents eligible for bonuses during pay freeze

Inforum.com: College presidents eligible for bonuses during pay freeze

Presidents of Minnesota state colleges and universities can earn $3,000 to $15,000 in performance bonuses next school year even though faculty and staff pay is frozen for two years.

Presidents of Minnesota state colleges and universities can earn $3,000 to $15,000 in performance bonuses next school year even though faculty and staff pay is frozen for two years.

Presidents, including those at Minnesota State University Moorhead and Minnesota State Community and Technical College with one of four campuses in Moorhead, had the ability to earn $2,000 in performance pay for the fiscal year that just ended.

Michigan: Oakland U pres takes pay hike; freeze faculty salary

Detroit News: Oakland University negotiators still at table
President’s ’08 pay hike, then freezes, at issue

Faculty negotiations at Oakland University are beginning to heat up as the professors’ Aug. 14 contract is set to expire.

And if history is any indication, negotiations will likely come down to the last minute, possibly narrowly averting a professor strike hours before students begin fall classes, similar to the last contract talks in 2006.

College president picks fight with union, critics

Inside Higher Ed: So Sue Me

Contracts be damned. Kenneth A. Yowell, president of Edison Community College, in Ohio, believes he need not follow a union contract in deciding whose jobs to eliminate. Now, amid protest from faculty who already disapprove of his leadership, he is picking a fight with the local union to try to prove that he is well within his rights.

Texas A&M Regents Name an Interim Leader for Flagship

The Chronicle: Texas A&M Regents Name an Interim Leader for Flagship

One day after Elsa A. Murano announced her resignation as president of Texas A&M University’s main campus here, the university system’s Board of Regents on Monday appointed R. Bowen Loftin, leader of the system’s Galveston branch campus, as the flagship’s interim president.

Long-Serving President of U. of Virginia Will Retire Next Year

The Chronicle: Long-Serving President of U. of Virginia Will Retire Next Year

John T. Casteen III, the longtime president of the University of Virginia, announced today that he would step down at the end of the 2009-10 academic year.

Mr. Casteen, who is 65 and has been president of the university since 1990, is known as a forceful advocate for increasing the ethnic and socioeconomic diversity of the university’s Charlottesville campus, which for much of its history has been mostly white, male, and privileged.

President of Texas A&M’s Flagship Resigns Under Pressure

The Chronicle: President of Texas A&M’s Flagship Resigns Under Pressure

The embattled president of Texas A&M University at College Station, Elsa A. Murano, has resigned, effective today. Her announcement on Sunday came one day before a special meeting of the system’s Board of Regents during which she was expected to be fired or forced to resign.

Inside Higher Ed: Texas Showdown

An unusually public battle between the president of Texas A&M University’s flagship campus and her boss, Chancellor Mike McKinney, ended Sunday as the president announced her resignation, effective today. Elsa Murano’s job had been in limbo since McKinney, the system head, gave her a particularly stinging evaluation.

Nevada: UNLV pres being forced out?

Las Vegas Review-Journal: UNLV PRESIDENT: Source: Contract renewal unlikely

Pressure also mounting for Ashley to resign post

UNLV President David Ashley’s contract probably will not be renewed by the state higher education system’s Board of Regents, according to a source within the system. The source also said that pressure on Ashley to resign is mounting.

Ashley returned to campus Wednesday after he cut short a trip out of the country.

Greenwood chosen as new UHawaii president

Honolulu Star Bulletin: Greenwood chosen as new UH president

The University of Hawaii Board of Regents unanimously selected M.R.C. Greenwood today to become the next UH president after current UH President David McClain steps down on July 31.

Greenwood, 66, will be the first woman to lead the 10 campus UH system.

Greenwood will be paid $475,008 a year, board chairman Allan Landon said. But if UH administrators, as expected, are asked to take a salary cut because of the state’s budget crisis, Greenwood’s salary would be reduced by the same percentage.

McClain makes $414,096. Landon said the regents raised the salary for the position because a salary survey showed that was the amount needed to attract top candidates.

In a written statement, Greenwood said: “I am honored to be selected as the next president of the University of Hawaii. I know, and appreciate, how vitally important the university is to the state of Hawaii.”

“I am proud and very pleased to be joining such a fine institution, one that is and will continue to be, a vital resource to the state of Hawaii, the Asia-Pacific region and the worldwide community.

“I know that I have much to learn about Hawaii and its rich cultural and linguistic heritage. I believe that to succeed in the future one must appreciate the lessons and values of the past.”

Greenwood will start no later than Aug. 24, Landon said. She will have a three-year contract with options for renewal for each of the next two years. The position also comes with the use of College Hill, the UH president’s residence, a car allowance and expense account.

Landon said Greenwood was “the best fit” as president, citing her research background and experience in higher education.

He said he was confident she would be able to learn and adjust to the local culture here.

Greenwood has extensive experience as a university administrator and is a noted researcher in nutrition and obesity, but she also comes with some ethical baggage.

She resigned as provost, the second highest position in the UC system, in the midst of a investigation into her participation in the hiring of a friend and business partner for a high-paying position in the UC system office. The investigation found that she had violated the university’s conflict of interest policy by not reporting her shared ownership of a rental property and that she should not have participated in hiring her friend. Greenwood has since admitted her mistake and apologized.

The UH president search committee said it vetted Greenwood and concluded that what happened was an inadvertent mistake.

Landon said the search committee and the regents were confident that Greenwood’s participation in the hiring of a friend and business partner were an uncharacteristic mistake and that she had learned from it.

“If anyone has ever gone through this, it is a painful, painful experience,” Landon said. “Dr. Greenwood brings the silver lining of that dark cloud with her.”

Greenwood is currently director of the Foods For Health Initiative at the University of California at Davis. She also served as chancellor at UC Santa Cruz for eight years and worked in the White House Office of Science and Technology during the Clinton administration.

McClain pledged his full support to Greenwood, who will become the 14th UH president and said he would work with her during the transition.

Public testimony before the regents went into executive session was split on Greenwood.

UH Professor David Ross, speaking for the Faculty Senate, said they trusted the faculty representatives on the search committee and “we do not believe we can do better than Dr. Greenwood by going down the list.”

Ross said the worst thing that could happen would be for the regents to appoint an interim president while the search continued. “We think the choice is clear,” he said.

But Doodie Downs, an information center specialist at Hawaii Community College, urged the regents to expand the search.

“One candidate left standing is not enough,” she said. “This is not a choice.”

Downs said she would like to see someone who understands Hawaii.

“This particular candidate has a shadow over her,” Downs added.

Several native Hawaiian faculty and campus organizations also testified against Greenwood’s selection, asking the regents to appoint an interim president from among the current UH leadership, who they said would better understand Hawaii and the budget cuts that are coming.

J.N. Musto, the executive director of the UH faculty union, pointed out that the regents are also being asked to approve Mike Rota as chancellor of Honolulu Community College. Rota, Musto noted, was not on the search committee’s list of finalists for the position.

Liana Hofschneider, former chairwoman of the UH Student Congress, told the regents Greenwood would be the right choice.

“More (candidates) doesn’t mean it’s better,” she said.

The University of Hawaii Board of Regents unanimously selected M.R.C. Greenwood today to become the next UH president after current UH President David McClain steps down on July 31.

Greenwood, 66, will be the first woman to lead the 10 campus UH system.

Mary Easley Is Out at N.C. State, and So Is the Chancellor

The Chronicle: Mary Easley Is Out at N.C. State, and So Is the Chancellor

Shock waves from a politically charged hiring scandal at North Carolina State University continued to expand Monday with the resignation of James L. Oblinger, the university’s chancellor, and the firing of Mary P. Easley, the former governor’s wife whose $170,000-a-year job is at the center of the controversy.

The high-profile departures followed the university’s release on Monday of a large number of documents it had provided to a federal grand jury that is investigating dealings involving the former governor, Michael F. Easley.

Inside Higher Ed: Survival Tactics

It’s looking like a hot, sticky and scandalous summer is in store for higher education. In recent weeks, controversies of varied size have embroiled college chiefs at the University of Illinois, the University of Nevada at Las Vegas and North Carolina State University, where Chancellor James L. Oblinger resigned Monday.

California: Humboldt State faculty wants to oust president

Mercury News: Humboldt State faculty wants to oust president

ARCATA, Calif.—The faculty of Humboldt State University is calling on its president to step down over his decision to appoint a top administrator without conducting a national search.

By a 128-4 margin, the university’s General Faculty Association cast a vote of no confidence against President Rollin Richmond on Tuesday night, citing “a pattern of failed leadership.”

Houston Chronicle: Chancellor gives A&M president poor score

The last few months have not been easy for Elsa Murano, the first female and first Hispanic president of Texas A&M University.

Last week, the chancellor of the sprawling system, Mike McKinney, floated the idea of eliminating her job and combining it with his.