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June 24, 2010
Bredesen Charges UT
Trustees with Hiring Solid Leader
UT Board Approves Appointment of
Chancellor Steve J. Schwab
KNOXVILLE
-- Gov. Phil Bredesen, chairman of the University of Tennessee Board of
Trustees, charged trustees and the university with hiring a president who will
lead UT through a new era of great opportunities as it faces unprecedented
budgetary challenges.
Bredesen
attended the board's annual meeting in Knoxville today, as trustees continued
the search process by appointing a search committee. http://president.tennessee.edu/search/committee.html
"If
there is any responsibility that any board of trustees has, picking the CEO has
to be at the top of the list, always," Bredesen said, as he suggested that
the next leader's attributes be measured against the ambitious vision for the
future of the university.
Bredesen
also spoke of his efforts to advance education in the state, noting his pride
in Tennessee being one of the first two states to win the Race to the Top
federal funding for K-12. He noted this year's special legislative session on
education which made changes to improve student retention and the graduation
rates of Tennessee's students.
During
that January session, Bredesen challenged UT Knoxville to become a Top 25
institution in the next 10 years.
The
governor told the board today that it will take a "laser-like" focus
to accomplish the goal, noting that trustees must stay engaged so it will
advance.
UT
Knoxville Chancellor Jimmy G. Cheek provided an update about the challenge by
sharing an initial task force report that compares the university to the
nation's top-ranked public research universities. See the presentation at http://chancellor.utk.edu.
Cheek
shared the good news about the quality of UT Knoxville's students, who are
competitive with those at many Top 25 institutions. In most other key measures,
however, the university faces challenges with improving student retention
rates, graduation rates, awarding of doctorate degrees, faculty salaries and
annual research expenditures.
"If
we can make progress, we can improve the quality of our institution, our
service to the state and our service to our students," Cheek said.
"It's
an ambitious plan, but one we are committed to achieve, and one that we will
pursue with abandon. But the journey that we take is more important than
achieving the goal," he said.
UT
Knoxville currently ranks 52nd among public research universities, as measured
by U.S. News and World Report.
The next
steps will involve creating action and financial plans, which Cheek intends to
share with the board at its October meeting.
In other
business, the board:
--
Approved a range for compensation for the next president between $420,000 and
$450,000 in base salary, a housing allowance of $20,000 and an expense account
range of $12,000 to $16,000. Trustees intend to elect a new president at the
fall meeting on Oct. 21 - 22.
--
Re-elected Vice Chair Jim Murphy to serve a one-year term. Murphy has served in
this role for the past two years and has agreed to extend his service through
the president's search and anticipated transition of the presidency in this
next academic year.
--
Elected Steve J. Schwab, M.D., as chancellor for the University of Tennessee
Health Science Center. Schwab has served as UTHSC interim chancellor since Oct.
1, 2009. He simultaneously served as executive dean for the UTHSC College of
Medicine, the largest of the Health Science Center's six colleges. A national
search was conducted to fill the chancellor post. Schwab will make $525,000 a
year and receive a $20,000 housing allowance.
-- Revised
the bylaws to change the title of vice president for agriculture to chancellor
of UT Institute of Agriculture. This new title clarifies the role of the
Institute of Agriculture's chief officer in academic and tenure decisions. This
position will continue to report directly to the president.
--
Revised the bylaws to change the reporting structure for UT Knoxville athletics
to the chancellor of the Knoxville campus, rather than directly to the UT
president. The president will continue to have overall responsibility for all
campus athletic programs as these departments report to the president through
their respective chancellors.
-- Approved a pilot regional tuition rate
program at UT Martin for undergraduate students from contiguous counties of
Alcorn, Tippah and Tishomingo in Mississippi to take courses at the Selmer
Center. Beginning this fall, undergraduate students will pay the in-state rate,
plus 25 percent of the out-of- state rate.
--
Extended a regional tuition rate program at UT Chattanooga for undergraduate
students from contiguous out-of-state counties of Alabama and Georgia for a
fourth year. Eligible students must have earned at least 60 credit hours for
eligibility for the in-state rate, plus 25 percent of the out-of-state rate.
--
Approved the degree of Doctor of Nursing Practice at UTC and UTK to conform to
changing accreditation standards for the advanced nursing practice. The
Tennessee Higher Education Commission will consider the proposals at its July
meeting.
--
Approved establishing the Department of Public Health within UT Knoxville's
College of Education, Health and Human Sciences. Planning has been under way
for several years to bring various programs into one department. The program
will collaborate with the college's Center for Public Health to attract new
research dollars to expand the program's reach.
-- Named
the Anderson Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation at UT Knoxville for
Charles and Moll Anderson of Knoxville. The couple provided a significant gift
for the College of Business Administration's center and established an
endowment to provide scholarships for single parents. The Andersons' gift put
the university's Campaign for Tennessee over the $1 billion goal, trustees
learned Wednesday. UT is now one of only 36 universities in the nation to reach
a billion dollar goal. The campaign will continue through December 2011. See
the release at http://www.tennessee.edu/media/releases/062310_billion.html.
-- Named
the alumni center at Martin the Nick and Cathy Dunagan Alumni Center in honor
of the Chancellor Emeritus and the former first lady of the Martin campus.
--
Established the Haslam Torch Fund, a student-managed investment fund to be
invested separate from university endowments. Jim and Natalie Haslam of
Knoxville have dedicated $1 million over three years to an endowment to provide
the hands-on investment experience for UT Knoxville business students.
To view
materials for the meeting, visit http://bot.tennessee.edu/resources/materials_06232010.html.
To watch
an archived Webcast of the meeting, visit http://bot.tennessee.edu/webcasts.html.
---
Contact:
Gina Stafford, (865) 974-0741, stafford@tennessee.edu
Karen Ann Simsen (865) 216-6862 or Karen.simsen@tennessee.edu
This study
quantifies the economic impact of the UTHSC on the economy of the state of Tennessee for FY2010.
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