Ottawa Citizen

University president will step down

- BRUCE DEACHMAN bdeachman@postmedia.com

Carleton University president and vice-chancellor Roseann O’Reilly Runte has announced her resignatio­n from the school, effective July 31.

Her resignatio­n, announced at Carleton’s board meeting on Thursday, follows a nine-year career with the school.

According to a release from the university, she is leaving to pursue a “new leadership opportunit­y.”

Details on exactly what that will be are to be announced in the coming week, but she’s leaving a hefty paycheque.

Carleton’s 2015 salary disclosure revealed she was earning almost $360,000 in salary and roughly $40,000 in taxable benefits.

Chris Caruthers, chair of Carleton’s board of governors, noted that Runte has provided “exceptiona­l and stable leadership” to Carleton since her appointmen­t.

According to David Lindsay, president and CEO of the Council of Ontario Universiti­es, Runte was successful in leading Carleton’s growth while always keeping its students and the community in mind.

“She was quite proud of the strategic plan they’d done and how she’d expanded the university,” he said from his Toronto office on Friday. “There was a lot of new programmin­g that she was proud of, and really brought some creativity to the job. She would take on, not just as an academic but as a leader of the organizati­on, the quality of life as well as the quality of the academics.”

Lindsay said that the news of Runte’s resignatio­n came as a surprise.

Carleton’s first female president, Runte was appointed to the position in January 2008, a dual Canadian-American citizen who left her position as president of Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Va., to come to Ottawa.

She replaced Carleton’s acting president, Samy Mahmoud, who served in the position following the abrupt resignatio­n of David Atkinson in November 2006.

Prior to her term at Old Dominion, she had spent seven years as president of Victoria University.

The then-59-year-old Runte arrived in Ottawa with a PhD in French literature and a considerab­le record of community service.

She was past president of the Canadian Commission for the United Nations’ education, science and cultural agency, and a former executive member of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada. She has also wrote three volumes of French poetry.

In 2002, she was appointed to the Order of Canada.

Among Runte’s challenges when she arrived at Carleton were fundraisin­g and improving the university’s academic reputation. But she also presided over numerous difficult issues at the school, including its 2009 firing of sociology lecturer and accused terrorist Hassan Diab, and its mediated out-of-court settlement, that same year, with a student who was suing the school over an unsolved sexual assault.

In 2010, the university took control of its frosh week programmin­g away from students, following allegation­s of inappropri­ate incidents the previous year. And last year the school was at the centre of a controvers­y over whether it should acknowledg­e and use the phrase “rape culture” in its province-mandated policy on sexual violence.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada