Chattanooga Times Free Press

University of Tennessee president to retire

Joe DiPietro will use his remaining vacation time and will step down from active service Nov. 21

- BY MEGHAN MANGRUM STAFF WRITER

University of Tennessee President Joe DiPietro has announced he will step down in November and officially retire in February 2019.

DiPietro has led the UT system since January 2011, but the time has come for him to step down, he said in a news release Monday.

“I am very proud of all we have accomplish­ed together, which would not have been possible without the important efforts of our talented faculty, students, staff and administra­tors and the steadfast support of the Board of Trustees,” DiPietro said in a statement. “The University is well positioned for success — we are coming off a record-breaking year in research funding as well as private fundraisin­g, and we have a committed group of chancellor­s and system administra­tors to move the University forward.”

Steve Angle, chancellor of the University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a, one of the regional campuses in the system, said whoever comes after DiPietro has big shoes to fill.

“Joe has done a phenomenal job in seizing the opportunit­y and setting the system up for success,” Angle said.

Though it joined the UT system in 1969, UTC still has a strong foundation and a local identity.

“We’re hoping to continue the momentum that we’ve had in working with President DiPietro,” Angle said. “The biggest thing that he did was help us develop an identity as part of the UT system but also an individual identity as being a part of Chattanoog­a.”

Angle does not see a move to Knoxville in his future, saying he is “fully entrenched” in Chattanoog­a, but he looks forward to whoever the UT Board of Trustees appoints to the position.

UT Board of Trustees Chairman John Compton praised DiPietro.

“We should all be thankful for Joe’s leadership. He and the former Board of Trustees accomplish­ed a great deal together. All stakeholde­rs in the University system have been well-served by his tireless commitment to continual improvemen­t across all of our campuses,” Comptom said in a statement. “Our new board will convene soon to discuss next steps in selecting a new leader for the University of Tennessee system.”

DiPietro received criticism for the ousting of UT-Knoxville Chancellor Beverly Davenport in May, when he effectivel­y fired the head of the flagship campus saying it “needed a change.”

The Faculty Senate responded by accusing him of failing to be transparen­t on controvers­ial issues such as outsourcin­g jobs on campuses and the post-tenure review of professors, but later that month DiPietro received a vote of confidence from the system’s Board of Trustees.

Angle said some of those controvers­ial things have gotten people’s attention, but he hopes they will “really understand the gem the state of Tennessee has with the UT system.”

During his tenure, DiPietro advocated for record low tuition increases, including no increase for the 2018-19 school year.

The UT Foundation also experience­d record-high fundraisin­g, including more than $397 million given during 2017-2018 fiscal year. That fundraisin­g resulted in four named colleges across the system, including the Gary W. Rollins College of Business at UTC.

DiPietro also oversaw the constructi­on of the Cherokee Farm Innovation Campus and the deepening of the system’s partnershi­p with the Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

Angle said DiPietro set a high bar for performanc­e and the next president will have to continue that momentum.

DiPietro led the system’s Institute of Agricultur­e for five years from 2006 until he became president in 2011. He previously served as dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine at the University of Florida and was a tenured professor and associate dean for research at the University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine.

He plans to retire to Illinois and spend time with his wife, their three children and six grandchild­ren, according to a news release.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER ?? UT President Joe DiPietro speaks Thursday outside the Gary W. Rollins College of Business in Chattanoog­a during a campus-wide celebratio­n of the Rollins’ $40 million gift to the school. DiPietro announced his retirement Monday.
STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER UT President Joe DiPietro speaks Thursday outside the Gary W. Rollins College of Business in Chattanoog­a during a campus-wide celebratio­n of the Rollins’ $40 million gift to the school. DiPietro announced his retirement Monday.

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