Los Angeles Times

UC weighs plan to alter searches for chancellor­s

The proposal is opposed by faculty leaders, who feel it will reduce their role.

- By Teresa Watanabe

In a highly unusual protest, University of California faculty leaders are collective­ly opposing a proposal to alter the search process for campus chancellor­s, which they believe will significan­tly reduce their role and potentiall­y affect the quality of the UC system.

Twenty past Academic Senate chairs, who have served since 1994, have signed a letter asking UC Board of Regents members to reject the proposal, which will be debated Wednesday at the board’s online meeting. The Academic Council of current leaders has expressed similar concerns, saying the search process has resulted in “stellar recent recruitmen­ts,” according to a letter by Chair Kum-Kum Bhavnani to outgoing UC President Janet Napolitano.

The last four chancellor­s hired have been white women to head UC Berkeley and Santa Cruz, a Black male leader at Davis and a Latino at Merced. The other six campus chancellor­s are men: Asian Americans at Santa Barbara and San Diego and white leaders at UCLA, San Francisco, Irvine and Riverside.

Regent Lark Park, chair of the group of five board members who crafted the proposal, said the intent was to improve the process by widening public input, increasing the diversity of candidates and minimizing bias and inefficien­cies.

The recommenda­tions, she said in an email, “are fundamenta­lly about being more inclusive. It’s about having better communicat­ion, greater efficiency and accountabi­lity, and engaging the broader UC community with humility.”

But two of the proposal’s 17 recommenda­tions have sparked a firestorm among faculty.

One would move the role of screening candidates from the faculty to an outside search firm. At present, five faculty members of the 17-member search committee assess the qualificat­ions of hundreds of potential candidates submitted by the search firm and others. They then recommend at least five promising candidates to fellow committee members, who include the UC president, board chair, other regents, students, alumni and staff. The president then selects a candidate to recommend for approval by the full board.

The proposal did not clearly explain why screening should be moved to the search firm, but a report commission­ed by Park’s group included criticism that faculty could be barriers to diverse searches and too narrowly focused on candidates’ academic credential­s, to the exclusion of other qualities, such as leadership or vision. The report was based on a survey of 36 former members of search committees and more than 40 interviews with people inside and outside of UC.

George Blumenthal, a former UC Santa Cruz chancellor who signed the protest letter as a past Academic Senate chair, said robust faculty involvemen­t was critical to ensuring quality and excellence at UC.

“Faculty buy-in is crucial to the success of a chancellor, and any policy change that suggests that the faculty have a lesser role to play in selection will inevitably lead to a lesser faculty investment in the success of an appointee,” the protest letter said.

The proposal also would require the UC president to obtain approval from the search committee’s regents before directly recommendi­ng a choice to the full board, as is now the case. That change would “fundamenta­lly undercut the authority of the president in selecting chancellor­s,” the past Academic Senate chairs wrote.

Faculty members also took umbrage at the working group’s report, saying the methodolog­y was flawed and the opinions expressed were off-base.

Robert May, who has participat­ed in several searches and signed the protest letter as a former Academic Senate chair, said faculty members are concerned with all qualities in a would-be chancellor — leadership, interperso­nal skills, ability to raise money and advocate for their campus — but campus leaders do need to have some level of academic achievemen­t.

“Academic credential­s matter, among other important considerat­ions,” May said. “The chancellor is running a university. Universiti­es are, by definition, academic institutio­ns.”

May and Blumenthal said faculty members have fought hard for diversity — including the Academic Senate’s opposition to a Board of Regents decision to eliminate affirmatio­n action in 1995, one year before Propositio­n 209 did so statewide in public education and employment.

Park, however, said the proposal invites faculty, along with others, to submit candidates for considerat­ion.

“This is not about diminishin­g their role,” she said. “The faculty voice will remain as strong as ever.”

 ?? Jeff Chiu Associated Press ?? GEORGE BLUMENTHAL, former chancellor at UC Santa Cruz, signed a letter opposing the proposal.
Jeff Chiu Associated Press GEORGE BLUMENTHAL, former chancellor at UC Santa Cruz, signed a letter opposing the proposal.

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