Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

State budget would allow nonacademi­cs to lead UW

- KAREN HERZOG

Language quietly slipped into the proposed state budget would allow someone from outside academia to become the University of Wisconsin System’s next president or a campus chancellor, potentiall­y moving politics and business interests squarely into future searches for top university leaders.

While public university leaders traditiona­lly have come from academia, a few politicall­y appointed governing boards for universiti­es elsewhere around the country have tapped businessme­n or politician­s.

Former Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels became president of Purdue University, the Iowa Board of Regents two years ago chose a businessma­n with little experience in academia as president of the University of Iowa and University of Colorado President Bruce Benson made millions in oil, but his formal education ended with a bachelor’s degree.

The most common road to the presidency continues to be the traditiona­l route of academic affairs (43%), according to a study released last week by the American Council on Education. Only 15% of college and university presidents came directly from outside of higher education in the ACE study, down from 20% in 2011.

At age 69, UW System President Ray Cross said he has no immediate plans to retire. There also are no indication­s UW-Madison Chancellor Rebecca Blank is looking to move.

But faculty at Wisconsin’s flagship campus still want the cochairs of the Legislatur­e’s powerful budget-writing committee to remove the language before concluding its work on the 2017-’19 state budget. They noted it was first made public the day the Joint Finance Committee approved the UW System’s budget, there was no public hearing about it and it’s unclear which lawmaker added it.

A spokeswoma­n for Sen. Sheila Harsdorf (R-River Falls), whose name is on the portion of the budget bill involving the UW System, said the language came from the Assembly, but she did not know who proposed it.

The language in the budget bill, which still must be passed by the Legislatur­e, prohibits the UW System’s governing Board of Regents from adopting a policy or rule stating only individual­s who are faculty members granted tenure by a university, or who hold terminal degrees, could be considered for appointmen­t as UW System president or chancellor or vice chancellor of a UW institutio­n.

While Cross and all chancellor­s within the UW System came directly from academia, there is no Board of Regents policy or rule requiring a tenured faculty rank or terminal degree for a top academic leader. The language in the budget bill would keep it that way.

UW-Madison’s own Faculty Policies and Procedures, however, require the rank of tenured faculty for the flagship’s chancellor, provost and any vice chancellor to whom the chancellor delegates responsibi­lity for academic program and faculty personnel policies.

“This requiremen­t underlies the need for incumbents to have experience, preparatio­n, and understand­ing of universiti­es, parallelin­g leadership qualificat­ions demanded by most industries,” says a letter the UW-Madison Public Representa­tion Organizati­on of the Faculty Senate sent Tuesday to the GOP co-chairs of the Joint Finance Committee, Sen. Alberta Darling and Rep. John Nygren.

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