The Arizona Republic

UA president to quit:

Regents to start search for next UA president

- ANNE RYMAN THE REPUBLIC | AZCENTRAL.COM

Embattled University of Arizona President Ann Weaver Hart announces she won’t seek a contract extension and will leave her post in 2018. Hart has faced controvers­y over her paid position on the board of directors of DeVry University, as well as issues with the UA medical school.

The Arizona Board of Regents expects to begin a search for a new president at the University of Arizona in the fall after the school’s embattled leader Ann Weaver Hart said she will not seek an extension when her contract expires in two years.

The regents announced her decision late Friday morning following the board’s regularly scheduled meeting in Flagstaff.

In a statement, Hart said she looked forward to “returning to full-time faculty work as a teacher, scholar and citizen of the university.”

Hart’s contract runs through June 30, 2018. The regents typically vote on one-year extensions in September of each year so that university presidents have rolling, threeyear contracts.

“After some time for strategic review, we expect to devise and begin a search for her successor sometime in the fall,” Regents Chairman Jay Heiler said in a statement issued Friday.

Last September, the board voted to give Hart and Arizona State University President Michael Crow contract extensions and six-figure bonuses for meeting a series of goals set by the regents related to increasing bachelor’s degrees, boosting enrollment and other academic measures.

But more recently, Hart has been at the center of controvers­y for deciding to take a side job as a board member for the company that operates DeVry University, a forprofit school facing a lawsuit from the Federal Trade Commission, alleging that it misled students about job prospects. DeVry has denied any wrongdoing.

She also faced questions about the school’s College of Medicine.

The Arizona Medical Associatio­n earlier this week asked the regents, who oversee state universiti­es, to conduct an independen­t investigat­ion of the University of Arizona College of MedicinePh­oenix’s leadership churn. Former Dean Dr. Stuart Flynn and five other senior leaders of the medical school have resigned in recent weeks.

“The decision not to seek an extension is hers,” Heiler said in the statement, “and true to her character, she has made it in full considerat­ion of both her personal aspiration­s and her institutio­nal commitment­s.”

UA spokesman Chris Sigurdson said Hart would not be doing media interviews Friday related to her decision and instead would let a statement sent to faculty and staff speak for itself. The statement said in part that during the UA’s spring commenceme­nt, she realized she would be presiding over her 14th commenceme­nt as a university president.

“This is a natural choice, and one that all of us must make some time in our lives,” Hart said in her statement. “I am excited for the years ahead working on behalf of this great university.”

However, Hart found herself in the center of a controvers­y earlier this year, as Arizona lawmakers and faculty objected to her taking a position on the board of the DeVry Education Group, a forprofit college company.

DeVry is paying Hart $70,000 plus $100,000 in stock annually. Critics say the appointmen­t is a conflict of interest and tarnishes the UA’s name.

Rep. Bruce Wheeler, D-Tucson, was one of 22 lawmakers who signed a letter published in the Arizona Daily Star in April, saying Hart should resign from the UA after she refused to step down from her position at DeVry.

Wheeler said he’s not surprised by the regents’ announceme­nt on Friday, adding that “preferably, she should be resigning immediatel­y.”

That April letter prompted a response by 13 other Arizona legislator­s, voicing their support for Hart’s decision to join the DeVry board.

“We should be encouragin­g collaborat­ion and communicat­ion between educationa­l facilities, not attempting to shut it down,” said the letter coauthored by Sen. Steve Pierce, R-Prescott, and Rep. T.J. Shope, R-Coolidge.

Hart remained steadfast in her decision to remain on the board, telling the Associated Press earlier this year that “I will remain on the (DeVry) board for the same reasons I accepted the appointmen­t — I believe my experience helping public university students achieve their academic goals will benefit DeVry’s students.”

Hart was hired in 2012 as the UA’s 21st president to oversee the state’s flagship research institutio­n after then-President Robert Shelton left to take a job overseeing the Fiesta Bowl organizati­on. She was the president of Temple University for six years before coming to Arizona and before that, the president of the University of New Hampshire for four years.

The AP and Republic reporter Ken Alltucker contribute­d to this article.

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