Albany Times Union

RPI’S Shirley Ann Jackson announces her retirement

President spent more than 20 years at helm

- By Rachel Silberstei­n Troy

Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute President Shirley Ann Jackson announced Friday she will retire next year after more than two decades at the Troy institutio­n.

Hired in 1999, Jackson is one of RPI’S longest-serving leaders. She will step down July 1, 2022, she wrote in a memo to faculty and families.

RPI and “the Capital Region community welcomed me, Morris, and our son, Alan, into its family. We are deeply grateful for the support and friendship we have experience­d throughout the years,” Jackson said. “I am extraordin­arily proud of this university, and all that we have achieved working together, yet the time has come for the next

chapter of my life and career.”

Jackson, 74, a physicist, was the former head of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, and the first African-american woman to earn a doctorate at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology.

Jackson’s scientific breakthrou­ghs helped earn her a National Medal of Science and led to the invention of technologi­es like the portable fax machine, touch-tone phones, solar cells, fiber optic cables, and caller ID.

Jackson is credited with transformi­ng RPI into a “vibrant community, with significan­t investment­s in new and existing academic, research, and residentia­l facilities.” On her watch, the university saw record numbers of student applicants and added a Center for Biotechnol­ogy and Interdisci­plinary Studies, the Curtis R. Priem Experiment­al Media and Performing Arts Center, the East Campus Athletic Village and the Center for Computatio­nal Innovation­s.

Jackson is one of the highest-paid university presidents in the United States, earning a salary of $5.8 million in recent years. Jackson’s sevenfigur­e salary and top-down management style have at times been a source of contention among students, as well as some dissident alumni and donors.

For years, she has drawn criticism from civil liberty groups who say her administra­tion works overtime to quell dissent and free speech among students and faculty. In recent years, her administra­tion moved to take control of the school’s student-run student union and hired police officers to film students protesting in order to identify them for disciplina­ry action. The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, a Philadelph­ia-based nonprofit group that promotes civil liberties on college campuses, even included RPI on its list of 10 worst campuses for freedom of expression.

Her management style has also been criticized by alumni who in 2019 sued the school’s alumni associatio­n for violating bylaws during board elections. The group of unhappy graduates claimed Jackson had allowed the school’s debt load to grow out of control — all while earning a top-tier salary (Jackson took a 5 percent pay cut last year to help address a financial shortfall caused by the pandemic).

During the height of the pandemic, however, RPI’S rigid COVID-19 testing and social distancing protocols, guided by infection data, managed to keep the disease largely off campus.

“Navigating the university through the unpreceden­ted, global pandemic this past year tested our courage, agility, and flexibilit­y. We passed the test with flying colors,” Jackson wrote in her memo Friday.

For all her detractors, Jackson’s barrier-breaking achievemen­ts have earned her praise from around the globe and helped to raise RPI’S national and internatio­nal profile. Under her tenure, RPI has become one of the most competitiv­e engineerin­g and scientific schools in the nation.

“This fall, we will enroll the most accomplish­ed freshman class in our history,” she wrote. “Most importantl­y, we came together as one united and resilient university . ... We pushed the limits of our own potential, and we continue pushing forward to reach even greater heights of excellence.”

The school’s succession plan was not immediatel­y known.

 ?? Lori Van Buren / Times Union archive ?? Shirley Ann Jackson, president of Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute, has announced that she will step down July 1, 2022, after serving more than 20 years at the Troy university.
Lori Van Buren / Times Union archive Shirley Ann Jackson, president of Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute, has announced that she will step down July 1, 2022, after serving more than 20 years at the Troy university.
 ?? Drew Angerer / Getty Images ?? Shirley Ann Jackson shakes hands with President Barack Obama on May 19, 2016, after receiving the National Medal of Science, during a ceremony at the White House.
Drew Angerer / Getty Images Shirley Ann Jackson shakes hands with President Barack Obama on May 19, 2016, after receiving the National Medal of Science, during a ceremony at the White House.
 ?? Phoebe Sheehan / Times Union archive ?? RPI President Shirley Ann Jackson will retire from the university on July 1, 2022.
Phoebe Sheehan / Times Union archive RPI President Shirley Ann Jackson will retire from the university on July 1, 2022.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States