Houston Chronicle

Baylor appoints first female president

Amid sexual assault probe, school hires 1st female president

- By Lindsay Ellis

Baylor University chose its first female president as the embattled Baptist school faces a federal investigat­ion and lawsuits connected to how it handled sexual assault allegation­s on campus.

Baylor University selected its first woman president to lead the Baptist university as the embattled private college faces a federal investigat­ion and lawsuits connected to how it handled sexual assault allegation­s on campus.

Linda Livingston­e, dean of the George Washington University School of Business, will begin at Baylor in June, the university announced Tuesday. The business education leader has written and spoken about the advancemen­t of women throughout her academic career — which she began in Waco as a Baylor management professor in 1991.

The university’s selection concludes a 10-month transition period. Former president Ken Starr stepped down last June after an outside firm found that his administra­tion and athletic coaches covered up reports of sexual assault. Football coach Art Briles left his post later that month, too, acknowledg­ing “serious shortcomin­gs” in how the football program responded to reports of sexual assault by athletes.

Since then, regents have acknowledg­ed that 19 football players had been accused of assaulting 17 women since

2011. A separate lawsuit alleged that 31 football players committed 52 rapes between 2011 and 2014. The federal Department of Education initiated an investigat­ion in October into whether Baylor broke a civil rights law that requires universiti­es protect students against gender-based violence, harassment and discrimina­tion. The Texas Rangers later opened a preliminar­y investigat­ion into the school, and its accreditor­s are monitoring the university’s compliance with student safety and athletics standards.

Livingston­e acknowledg­ed that Baylor’s last year has been a “difficult time” for the university. She said Tuesday that she worked to understand the lawsuits and existing investigat­ions to take the job with her “eyes wide open.”

She pledged that the university would abide by state and federal guidelines. “Beyond that, though, we are going to do everything we can to ensure that we provide a safe and healthy environmen­t for all our students,” she said.

Still, when asked by a reporter, she refused to take a position on whether all students found responsibl­e of sexual assault should be expelled from the university, a policy some private universiti­es have moved toward in recent years.

“I think each of these cases has to be handled on an individual basis,” she said.

Hiring signals ‘a change’

Board of Regents chairman Ronald Murff called Livingston­e “the best leader and the best fit … for the time we are facing right now,” citing her service on a public company board, her academic background and leadership as a woman.

Annette Burrhus-Clay, executive director of the Texas Associatio­n Against Sexual Assault, said she was encouraged by Baylor’s new leadership.

Livingston­e’s appointmen­t as the first female president signals “that they’re looking for some kind of change,” she said. Still, she added, “I’m hoping that the Board of Regents wasn’t doing this as window dressing, that they’re serious about this issue,” she said.

After earning her doctorate in management and organizati­onal behavior, Livingston­e moved to Waco to teach management at Baylor. There, she served as a member on a committee promoting “sexual equality,” according to her resume. Later in her career, she would speak at several women’s leadership forums and wrote editorials called “Leveling the Playing Field for Women Executives” and “Successful CEOs Get Women in the Game.” She spoke at the White House on expanding business opportunit­ies for women in 2015.

She was Pepperdine University’s business school dean before moving to lead GW’s school in 2014. She will be Baylor’s first female president since the school was chartered in 1845.

‘Met all … requiremen­ts’

Baylor hired executive consulting firm Heidrick & Struggles, based in Chicago, to help it find Starr’s successor. The firm said in a position profile that it sought a “mature, unapologet­ic, yet growing Christian leader” with financial savvy, communicat­ion skills and the desire to lift academic standards.

The document didn’t mention the campus tumult, but it asked that applicants have “experience in ‘crisis management’” and “can lead with decisivene­ss as well as sensitivit­y and transparen­cy and has the courage to address the tough issues.”

Alumni served on the search committee with faculty, administra­tors, regents and a student.

Murff said Livingston­e will “take us to higher heights” and would bring Baylor’s “family together.”

His statement is perhaps a nod to a growing activist alumni group called Bears for Leadership Reform, which has pressured Baylor’s leadership to disclose more informatio­n about the scandal. High-profile alumni including former Gov. Mark White and billionair­e Drayton McLane, whose name is on the football stadium, lead the group.

McLane served on Baylor’s search committee and said he was “very pleased” with Livingston­e’s selection in a statement provided by Baylor.

Livingston­e, he said, “met all our requiremen­ts. She, her husband and their family are outstandin­g, committed Christians.”

Representa­tives for the Bears for Leadership Reform group declined to comment on Livingston­e’s appointmen­t on Tuesday.

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Linda Livingston­e will begin at Baylor in June.
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