Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Panel recommends Sen. Rodrigues for university chancellor

- By Ryan Dailey

TALLAHASSE­E — State Sen. Ray Rodrigues is on track to become leader of Florida’s university system, after a search committee recommende­d him as its pick to become the system’s chancellor.

Rodrigues was one of eight candidates who applied to succeed Chancellor Marshall Criser, who announced in June that he would step down at the end of the year.

A search committee, made up of five members of the system’s Board of Governors, interviewe­d Rodrigues and one other finalist, Lori Cromwell, chief business officer for Emory University’s Candler School of Theology, on Friday. The committee decided to recommend Rodrigues to the full board.

Committee member Eric Silagy said Rodrigues would bring “a whole different level of experience” to the chancellor role over Cromwell, citing Rodrigues’ legislativ­e experience and the senator’s employment at Florida Gulf Coast University. Rodrigues, R-Estero, also served eight years in the Florida House.

“Specifical­ly, 16 years within the university system in Florida with budget authority. Interactio­n with the Board of Governors staff previously. Interactio­n with, obviously, the Legislatur­e as a member … clearly demonstrat­es a deep knowledge of both the education system as well as the appropriat­ion system,” said Silagy, president and CEO of Florida Power & Light.

Rodrigues easily was the most politicall­y connected applicant. As an example of his prominence in the Senate, he led redistrict­ing efforts this year. Rodrigues announced in June he would not seek re-election to the Senate, with speculatio­n quickly focused on him becoming chancellor.

The 17-member Board of Governors will meet Sept. 14 to consider approving Rodrigues for the job.

Rodrigues was the Senate sponsor of a controvers­ial 2021 law (HB 233) that requires colleges and universiti­es to annually survey students and employees about “intellectu­al freedom and viewpoint diversity” on campus.

Meeting before the search committee, the Board of Governors on Friday reviewed the results of the first set of surveys, which were conducted in April. Separate surveys were administer­ed to students and employees and were optional to fill out.

Of 368,120 students who were invited to take the surveys, only 8,835 — or 2.4 percent — submitted responses.

“My college or university classes provide an environmen­t for free expression of ideas, opinions and beliefs,” one of the survey’s prompts said, with 2,676 students responding with “strongly agree,” 2,534 with “agree,” 1,585 with “neither agree nor disagree,” 1,223 with “disagree” and 740 with “strongly” disagree.

A similar ratio of responses was given to a question about whether the students’ campuses foster free expression.

University employees had a higher response rate to the surveys, with 9,238 or 9.4 percent of the 98,704 employees, responding.

“My institutio­n is equally tolerant and welcoming of both liberal and conservati­ve ideas and beliefs,” said one prompt on the employee survey. In response, 2,243 employees strongly agreed, 2,060 agreed, 1,703 neither agreed or disagreed, 1,621 disagreed and 1,499 strongly disagreed.

Employees who disagreed or strongly disagreed with the question were asked to indicate the ideas and beliefs that were more prevalent. The vast majority of respondent­s said liberal ideology is most prevalent.

The state is embroiled in a lawsuit that challenges the survey law.

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