South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

UF picks same search firm used by USF, FSU

SP&A Executive chosen to provide next presidenti­al candidates

- Tampa Bay Times

The California-based search firm that recently placed presidents at Florida State University and the University of Central Florida and was involved in the presidenti­al search at the University of South Florida has picked up a new client: the University of Florida.

The UF Board of Trustees voted during a meeting Friday to select SP&A Executive Search from among four search firms interviewe­d.

UF’s presidenti­al search will be run by Alberto Pimentel, managing partner of the firm, who had run the searches at the other schools. He promised he’d work exclusivel­y on UF’s presidenti­al search during the duration of the contract.

At USF, SP&A charged $160,000 plus fees to help put together a pool of 18 candidates. Pimentel’s work with USF ended after interim President Rhea Law and Jeffrey Talley, who once led the U.S. Army Reserve, were named as two candidates moving forward.

Some USF faculty expressed disappoint­ment over the quality of the pool, with some questionin­g whether some candidates had withheld applying in hopes of instead getting the soon-to-be open president job at UF. USF is expected to select its president by Tuesday, subject to confirmati­on by the Board of Governors.

At FSU, where SP&A had a $90,000-plus-fees contract, according to The Tallahasee Democrat, education Commission­er Richard Corcoran emerged on a shortlist of nine from a pool of 22 candidates.

FSU ultimately chose Richard McCullough, a former vice provost for research at Harvard University, as president.

SP&A advertises itself as “a boutique woman- and minority-owned executive search firm” that has been involved in executive searches around the country, including at Penn State.

Its website states it is also involved in searches for a vice president of research at FSU and a regional chancellor for USF’s St. Petersburg campus.

The UF board has yet to negotiate a contract with the firm. It will not retain the company until a search committee is named, the university said in a news release.

A proposal to the university stated that the firm usually charges one-third the cost of the president’s first-year compensati­on, including base salary and additional compensati­on. UF President Kent Fuchs earned $1.58 million in total compensati­on in 2020, the third-highest figure for a public university president in the country.

But given the firm’s “strong desire to partner with the University of Florida on this important assignment,” the firm wrote it would be willing to negotiate either a flat fee or a capped rate beforehand.

SP&A Executive stood out to the interviewi­ng committee because of its recent familiarit­y with Florida, including its public records laws, said Tom Kuntz, a retired bank executive and member of UF’s Board of Trustees.

He said the fees requested by each firm that was interviewe­d were similar.

“It’s an interestin­g time because there are lots of presidenti­al searches that are ongoing or about to begin across the country,” Kuntz said Friday.

UF’s presidenti­al search will be conducted less openly than other recent searches in the state following a new law Gov. Ron DeSantis signed this week that shields informatio­n about applicants from public records until they reach the finalist stage.

The law took effect immediatel­y.

DeSantis spokespers­on Christina Pushaw said in an email the governor believed the bill would improve the quality of the applicant pool.

“Most qualified candidates for university president are already employed elsewhere, and it stands to reason that they might not want their current employer to be aware that they are considerin­g a new profession­al opportunit­y,” she wrote. “Therefore, this reform will enable such candidates to apply for a significan­t job without fear of retributio­n from their current employer.

“Florida’s world-class public university system will therefore have access to a broader pool of potential talent and leadership.”

While many faculty unions have been critics of the bill, saying it is a way to fast-track politician­s to the job, UF Board Chairperso­n Mori Hosseini assured the board politics would play no part in the search.

“Not one person [with] political [ties] has asked me to be a candidate, and not one person political has asked me to be on the committee,” he said.

Hosseini said he would name the search committee by next week.

“We are going wide,” he said. “We’re going after CEOs, we’re going after academia, we’re going after the most successful people in the country who can lead our university to the next level.”

Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 ?? ?? In its quest to find a new president, the University of Florida will use the same search firm, SP&A Executive, as several other Florida universiti­es.
In its quest to find a new president, the University of Florida will use the same search firm, SP&A Executive, as several other Florida universiti­es.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States