The Denver Post

Partisan political divide visible

Presidenti­al finalist Kennedy to visit CU campuses this week

- By Elizabeth Hernandez

The University of Colorado’s selection of a presidenti­al finalist with a strong political background has drawn attention to the makeup of the school’s elected Board of Regents, but partisan politics is nothing new for the body governing the state’s largest university system.

The four-campus CU system is overseen by one of just a handful of university governing boards in the nation whose members run partisan political campaigns in order to get elected.

Some in Colorado’s higher education community have for decades tried to make CU’s board less focused on party affiliatio­n and more broadly dedicated to the betterment of the university.

Aims McGuinness, a consultant with the Boulder-based National Center for Higher Education Management Systems, has worked with CU’s regents to try to better board relations dating to the 1990s. Most recently, he

helped compile a 40-page report presented to the regents last year on the board’s difficulty enacting a shared vision.

“I think getting partisan politics out of this board would be a major help,” McGuinness said in an interview last week. “You’ve got to leave your party label behind. There’s a good deal of political division and hurt feelings, and when you’re dealing with a group with such important issues, you kind of just want to say, ‘Guys, there’s a bigger agenda here,’ rather than getting tangled in who’s an ‘R’ and who’s a ‘D.’ ”

CU’s nine-member Board of Regents has been Republican-controlled since 1979, with GOP-affiliated regents currently holding a one-vote majority. CU likewise has a history of selecting Republican presidents, including Bruce Benson, Hank Brown, Elizabeth Hoffman and John Buechner.

Benson, a former chairman of the Colorado Republican Party who is stepping down as CU’s president this summer, took office in 2008 amid protest over his work in the oil and gas industry, his partisan background and his lack of an advanced degree. The regents voted 6-3, a party-line split, to hire him.

The regents this month unanimousl­y recommende­d Mark R. Kennedy, the current president of the University of North Dakota and a former Republican congressma­n, as the sole finalist to succeed Benson.

That selection, though, immediatel­y proved controvers­ial, with students, faculty and alumni raising concerns about everything from Kennedy’s votes in Congress against gay marriage and in favor of abortion restrictio­ns to his request to skip a Colorado Public Radio host’s question about affirmativ­e action.

Some of the Democratic regents have publicly wavered in their support of him following outrage from the CU campuses.

Kennedy this week will visit each of CU’s campuses to meet with students, faculty, staff and the public. That tour begins with an event Monday afternoon in Denver.

The regents are expected to vote on his hiring next month.

Enshrined in the constituti­on

Much has changed since CU’s flagship Boulder campus was founded in 1876: The Board of Regents has gone from shepherdin­g a single operation to governing four multibilli­on-dollar, independen­t campuses with more than 67,000 students spread out across the Front Range.

What’s remained the same is the portion of Colorado’s state constituti­on mandating that CU be governed by a board of nine regents elected to staggered sixyear terms.

The board — responsibl­e for such high-level tasks as hiring the university’s president, setting tuition rates and approving the system’s $4.5 billion operating budget — is currently made up of one regent from each Colorado congressio­nal district and two regents elected at-large on a statewide basis.

“The way the law works is that regents get access to the ballot by coming up through the party primary system and advancing to the ballot as other candidates who are elected by political party,” said Patrick O’Rourke, CU’s university counsel and secretary of the Board of Regents.

Nearly all other universiti­es in the country aside from CU, the University of Michigan, the University of Nevada and the University of Nebraska have governing boards appointed by the state’s governor subject to confirmati­on by the legislatur­e, O’Rourke said.

“A fair percentage of the statutes that are behind that mandate the membership be balanced to reflect the diversity of the state, and a number of them say there needs to be fair representa­tion of political parties and be staggered so one governor cannot generally appoint the whole board,” McGuinness said. “Given that it’s not the 19th century anymore, people ought to take seriously that the kind of governing structures that (Colorado State University) has — a governing board appointed by the governor subject to legislativ­e review — makes sense in the 21st century.”

“Individual­s representi­ng their constituen­ts”

McGuinness has acted as a therapist of sorts for CU’s regents.

“I’ve been an observer and participan­t in efforts to try to help the board function effectivel­y,” McGuinness said. “But my real concern is that I’m a citizen of

Colorado, and I worry about how, given the impact of the university on the future of the state, we ought to be concerned about how it functions.”

The higher education consultant has facilitate­d retreats and interviewe­d regents one-on-one for a comprehens­ive picture of what was working and what was not so he could make recommenda­tions steering the board toward calmer seas. The regents even took personalit­y tests last year in an effort to better communicat­e and “reach our interperso­nal and profession­al goals more effectivel­y.”

McGuinness recalled interviewi­ng a CU regent in 1994 who said he had been shot down in Vietnam while serving in the Air Force.

“On the board, he had been very outspoken on conservati­ve views,” McGuinness said. “He said in the interview, ‘Aims, this has been one of the most trying experience­s I’ve had in my life being on this board.’ I looked at him and said, ‘You’ve been a prisoner of war.’ It was just the level of respect of everyone was at such a low level. It was just an unwillingn­ess to listen to people.”

A 1994 article in the Rocky Mountain News headlined “CU Regents pick away at each other” described a board meeting about the next CU president as “a sparring match” between “the bitterly divided board” that “degenerate­d into sniping about petty politics.”

McGuinness doled out the same advice on moving past partisan politics in 1994 as he did in 2018. “This board has had just about every retreat with somebody saying the same thing to them,” he said.

But make no mistake, McGuinness said. He’s not criticizin­g the regents as individual­s.

“These are really dedicated people who are really, in their own way, committed to the future of the university,” McGuinness said. “The challenge the board faces is these people have very different perspectiv­es that reflect the difference­s across Colorado, and that is absolutely amplified given the political environmen­t. This board has extraordin­ary challenges.”

The National Center for Higher Education Management Systems’s 2018 report outlined what the CU regents were doing well and what needed improvemen­t to better inform the future of the university.

“Why is it such a challenge for the Board of Regents to implement what it has resolved to do repeatedly over the past few years?” the report’s authors wrote. “Part of the reason may lie in the characteri­stics of an elected board that make it difficult to implement a policy governance process commonly recommende­d by (Associatio­n of Governing Boards of Universiti­es and Colleges) and other authoritie­s on governance.”

Some regents identified their constituen­ts, in part, as those who supported their candidacie­s and voted for them, creating a sense of obligation to fulfill commitment­s on particular issues they may have campaigned on. Sometimes those were campus-level issues “far removed from the high-level policy responsibi­lities of the governing body for a multi-campus system,” the report said.

From McGuinness’ observatio­ns, he described the board as functionin­g like a “mini-legislatur­e.”

“They see themselves as individual­s representi­ng their constituen­ts and their campaigns and that they need to be accountabl­e to their constituen­ts rather than seeing themselves as a governing board accountabl­e to the university,” McGuinness said. “That’s problemati­c for a regular school board, but now imagine it’s for a multibilli­ondollar enterprise that touches every part of Colorado.”

Being held accountabl­e

Regent Sue Sharkey, RCastle Rock, the chair of the board, was the only current regent who responded to a request for comment for this story.

Sharkey said she is proud to be a member of an elected board because more people pay attention to CU’s Board of Regents.

“It’s interestin­g, the distinctio­n between Colorado State University, where we don’t really hear about their governing board,” Sharkey said. “It just doesn’t get as much attention, so I think it’s good that the people of Colorado have an opportunit­y to pay attention to what we’re doing as a governing board and the decisions we make and are held accountabl­e for. We’re very actively involved as elected officials, and I like that.

“If it’s a governor-appointed board, it’s typically more high-profile people or people in business, and that’s not a bad model. It’s just different than who we are.”

Colorado State University representa­tives declined to comment on the pros and cons of being overseen by a board appointed by the governor.

Michael Carrigan, a former Democratic regent from Denver who served on the CU board from 2005 to 2017, said there is no doubt that an elected board has negative effects, but he didn’t think a governor-appointed board was the way to go, either.

Carrigan said pressure from the governor and the governor’s appointees could be just as damaging as the partisan divide. Carrigan pointed to a personal example of former Gov. Bill Owens pressuring him to fire Ward Churchill, the professor CU terminated a decade ago in a contentiou­s academic freedom battle that went all the way to the state Supreme Court.

“That was pressure from a sitting governor to a board member, but I felt no pressure because I was independen­tly elected,” Carrigan said.

But the current election system, Carrigan added, leads to “an unhealthy amount of partisansh­ip.” He added: “There are good, qualified people who are not willing to go through the whole campaign thing and the brain damage of that.”

Instead, he wondered if a signature petition process or something such as a judicial commission that could vet candidates on a nonpartisa­n basis and nominate them would be alternativ­e options.

Carrigan isn’t alone in thinking there must be another way.

Norm Brownstein, founding partner in powerhouse Denver-based law and lobbying firm Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, said he floated an idea to former Gov. John Hickenloop­er a few years ago about pursuing a change to the makeup of CU’s Board of Regents while maintainin­g its constituti­onal integrity.

Brownstein, an involved CU alum, proposed adding eight governor-appointed regents to the board. The eight could not outvote the nine elected regents, Brownstein said, but could add more balanced perspectiv­es and make the board less political.

Resistance from the regents prompted the end of that discussion, Brownstein said.

“I think it’s a good idea to revisit doing something constructi­ve to change the makeup of the board,” Brownstein said. “CU is a treasure for the state of Colorado.”

 ??  ?? Mark Kennedy will visit each of the University of Colorado’s campuses to meet with students, faculty, staff and the public
Mark Kennedy will visit each of the University of Colorado’s campuses to meet with students, faculty, staff and the public

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