The Morning Call

Penn State group gets candidate on trustee board

- By Susan Snyder

One of three candidates supported by a group of Penn State University students and alumni who wanted to see younger, more diverse members on the board of trustees was elected, according to results announced Friday.

Christa Hasenkopf, 41, an atmospheri­c scientist and 2003 graduate who founded an open air-quality database, the first to make informatio­n readily available in any location, received more than 7,000 alumni votes to earn one of three open alumni-elected seats on the board.

“I think this is a giant first step,” said Hasenkopf, who was backed by the group Penn State Forward. “I’m excited to work with the rest of the board. I think — I know — there are like-minded individual­s on the board who were excited about the ideas represente­d by Penn State Forward.”

Penn State students want to be heard, so they’re running candidates for the board of trustees.

Earlier this year, the fledgling group announced that it wanted to change the makeup of the mostly white and mostly male board — a volunteer body that sets policy and strategic direction, approves an annual budget and tuition rates, and provides broad oversight for everything from academics to athletics.

Penn State Forward’s effort prioritize­s climate change, educationa­l equity, student safety, and transparen­cy in governance. It was patterned after a similar push at Harvard in 2019. The election results were announced Friday at a board of trustees meeting where

the board also said goodbye to president Eric J. Barron, who is retiring after eight years.

In addition to a video tribute, the board named the Penn State Innovation Hub in downtown State College after Barron, gave him emeritus status, and awarded him the Penn State medal, which recognizes outstandin­g achievemen­t and has been around for decades but awarded only three other times. He led Penn State in the Sandusky aftermath and through

a pandemic: Eric J. Barron reflects on eight years

“We’ve had some ups and downs,” said Barron, who led the university through the aftermath of the Jerry Sandusky child sex-abuse scandal and then the pandemic, “and I will tell you if I were a little bit younger, I would do it all over again even if I knew it wouldn’t be smooth, because this is a special place.”

On alumni trustee elections, in addition to Hasenkopf, incumbent

Ted Brown, a 1968 graduate and CEO of Ketch Consulting Inc., received the most votes — more than 9,000 — and will remain on the board. Elected to the third seat was newcomer Barry Fenchak, who has two Penn State degrees and is a State College-based investment adviser. They will serve three-year terms.

Incumbents Bill Oldsey, a 1976 graduate and educationa­l publishing executive, and Barbara Doran, a 1975 graduate and CEO of BD8

Capital Partners LLC, were not re-elected. Also not successful were the two other candidates backed by Penn State Forward: Farnaz Farhi, 33, a 2010 graduate and Iranian-born ob/gyn at George Washington University, and Ed Smith, 38, who got both his bachelor’s and master’s degrees at Penn State, where he served as president of the student Black Caucus, and now works for the Kresge Foundation, promoting college opportunit­ies for students from marginaliz­ed groups.

They were among eight candidates vying for the positions. There are nine alumni-elected seats, three of which turn over every year. They represent about one-quarter of the more than 30 seats on the board. Others are appointed by the governor, elected by agricultur­al societies, chosen by the board itself, or serve as a result of their position in state government or within the university.

There were other new trustees appointed in those groups as well on Friday. In total, including the alumni seats, there are five newcomers and three incumbents who got board terms. Valerie Detwiler, senior vice president for Reliance Bank and a 1983 graduate, and M. Abraham Harpster, a 1993 alumnus and co-owner of Evergreen Farms Inc., were returned to office by the agricultur­al societies.

The board appointed Richard Sokolov, a 1971 alumnus and vice chair of Simon Property Group, a retail real estate group; Naren Gursahaney, former president and CEO of the ADT Corp.; and Tracy Riegel, a 1985 graduate and a former project manager for the Vanguard Group.

 ?? AMY SHORTELL/THE MORNING CALL ?? The Penn State Board of Trustees election results were announced Friday at a meeting where the board also said goodbye to President Eric J. Barron, who is retiring after eight years.
AMY SHORTELL/THE MORNING CALL The Penn State Board of Trustees election results were announced Friday at a meeting where the board also said goodbye to President Eric J. Barron, who is retiring after eight years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States