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Post Info TOPIC: C.L.--Universities decry plan to restructure


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C.L.--Universities decry plan to restructure
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http://www.clarionledger.com:80/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080911/NEWS/809110384/1001/newsfrnt

Universities decry plan to restructure

Current College Board system would be nixed

Elizabeth Crisp elizabeth.crisp@clarionledger.com September 11, 2008


Some lawmakers are pushing legislation that would restructure the state's public university system and give each school its own board of trustees.

Under a proposal discussed Wednesday, each of the eight universities would gain its own board to oversee issues like the hiring of presidents and faculty.

The existing state College Board would be transformed into a board of governors that would primarily oversee the collective budget issues and work as a liaison between the university boards and the Legislature.

The proposal has drawn opposition from the College Board as well as all the universities' presidents, who say the plan could create unnecessary competition between the state's schools and give way to political influence.


The Senate Universities and Colleges Committee held a hearing Wednesday on draft legislation that would take the issue to Mississippi voters. The hearing will continue today.


"We need to renovate our higher education system," said committee Chairman Doug Davis, R-Hernando.

Davis said if the proposal moves forward, it could appear on ballots as early as November 2010.


Recent issues over confidential presidential searches and the renaming of the Mississippi University for Women precipitated this look at the state College Board, he said.


Davis said he thinks individual boards would put people in place who have each university's best interest at heart.

"You wouldn't put the president of Pepsi in charge of making decisions for (Coca-Cola)," he said.

But all of the university leaders who spoke during Wednesday's hearing said they oppose the proposal.


"Our current structure is held in high regard," Delta State University president John Hilpert said.

Hilpert said creating additional boards would create additional costs and would benefit only the state's largest universities.


JSU President Ronald Mason said the College Board system is not the problem.

"We don't have any problems that money can't solve," he said. "The pie just isn't big enough, but I don't see how any of these changes would expand the pie."


College Board President Amy Whitten said she thinks the current system is the best option for Mississippi and is the best way to keep out political influence.

University of Mississippi Chancellor Robert Khayat said he also does not see a benefit in changing the system. "Do you want eight regional universities or a unified system?" Khayat asked.


Under the current system, the board has the ability to "advance pockets of excellence" and make sure universities "stay out of areas they shouldn't be in," Whitten said.


Interim MSU President Vance Watson also said the current system "works for us."


Some of the scrutiny being leveled at the College Board has come about because of the hiring of Watson's predecessor, Doc Foglesong.

Foglesong was hired to lead Mississippi State in 2006 following a search that many criticized as being too secretive. He resigned this year amid criticism of his leadership from students, faculty and alumni.


About 100 MSU alumni attended a meeting Wednesday evening in Rankin County with six members of the College Board to discuss the university's ongoing presidential search.


The College Board expects to name a preferred candidate late next month, board member Scott Ross said.


Many alumni who attended Wednesday's meeting said they had grown wary of the selection process after the hiring of Foglesong.

"The university is kind of at a tumultuous time," said MSU graduate Lee Hill. "We need certainty."

Alumni overwhelmingly expressed their desire for a president with ties to the university.


Though neither of the candidates the board has decided to interview has been identified, several alumni named their top two picks - Watson and U.S. Department of Agriculture Undersecretary Mark Keenum.

Watson has been with the university since 1966, working his way from professor to vice president before being appointed as interim president. He also holds a doctorate from MSU.


Keenum holds bachelor's and master's degrees and a doctorate from MSU and worked with the university for several years before working as legislative assistant for Sen. Thad Cochran and his appointment to the USDA.

"I just think, from my heart, the Mississippi State family is looking for a visionary person who can guide us," MSU grad Hardy Mitchell said.


To comment on this story, call Elizabeth Crisp at (601) 961-7303.



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H.A.--College board proposal worries some officials

http://www.hattiesburgamerican.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080914/NEWS01/809140317/1002

Excerpts:
...

Recent issues over confidential presidential searches and the renaming of the Mississippi University for Women precipitated this look at the state College Board, Davis told the Clarion-Ledger last week.

"We need to renovate our higher education system," he said.

However, Annie Mitchell, spokeswoman for the College Board, said the current set-up "allows us to make the decisions between politics and public policy.

"The board was unanimous in their opinion that a decentralized system would not adequately support the needs of the state and would create unnecessary competition for limited resources," she added."...

Former College Board member and Hattiesburg resident Bobby Chain said the shift back to a decentralized system will only reap more academic suspensions.

"It would be an absolute disaster," he said. "It's how we lost accreditation in the '30s. And it was a painful process to rebuild."

Chain said the current College Board was designed to shield political interference.

"They created a governing board isolated from politicians, and it has worked well," he said.  ...


 

State Sen. Joey Fillingane, R-Sumrall, said the proposal has strengths and weaknesses.

"There would be more local control over our local university and that has a certain appeal to it," he said.

"But if there's no overarching group to disburse money evenly to the universities, then certain universities who have more pull could use that with legislators or big-money donors." ...


 

Faculty Senate President Stephen Oshrin, a professor of speech and hearing sciences at Southern Miss, is troubled by the proposal's possible effect on academics.

"If you decentralize the College Board, it might result in the duplication of some academic programs and the omission of high-need, low-visibility programs at various institutions," he said.

"My concern is continuing the ability to provide the kind of educational programs important to students and important in meeting the needs of the state."

Dr. Martha Saunders, president of the University of Southern Mississippi, said that in her experience, central boards put the needs of the state first.



 



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H.A. OPINION--State universities weigh decentralized option

http://www.hattiesburgamerican.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080914/OPINION01/809140340/1014/OPINION


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What Fillingane is talking about is restructuring IHL to be like the State Board for Community & Junior Colleges. Frankly, that would be utter disaster. The CJCs all have independent boards of trustees & through skillful manipulation of the selection rules for their trustees, most of the CJC presidents have total control of their boards. Simply put, anyone who rocks the boat gets "un-appointed" posthaste.

Moreover, with separate boards, you can bank that USM will get progressively less & less of the state appropriation.

And as Bobby Chain pointed out, the IHL board was developed in response to serious SACS issues in the 1930s. As an aside, the Delta Gamma sorority at Ole Miss (DG was founded in Oxford & the UM chapter is regarded today as the "flagship" chapter) lost its charter during that debacle. (Things one learns with a pack of Do Gooders running around the farm. biggrin)

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Damn right, Khayat and MSU want it to remain the same.  As it is, they control the board, always have and always will.  For those of you who dozed through the late 90s, this is what we were fighting about.  We wanted fairness for USM.  Simple.  Whitten likes her power.  How many times has she been on the campus at USM except to attend an IHL meeting here?  Hypocrites!

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Actually, Ms. Whitten was at Dr. Saunders installation. I spoke to her, thinking she was someone else.

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Your comments are quite telling.  Glad she came to the inaugural, but actually the board meeting was here at that same time.  Nope, I don't suppose many USM supporters would recognize most of the members of the IHL board.  How many come to athletic events?  Nicholson would not even cross the street for a game for years; he was hobnobbing at MSU.  So how do we rank now in terms of per capita funding?  Still number 7 on the hit parade--out of 8 schools?  We just don't seem to get it until we actually "get it."  A tribute to our leadership. 

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The funding formula, long time ago, was based on "cost of credit hour production".  USM had more credit hours than anyone, so cost was down for us.  USM fought to have the formula changed to give more weight to credit hours produced.  This resulted in the board leveling the playing field by mandating that USM go to the semester system as opposed to the quarter hour system with semester hour credit that was in place.  The formula has now been changed to give more weight to credit hour production.  Campus unrest over president selections and the Katrina disaster lowered enrollment and credit hour production.  We now have the opportunity to increase funding by recruiting more students and retaining those students.  Our destiny is in our hands.

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