UVA Board to meet Tuesday for possible reinstatement vote

Three members of UVA’s Board of Visitors have called for an emergency meeting of the Board, set for Tuesday at 3pm, to "discuss possible changes in the terms of employment of the President."

It’s evidence that Sullivan’s supporters on the 16-member Board—down a voting member after the resignation of Vice Rector Mark Kington earlier this week—believe they have enough votes to reinstate her the emergency meeting, which, unlike the near 12-hour marathon of Monday night, will be public.

An emergency meeting of the Board must be called three business days in advance, making Thursday at 5pm the deadline for requesting one Tuesday. Bylaws require no fewer than three members make the call. UVA spokeswoman Carol Wood told the C-VILLE that the Board members who requested the meeting were A. Macdonald Caputo, Timothy Robertson, and Hunter Craig. 

Caputo was one of two who abstained from voting on the appointment of Carl Zeithaml as interim president at the end of the Board’s long meeting earlier this week. Craig expressed regret at not being able to reinstate Sullivan at the same meeting. 

The assumption that they and Robertson could scrape together enough votes for a reinstatement doesn’t seem far off the mark. Board member Heywood Fralin voted no on Zeithaml’s appointment, and Robert Hardie also abstained. Member Glynn Key left the meeting early, which has led many to speculate she’d come down on the side of Sullivan in a vote. 

That makes six members who could be considered likely to favor reinstatement. And with no Kington—understood to be one of the architects of the ouster along with Dragas—Sullivan’s supporters on the Board would only need eight votes to carry the day.

The announcement of the special meeting came at the end of another day of widespread protest against the Board’s actions in forcing Sullivan out of the president’s office. UVA’s Faculty Senate fired off a message repeating demands for Dragas to step down, and sent a letter to Governor Robert McDonnell blasting the Board. All but one of the University’s deans signed a letter requesting the Board reinstate Sullivan. The only missing name was Zeithaml’s, but his fellow deans declined to ask him to join them, preferring to avoid putting him in a "difficult position."

There was a grassroots e-mail effort, too; once the Washington Post ran a story reporting Sullivan supporters would make a bid to reinstate her, faculty from multiple University departments sent repeated messages to alumni and current students urging them push the Board to vote to return Sullivan to office.

Meanwhile, members of the UVA community are planning yet another rally on the Lawn, this one dubbed the "Rally for Honor." Students, faculty, and alumni are encouraged to turn up between 2 and 4 pm Sunday, June 24 to "protest the lack of transparency and respect within the governing Board of Visitors."

 

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UVA Board under fire following Sullivan resignation

 

As more details of Teresa Sullivan’s sudden resignation come out, the Board of Visitors is coming under fire for the secretive process used to oust her. (Photoby Dan Addison/UVA Public Affairs)

Outrage within the UVA community over the sudden and still poorly understood resignation of University President Teresa Sullivan is building to a head this week, and the Board of Visitors is bearing the brunt of the anger over the secret ouster. As details of the behind-the-scenes decision to push out the president trickle out, some are saying the Board will reap what it sows.

More than a week after UVA Rector and head of the Board Helen Dragas announced the president’s resignation via e-mail, the timeline of the campaign to unseat Sullivan has started to come together. What’s still not clear is who knew what when—and that raises some sticky legal questions.

For the latest on this story, visit our This Just In blog…Zeithaml named interim President

University spokeswoman Carol Wood told reporters last week that Dragas had spoken with each individual member of the Board of Visitors and “had their full support” before telling Sullivan she was out. Speaking through Wood, Dragas stuck by that statement, even after a Thursday Washington Post story reporterd at least three members—A. Macdonald Caputo, Heywood Fralin, and Vincent Mastracco—were kept in the dark until shortly before Sullivan herself was told she was out.

It’s the acknowledgement that Dragas took a piecemeal approach to her campaign that’s at the heart of the anger over Sullivan’s departure. Many say it’s a blatant violation of the spirit, if not the letter, of the Freedom of Information Act.

Virginia’s FOIA is set up to push proceedings into the light of day. Any gathering of a body’s members that meets a quorum—in the case of the Board of Visitors, it’s five people—requires public notice and an agenda. Certain discussions and actions, including those about personnel, can take place behind closed doors, but the governing body must still call the meeting publicly.

And by the Rector’s own admission, that’s exactly what didn’t happen at UVA. By speaking with her Board one-on-one, Dragas avoided the need to call a meeting.
According to open government experts, though, the Board’s actions on that front weren’t illegal.

“The Board was quite careful in dotting the ‘i’s and crossing the ‘t’s,” said Robert O’Neil, who served as UVA president from 1985 to 1990. O’Neil is uniquely qualified to weigh in: Not only did he step down from his presidency after a historically short term found him at odds with the Board, he’s also a renowned First Amendment scholar and was the first president of the Virginia Coalition for Open Government, a nonprofit watchdog group.

Megan Rhyne, the Coalition’s associate director, said a recent Virginia Supreme Court decision removes more ambiguity. On June 7, the court reaffirmed an earlier ruling that said e-mail communications—even group messages that specifically get at issues of public governance—aren’t considered meetings under the FOIA. So if Dragas orchestrated her consensus-building via online messages, Rhyne said, it’s O.K. in the eyes of the state.

But that doesn’t mean the secrecy was wise, she said. “That kind of sudden decision is always going to raise questions, and it’s always going to fuel rumors and speculation,” said Rhyne. At that point, appearing transparent becomes a matter of self-preservation.

In the week that followed Sullivan’s surprise resignation, nobody privy to the decision to force her out has offered a detailed, on-the-record explanation, and rumors have indeed been flying in the information vacuum. Unsourced media reports have fueled speculation that key UVA donor Paul Tudor Jones II pushed for Sullivan to get the ax, that Governor McDonnell was in on the scheme, and that Sullivan’s refusal to sign on to a lucrative deal to privatize an online degree program was her undoing.

The closest thing the public and press have had to a candid, attributable take on the reasons for Sullivan’s departure came from then-chair of the Darden School Foundation, Peter Kiernan, who on Monday advertised his role in an e-mail accidentally sent to a much wider audience than intended.

Kiernan told his fellow Foundation trustees that the discussion about how to dump Sullivan had been going on for weeks, and that the Board felt Sullivan couldn’t make tough decisions about finances and technology, and that she wasn’t able to embrace “strategic dynamism”—Wall Street-speak for rapid-fire fiscal management.

Kiernan suffered for his candor. Just days after his e-mail went public, he resigned from the Darden Foundation board, apologizing for “further complicating the already difficult situation.”

Dragas’ top-down approach to governance is a deviation from her own recently stated philosophy as rector. In March, Virginia Business Magazine ran an interview in which the rector was pressed to define her role at the University. Was being the Board’s CEO similar to running her development company?

“I don’t consider myself the chief executive of UVA,” she replied. “The academic environment is one of shared governance, which is quite different than running a for-profit company. I recognize that, and I try to honor that.”

Rhyne said the Board’s lack of transparency has shifted scrutiny from the decision to the deciders. “When there is no real disclosure, then the debate becomes the lack of disclosure,” she said. And at a public institution, everybody has a reason to care. “It does have an impact on all of us,” she said, “even if the decision was the right one.”

Soundboard | June 15, 2012 – Teresa Sullivan’s Resignation by C-Ville Weekly on Mixcloud

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Two missing Afghans in jail following flight from Charlottesville

 

Four women from a group of 21 visiting Afghans disappeared from Charlottesville before their trip was cut short June 6. Officials say two were intercepted trying to cross into Canada. (Photo by UVA Today) 

The Federal government continues to investigate the disappearance of four Afghans from a group visiting UVA earlier this month, but even with at least two of the women in custody, officials have remained quiet on why the women fled the educational program.

The State Department and the nonprofit Relief International, which jointly oversaw the group, have shared little since the women went missing from the group of 21 individuals—mostly young women working with nonprofits in Afghanistan—who were visiting the Center for Politics on a diplomatic trip to learn about democracy and the rule of law.

But Center spokesman Kyle Kondik confirmed that by the morning of Saturday, June 2, two women had slipped out of their rooms at the Cavalier Inn. The Center was alerted by Relief International officials the next day, said Kondik. The following Monday night, another woman disappeared, followed by a fourth the next night.

That’s when the State Department pulled the plug on the trip, cutting it short before a planned tour of historical East Coast cities. The delegation was bused to D.C. Wednesday, June 6 and flown back to Afghanistan—minus four members.

As the State Department and FBI began investigating, officials said they didn’t believe any of the four posed a threat to U.S. security, saying they were motivated by concern for the women’s safety. While the State Department initially named two of the women—Zuhra Sadat and Hamida Sayedkhan—officials refused to release the names of the others.

It wasn’t until last week that any more news broke. On Tuesday, June 12, U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents patrolling near the town of Champlain, New York, came across two of the women walking north toward the Canadian border, according to the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees CPB. When approached, the pair confirmed that they were Afghans, and said that they had intended to walk into Canada. They were detained, and DHS said they are now being held at the Clinton County Jail in Plattsburg, New York. Their names have not been released.

At least one report said three women had been detained, and while officials haven’t confirmed that they have a third in custody, DHS has indicated that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement may have been involved in intercepting one of the four.

Everyone involved has clammed up about what will happen to the women in custody and details on who remains at large. The State Department has repeatedly referred all comment to the FBI, saying the matter is now one of law enforcement. The FBI has in turn refused to release information, pushing off that responsibility to the Departments of State and Homeland Security. Relief International did not return calls for comment.

The women’s motivations for leaving aren’t clear, but officials told reporters last week that some of those participating in the UVA program had said they were concerned that their trip to the U.S. could put them in danger when they returned home. It’s a familiar situation for the State Department, which last year ended a foreign exchange program that brought Afghan students to U.S. high schools after dozens of minors fled for Canada, which has long had one of the world’s least restrictive asylum policies.

UVA’s Center for Politics has expressed concern for the women who left, but said responsibility lay with Relief International and the State Department. A second trip to UVA by a separate Afghan group has been cancelled in the wake of the incident, said Kondik, “but we fully expect to continue the program and have similar groups come in the future.”

Two missing Afghans in jail following flight from Charlottesville by C-Ville Weekly on Mixcloud

Carl Zeithaml appointed interim UVA President after marathon meeting

After more than 11 hours behind closed doors, the University of Virginia Board of Visitors has elected Carl Zeithaml, head of UVA’s McIntire School of Commerce, interim president. 

"I am sincerely honored and humbled to be called upon to serve the University in this capacity," Zeithaml said. "I realize that it is a very difficult time for many people within our community, but I look forward to working with our faculty, students, staff, alumni and University leaders to move U.Va. forward."

Heywood Fralin offered the only "no" vote at the 2:30 a.m. public session, though there were two abstentions—one from A. Macdonald Caputo and another from Robert D. Hardie. Caputo and Fralin were among the Board members said to have been kept in the dark by Rector Helen Dragas ahead of the decision to oust President Teresa Sullivan, who served only two years before being told a week ago last Friday that she could resign or be fired.

"Carl Zeithaml is the perfect choice to serve as interim president while we undertake a national search for a new president," said Dragas, in a statement Tuesday morning. "His length of service, experience leading the undergraduate business school and his commitment to the University will enable him to hit the ground running."

 

Dragas once again acknowledge the Board’s part in what she called a "difficult week" for the UVA community.

"I want to thank the U.Va. family for enduring the tumult of this difficult week. It has been exceptionally trying for all of us, and we accept our great share of responsibility for that," Dragas said. "As we look forward to the transition to new leadership at the University, our community can rest assured that it will have a great deal of input."

According to the McIntire School’s website, Zeithaml is serving his fourth term as the school’s dean and is the F.S. Cornell Professor of Free Enterprise. He has a D.B.A. in Strategic Management from the University of Maryland and an M.B.A. in Health and Hospital Administration from the University of Florida. He earned his B.A. in Economics from the University of Notre Dame.

Zeithaml’s academic work focuses on the field of strategic management with an emphasis on global and competitive strategy. He joined the McIntire School in 1997. Prior to that, he spent 11 years on the faculty in the Kenan-Flagler Business School at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

 

 

Kington resigns from UVA Board of Visitors, signals need for “healing process”

UVA Vice Rector Mark Kington has resigned from his position, according to a letter sent to Governor Robert McDonnell today. The Daily Progress acquired the letter, the full text of which reads as follows:

Dear Governor McDonnell: 

It has been a great honor to serve on the Board of Visitors of the University of Virginia, and I am deeply grateful to you for giving me that opportunity.

In order to better serve this university which I love and respect, and to help bring about new leadership on the Board of Visitors at this critical time, I am resigning my position as Vice Rector and as a board member effective immediately. I believe that this is the right thing to do and I hope that it will begin a needed healing process at the university. 

Thank you for allowing me to serve.

Sincerely,

Mark J. Kington

As Vice Rector of the UVA Board of Visitors, Kington was in the room when Rector Helen Dragas informed President Teresa Sullivan that her services were no longer needed. According to the Washington Post, Dragas also said in an email that Kington had been involved in an ongoing process to review Sullivan’s performance that had informed her determination to look for a new president.

“I refer you to board meeting minutes from the fall of last year when the board adopted procedures for presidential review, which were followed,” Dragas wrote. “There were ongoing discussions between the Vice Rector, the President, and myself, as often as bi-weekly, on areas of presidential responsibility. At no time did I conduct a personnel review of the President with no other members present.” 

The formality of Kington’s statement makes it hard to determine if he resigned his position on the Board of Visitors as a way of indirectly accepting blame for the fallout from Sullivan’s removal or avoiding it, but he clearly indicated the move was motivated by his desire to help "begin a needed healing process at the university."

Board of Visitors’ Fralin voices opposition to Sullivan’s removal

Heywood Fralin, the only member of the UVA Board of Visitors to vote against the appointment of interim president Carl Zeithaml at the end of the Board’s marathon meeting early this morning, has issued a statement about his decision to stand his ground.

In a statement e-mailed to media, Fralin said he believed Zeithaml is a strong leader, but voted against the McIntire School Dean’s appointment to express his unhappiness with the way the Board ousted President Teresa Sullivan.

Fralin was reported to be one of at least three Board members who wasn’t informed of the majority of the Board’s plan to push for Sullivan’s removal until just before the president herself was asked to resign. 

"I have served on two search committees with Carl and believe him to be an extraordinary and capable leader," Fralin said in his statement. "I like him as a person, and admire his leadership at the Commerce School, which is the highest rated school at the University of Virginia and is viewed by many to be the first or second best Commerce School in the nation."

"My vote was an indication of my dissatisfaction with the process and the decision that lead to the resignation of Terry Sullivan. I have not been presented with evidence that I believe merits asking for her resignation, nor have I ever indicated that I would be willing to support such an effort. Given an opportunity I would have also voted to support her reinstatement. It is my opinion that the process leading to her resignation was flawed. I am convinced that in the future the Board of Visitors will always meet in a scheduled meeting to discuss issues involving the President."

"Now that Carl has been selected as the Interim President I believe that we should all join behind his selection and work together to unify the university community in support of this institution that we love. It damages the university for us to be divided."

Landmark Hotel sells for $6.25 million

Start calling it the Dewberry.

The shell of what was to be the Landmark Hotel was sold at auction in a Charlottesville courtroom Monday morning to a property developer from Atlanta who paid $6.25 million for it, and hopes to make Halsey Minor’s failed project the second of a string of boutique luxury hotels.

John Dewberry, owner of Dewberry Capital, appeared in person to place the winning bid in the auction, which lasted less than five minutes and involved only two bidders. Lee Danielson, long expected to make another attempt at owning the stalled hotel, failed to provide evidence he had the financial backing to support the minimum $3 million bid and never made it to the table. Omni Hotel Group parent company TRT Holdings met the minimum, but declined to move forward with the auction once Dewberry upped the ante to $3.5 million.

A former quarterback for Georgia Tech who was born in Waynesboro, Dewberry said his firm has primarily built shopping centers and urban high-rises. He and his brother started planning to get into the boutique hotel market several years ago when they bought a hurricane-battered and long-neglected building in downtown Charleston. They’re moving ahead on that hotel, he said—the first Dewberry—and hope to start work on their new Charlottesville project within a year.

Dewberry said the Downtown Mall property had piqued his interest years ago, but the legal quagmire surrounding the Landmark turned him off.

"I’m the kind of guy who’s happy to step outside and settle it in an ally," he joked, "but I hate lawsuits."

He said he’s looking forward to the chance to bring an "understated elegance" to the property, and plans to add 55 rooms to the original 100-room concept.

"It’s kind of like buying a horse," said Dewberry, whose family races thoroughbreds in Ireland. "You always feel good the day you buy."

 

Thousands rally for Sullivan; Board of Visitors stands its ground

About 2,000 people gathered on the Lawn to demand the reinstatement of ousted UVA President Teresa Sullivan as the Board of Visitors met to discuss the appointment of her interim replacement. Graelyn Brashear photo.

About 2,000 UVA faculty, students, and alumni took to the Lawn this afternoon in a strong show of support for ousted University President Teresa Sullivan, who met briefly with the Board of Visitors behind closed doors.

Sullivan, accompanied by faculty escorts, made her way through the cheering crowd in front of the Rotunda steps shortly before 3:30pm. She joined the Board in a closed session immediately following a public meeting during which UVA Rector Helen Dragas expressed regret for causing "pain, anger, and confusion" but didn’t back down from her decision to push out Sullivan.

"We have heard your demands for a fuller explanation of this action," Dragas said. "And while our answers may seem insufficient and poorly communicated, we have responded with the best we have to offer—the truth."

Dragas said the Board was looking for "a leader in fulfilling its mission, not a follower," and said it would "seek to be responsive to families and taxpayers who foot our bills and to legislators who demand accountability."

Responding to rumors of academic cuts, Dragas said firmly that the Board will never direct that programs or courses be eliminated or trimmed back.

But she also indicated the Board had no intention of turning back.

"As we look forward to the transition to new leadership at the University—a process that begins today with our deliberation of the selection of an interim President—the UVA family can rest assured that it will have a great deal of input," she said. The next step is to set up a special search committee, which she promised will include students, faculty, alumni, and staff.

The thousands on the Lawn included many of the same, and they made their feelings clear as they surged up the steps with Sullivan as she entered the building, shouting, "UVA! UVA! UVA!" and "Terry! Terry! Terry!"

When Sullivan emerged, surrounded by a throng of reporters and cameras, she paused on the packed steps to address the crowd.

"You do great work every day," she said. "At the end of the day, that’s the important thing. The University of Virginia must remain a great university."

Sullivan said no more beyond promising that her remarks to the Board would be made public later in the day. As she moved off through the crowd, a purple umbrella held over her head, the assembled faculty and students broke into a loud rendition of the alma mater.

Read Dragas’ full remarks below:

June 18, 2012 Â? The following is a statement by University of Virginia Rector Helen E. Dragas presented today at the opening of the special Board of Visitors meeting.

"On behalf of the Board of Visitors, I’d like to speak directly to the extended U.Va. family– to our students, faculty, staff, alumni and friends. We reach out to you today as fellow sons and daughters of this University, who studied here, matured into adulthood here, made friends here, met spouses here, and walked the hallowed Lawn.

We share your love of this institution and its core values of honor, integrity, and trust. Like you, we have given our energy, commitment, and resources to the University. And, like you, we are inspired by the magic of U.Va. every time we speak with students and faculty. Through service to the University, we have had the true honor of witnessing up close all that the University community does so well.

This has been a difficult week for the University. It is never easy to announce a change in leadership, particularly after a relatively short period of time since the last selection.
While our actions in this matter were firmly grounded in what we believe to be in the very best and long-term interests of the University, and our students, faculty, staff and alumni, we want to express our sincere regret for the pain, anger and confusion they have caused among many in our U.Va. family. We certainly never wished nor intended to ignite such a reaction from the community of trust and honor that we all love so dearly. We recognize that, while genuinely well-intended to protect the dignity of all parties, our actions too readily lent themselves to perceptions of being opaque and not in keeping with the honored traditions of this University. For that reason, let me state clearly and unequivocally: you, our U.VA. family, deserved better from this Board, and we have heard your concerns loud and clear.

The Board of Visitors exists to make these kinds of judgments on behalf of all the constituencies of the University. While the broader U.VA. community– our students, faculty, alumni, and donors, among others– have varied and important interactions and touch-points with our University leadership, the Board is the one entity that has a unique vantage point that enables us to oversee the big picture of those interactions, and how the leadership shapes the strategic trajectory of the University. Simply put, we have the responsibility, on behalf of the entire community, to make these important and often difficult calls.

I want to make clear that the Board had a formalized communications process with the President, involving ongoing discussions for an extended period of time on progress toward mutually agreed-upon strategic goals for the University. And we took this action only as a result of there being an overwhelming consensus of the Board to do so, and after all Board members were thoughtfully and individually engaged.

We have heard your demands for a fuller explanation of this action. And while our answers may seem insufficient and poorly communicated, we have responded with the best we have to offer: the truth.

As Visitors, we have the very highest aspirations for the University of Virginia: for it to reach its fullest potential as a 21st century Academical Village, always rooted firmly in our enduring values of honor, integrity and trust. We crave to deliver the finest education and the most cutting-edge health care possible. Achievement of this singular goal is only possible through focused, specific, and well-funded institutional direction and vision, created not by the Board of Visitors, but by those who own the academic content and who steward the financial and physical resources of the University– the President, Provost, Chief Operating Officer, and the faculty. And, to set the record straight on an important point, the Board has never, nor will we ever, direct that particular programs or courses be eliminated or reduced. These matters belong to the faculty.

Simply put, we want the University to be a leader in fulfilling its mission, not a follower. We want the very best caliber education and experience delivered to the 21,000 students for whom we are responsible. We crave the highest quality care for the almost 900,000 patient visits attended to by the exceptional doctors, nurses, and staff members in the U.VA. Medical Center. We seek to elevate access, affordability, quality and diversity for every student and each patient. And in our push for excellence we seek to be responsive to families and taxpayers who foot our bills and to legislators who demand accountability.

This is all to say that there is not one single person on earth whose interests we would ever put above those of the thousands of stakeholders entrusted to our care. Not one President, not one administrator, not one faculty member, and certainly not one donor.

Yes, we require external philanthropy to operate. We believe that it should be solicited according to the University’s articulated priorities– in particular, on raising resources to reverse the slide in faculty compensation to combat the increasingly intensive raid on our talented faculty. We absolutely must find ways to provide for the recruitment of our next generation of eminent scholars and researchers.

As we look forward to the transition to new leadership at the University– a process that begins today with our deliberation over the selection of an interim President– the U.Va. family can rest assured that it will have a great deal of input. We have already met with student and faculty leadership, and we agreed to broaden and deepen our interaction and engagement going forward. For selection of the next president, our Board Manual calls for setting up a special committee, which, in addition to some Board members, will have representation from students, faculty alumni and staff. We look forward to your participation in this important process.

On a personal note, I want to say something about our outgoing President, Terry Sullivan. Dr. Sullivan has put all of her considerable energies, and then some, into her work as President, and we owe her a great deal of gratitude for her service, her enthusiasm for improving U.VA., and for always keeping the best interests of this University foremost in mind. We hope that Dr. Sullivan will remain an important contributing member of our U.VA. family in the coming years, and we are very fortunate to have had the benefit of her service.

I want to thank the U.VA. family for enduring the tumult of this difficult week. It has been exceptionally trying for all of us, and we accept our great share of responsibility for that. Going forward, the Board of Visitors pledges to work closely with you as we all pull together to restore the foundational unity of Mr. Jefferson’s University for current and future generations."

Sullivan to Board of Visitors: Trust requires frank discussion

UVA has released a statement made by ousted president Teresa Sullivan to the Board of Visitors this afternoon, a seven-plus page document read aloud by Faculty Senate member and drama professor Gweneth West on the Rotunda steps as the Board carried on a closed-session meeting.

In her statement, Sullivan detailed the changes she instituted during her 22 months in the president’s office. She also urged the Board members to avoid the pitfall of too much rapid change, and encouraged them to keep in mind the need for trust in their relationship with the rest of the University community.

"I have been described as an incrementalist," Sullivan said, directly addressing one of the criticisms UVA Rector Helen Dragas has made in justifying the board’s decision to oust her. "It is true. Sweeping action may be gratifying and may create the aura of strong leadership, but its unintended consequences may lead to costs that are too high to bear."

Sullivan said her kind of change—"carefully planned and executed in collaboration with Vice Presidents and Deans and representatives of the faculty"—was the way to move forward.

"Corporate-style, top-down leadership does not work in a great University," she said. "Sustained change with buy-in does work."

She said the last 10 days have already taken a toll at UVA. Faculty have already left for other Universities. "Deans and provosts at every peer institution are setting aside funds now to raid the University of Virginia next year given the current turmoil on campus."

Sullivan defended her budget reforms, which included pushing responsibility for department finances to the respective deans. 

"A dramatic top-down reallocation in our general fund, simply to show that we are ‘changing,’ or that we are not ‘incremental,’ seems to me fiscally imprudent, highly alarming to faculty, and unfair to students who expect to get a broadly inclusive education here."

She also drove home the divide that has sprung up since the Board announced her surprise resignation.

"Beyond fiduciary matters related to the budget model and fundraising, the University’s new administrative team has had a considerable human impact," she said. "If you want to know about the impact on the faculty, on its morale and energy and commitment to UVA, go outside and talk to them." The remark drew loud cheers as West read it aloud to the crowd still assembled on the Lawn, as did her comments about trust:

"The community of trust is not merely a term to describe a Code that applies to our students," she said. "Trust does not mean an absence of disagreement. But it requires that disagreements be frankly discussed."

But Sullivan ended her remarks with an apparent acknowledgement that her days as president of the University were up.

"No matter how accomplished he or she may be, a president cannot read minds," she said toward the end of the statement. "When you choose a new president, tell him or her what you are thinking."

Full text of Sullivan’s statement to Board of Visitors

The following is the text of Sullivan’s statement to the UVA Board of Visitors this afternoon, as provided by the University:

In 1816, our founder Thomas Jefferson said, "as new discoveries are made, new truth discovered and manners and opinions change with the change of circumstances institutions must advance also to keep pace with the times."

We are all aware that the UVA needs to change and for the past 2 years I have been working to do just that. Apparently, the area of disagreement appears to be just how that change should occur and at what pace.

I certainly want to take some time and talk about the many changes that I have made because they are significant. But first, I need to make one thing clear. The current reaction by the faculty, staff, and students on and off Grounds, and among the donors and alumni to my impending departure, is not something I have stirred up. I have made no public statement. I have done my best to keep the lowest possible profile. I have fulfilled previous commitments at the White House and elsewhere in Washington, and I have visited with friends in another state. I have not even responded to the innumerable people who have reached out to me personally and demonstrated their love for this great institution. I did not cause this reaction in the last ten days, but perhaps the reaction speaks to the depth of the connections I have made in the last 22 months. Through all of the last ten days, my overriding concern has been the welfare of the University of Virginia.

I have been described as an incrementalist. It is true. Sweeping action may be gratifying and may create the aura of strong leadership, but its unintended consequences may lead to costs that are too high to bear. There has been substantial change on Grounds in the past two years, and this change is laying the groundwork for greater change. But it has all been carefully planned and executed in collaboration with Vice Presidents and Deans and representatives of the faculty. This is the best, most constructive, most long lasting, and beneficial way to change a university. Until the last ten days, the change at UVA has not been disruptive change, and it has not been high-risk change.

Corporate-style, top-down leadership does not work in a great university. Sustained change with buy-in does work. UVA is one of the world’s greatest universities.

Being an incrementalist does not mean that I lack vision. My vision was clearly outlined in my strategic vision statement. It encompasses the thoughts developed by me and my team as to what UVA can become in the 21st century and parts of it were incorporated into the budget narrative that you adopted last month .

FACULTY: One of the great strengths of UVA is our outstanding faculty. As a tenured member of faculty, I have tried to view the campus not only from the president’s chair, but from the faculty’s lectern and it has been an amazing and rewarding experience. Nearly every faculty member here has opportunity costs for staying and has attractive options elsewhere. The faculty we most need to keep have many options elsewhere. Most of the faculty could earn more in some other organization, academic or non-academic. They stay to participate with other faculty “of the highest grade” and to interact with students who will be the leaders of the next generation. Their financial sacrifices have their limits; of course the faculty must be appropriately compensated.

But at the end of the day, money alone is not enough. The faculty must also believe that they can do their best work here. They must believe in the future here. At any great university, the equilibrium – the pull between the desire to stay and the inducements to leave – is delicate. Rapid change rapidly upsets this delicate equilibrium.

Already in the last ten days we have lost faculty to other universities. Fortunately, we are well past the usual hiring season in most disciplines. But deans and provosts at every peer institution are setting aside funds now to raid the University of Virginia next year given the current turmoil on our campus.

Clearly we have financial challenges. Our net financing from the state has been steadily cut for two decades, despite the efforts of the Governor and General Assembly to modestly reverse that trend. Both political and market forces limit the tuition we can charge. We are addressing these challenges in multiple ways.
The academic mission is central and must be protected. Strategic cutting and large-scale cost savings have therefore been concentrated in non-academic areas, and these areas have become notably leaner and more efficient.

The historic practice at UVA was that any necessary budget cuts in the academic areas were directed by the central administration, often by a non-academic officer. And because that officer often, almost inevitably, lacks sufficient information to make detailed choices, these cuts were usually applied across-the-board, the most non-strategic approach to cutting. I undertook to change this approach.

In the last two years, we have been working to implement a new internal financial model. This is no technical accounting matter. The new model would empower deans, improve their financial incentives, and hold them accountable for the results. Each dean knows his or her own school far better than the central administration can ever know it. But the deans have had limited financial planning tools, and if they did find a way to cut costs, or a creative way to raise revenue without raising tuition, there was no assurance that they would keep the savings or the revenue. We expect better financial decisions, new cost savings, and where necessary, more strategic program cuts from the new internal financial model.

The budgeting changes we have already set in place this year have created transparency and accountability and dispelled the perception that politics drives the internal allocation of resources. The budget meetings that we initiated this year provide the opportunity for the provost to work with deans on priorities for strategic investment. And often he discovers that multiple deans have a similar idea, and that a co-investment strategy will produce greater gains at lower total cost. We are making a portfolio of these “small bets,” which cumulatively will build strength in important areas of teaching and research. This approach acknowledges that we are neither prescient nor omniscient. No single initiative will do serious damage if it doesn’t work out.

One example, already under way and being expanded, is the Quantitative Collaborative, which addresses simulation and predictive statistical models and the challenges of massive data sets that exceed the limits of our analytic tools.
Others that are well along in the planning and funding stages include:
The Contemplative Sciences Center, which has broadened considerably from the original donor proposal to an exciting synergy among faculty from the Medical School, the College of Nursing, Asian Studies, Religious Studies, and other departments.

Our international focus: We are broadening and deepening the connections among our international faculty, especially among those who study China and Africa. These are not areas that should be siloed within academic units, but there should be ways for scholars across Grounds to interact on them. My recent trip to China was used as a way to integrate these scholars’ expertise and help us chart a course for the future.

Environmental sustainability is a topic that excites faculty and students from nearly every school, including the College, Architecture, Engineering, and other. . A new partnership with the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, together with our widely heralded Bay Game, offer opportunities for study in species conservation and clean water, which will be one of the most important issues of this century. Many more ideas are bubbling up both from faculty and from students. These projects require new funding, typically from interested private donors, but they are also force multipliers. They enable our existing faculty to expand the reach of their teaching and research through structured collaboration with colleagues in other departments and other schools. They do not tear down departments, but instead they provide ways for faculty from different departments to interact, enriching the departments but also allowing new activities.

We have taken similar initiative with respect to faculty compensation. We found funds for a 2% faculty pay raise last year — not enough, but the first raise of any kind in four years. Equally important, we instructed deans not to give a 2% raise across the board, but to allocate all raise money on the basis of merit. This rewards our most valuable faculty and improves the incentive structure for all faculty.
A dramatic top-down reallocation in our general fund, simply to show that we are “changing,” or that we are not “incremental,” seems to me fiscally imprudent, highly alarming to faculty, and unfair to students who expect to get a broadly inclusive education here. I have chosen a lower-risk and more conservative strategy, because I am accountable to the taxpayers and the tuition payers.

If we were to embark on a course of deep top-down cuts, there would also be difficult questions regarding what to cut. A university that does not teach the full range of arts and sciences will no longer be a university. Certainly it will no longer be respected as such by its former peers.

Faculty collaborate both within disciplines and across disciplines. In the nature of things, many of these collaborations are not even known to the central administration. If we cut from the top down, without consulting the affected faculty, a cut in one department may have wholly unintended consequences in another department that we are trying to build up.

Nor can we always predict which kind of knowledge will be of greatest import in the future. Before September 11, few of us understood just how important Arabic and other Middle Eastern and Central Asian languages would become — to our students, to the nation, and to national security. Suppose we had eliminated some of those languages because of low enrollment or other fiscal considerations before 2001. We would be scrambling to recreate them now.

Beyond finances, there are many other innovations I have undertaken and about which you are regularly briefed.

We conducted national searches to fill our two executive vice presidencies with talented administrators. No president can act alone; filling these positions was essential to further progress.

We have increased the emphasis on the unglamorous but critical task of patient safety in our hospitals.

We are undertaking or evaluating strategic alliances with other health care providers, to strengthen our position in the face of a changing and more complex and difficult market for health care.

We have taken initiatives to improve student safety. This is obviously a matter of great concern to parents. These initiatives include the Day of Dialogue during my first month on Grounds, and the follow up from that day, and a new policy on sexual misconduct that is considered a national model.

We greatly expanded our MLK Day celebration, both as an additional educational activity for our students but also as a way to link with the community of Charlottesville. We have worked with the Governor, with the Higher Education Advisory Commission created by the Governor, and with the legislature to implement the Higher Education Opportunity Act.

We are gradually increasing enrollment, preserving the quality of instruction with the initiative pre-funded by the General Assembly, and we have implemented Early Action in admissions, increasing our ability to compete for the best students.

We have created the 4VA telepresence consortium with the state, Cisco, Virginia Tech, George Mason, and James Madison that uses sophisticated technology to share courses and other resources; examples are advanced Mandarin and national security policy. I would have become the consortium’s chair on July 1. There is room for carefully implemented online learning in selected fields, but online instruction is no panacea. It is surprisingly expensive, has limited revenue potential, and unless carefully managed, can undermine the quality of instruction.

We have initiated the Hoos Well program, which in the long run will save money on our employee health care plan.

In this very Rotunda in which you are sitting, I initiated and secured funding for the critical roof repair. Much more must be done to complete this, and we had a plan in preparation to raise the funds.

Fundraising takes time. A new President first has to meet donors and establish trust and rapport. Instability is as alarming to donors as it is to faculty and in the last few days you are already seeing the impact.

Fundraising during my tenure has been rebounding from the effects of the recession and the presidential transition. Since I came on board in 2010, philanthropic cash flow has increased by 15.6%. New campaign commitments to date averaged $17.1 million per month in FY 2010 and averaged $24.6 million through April 30th of FY 2012. A number you may not know yet is that we raised $44 million from our Reunions classes at Reunions Weekend.

Beyond fiduciary matters related to the budget model and fundraising, the University’s new administrative team has had a considerable human impact. If you want to know about the impact on the faculty, on its morale and energy and commitment to UVA, go outside and talk to them.

I want to turn to the issue of trust. The community of trust is not merely a term to describe a Code that applies to our students. We equally need a community of trust between faculty and administration and among our leadership teams. Trust does not mean an absence of disagreement. But it requires that disagreements be frankly discussed. No matter how accomplished he or she may be, a president cannot read minds. When you choose a new president, tell him or her what you are thinking.

Finally, I would like to thank you for the great honor of leading the University of Virginia. In only 22 months, Doug and I have felt warmly embraced by the University and by Charlottesville and Albemarle County. Whatever the problems this University may be facing, make no mistake: This is one of the world’s great universities. Every day on Grounds, great ideas are pursued; outstanding books are written; patients’ lives are saved, often after despair had set in. The products and industries of tomorrow are being crafted in our laboratories, and the leaders of the twenty-first century fill our classrooms and seminar rooms.

One of the greater duties of the president is to listen carefully to the needs and aspirations of the community. Only with that input have I been able to identify and analyze the issues that required action. I am proud of my service here, and I thank you for the opportunity.