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Wiley to step down September ‘08

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Wiley to step down September '08

JAKE NAUGHTON/Herald photo

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by Tom Schalmo
Monday, December 10, 2007

After nearly seven years as head of the University of Wisconsin, John Wiley announced Friday he will step down as chancellor effective September 2008.

Wiley, who will turn 66 in March, said he is not retiring from the university and will stay on board to help with fundraising efforts, particularly with the East Campus renovation project.

Next fall will be the "perfect time for transition," Wiley said.

Wiley’s family moved out of the chancellor’s home last year so the house could undergo a wide range of renovations, and Wiley said Friday the family never intended to move back in.

Additionally, Wiley said the best time for a transition is halfway through a budget period, and 2008 will be midway through the 2007-09 biennial cycle.

UW is also up for reaccreditation in April 2009, seven months after the new chancellor would take over. That period gives the new chancellor "plenty of time to take full ownership and have full understanding" in developing the university’s next 10-year plan, Wiley said.

"Taking all these things into account, plus my age, it just seems like the right time," Wiley said at a press conference Friday.

One of Wiley’s strongest passions has been ensuring progress of the East Campus renovation project. Upon completion, there will be an arts and humanities district extending from Lake Mendota to Regent Street.

"I want to make sure that’s launched with enough momentum that it will continue on," Wiley said. "Even if we had all the money in hand today, it would still take about 10 years to complete."

Wiley said he spends at least 25 percent of his time as chancellor fundraising and will do even more during the next nine months.

"We have raised money at the rate of almost exactly $1 million a day every day of the year for six years," Wiley said. "So try waking up some day and telling yourself, ‘If I don’t raise $1 million today I’ve got to do two tomorrow.’"

While he will stay on faculty, Wiley said he will not go back into teaching in the electrical engineering department, which he did before joining the administration in 1989.

"I’m way too stale to do that," he said. "I’m a pretty good student, but I don’t have much appetite to relearn all that stuff again."

The next chancellor will continue to struggle with enduring budget cuts, but this is not an issue unique to UW, Wiley said.

"We as a society have to figure out where a division of responsibility lies between the students and their family, on the one hand, and the public at large on the other hand in financing public higher education because both sides benefit enormously," Wiley said. "It’s an investment."

He added returns on the investment in public higher education in the state are the greatest returns out of any state investment.

Wiley said the leadership within UW keeps the university at its level of quality.

"We’ve got an absolutely stellar group of deans right now, the best collection of deans this university has ever had," Wiley said, adding "the first, second, third, fourth and fifth things I would be most proud of are the people that we have around here."

After jokingly saying he has been considering this decision "for six years," Wiley said it has still been on his mind for some time.

 

Who’s next?

The UW System plans to "move swiftly on a national search" for the next chancellor, UW System Board of Regents President Mark Bradley said, with the new chancellor expected to take over immediately after Wiley leaves.

One struggle UW continues to deal with is faculty pay, which is less than competing universities throughout the United States.

Bradley said salary serves as just one part of a package, which also includes health insurance and retirement plans.

While the search will be broad, both Wiley and his predecessor, David Ward, served as UW faculty members before becoming chancellor.

"If you look at the tradition and you look at where, historically, the chancellors of this campus have come from, the norm has been to find a chancellor from within the faculty," Bradley said. "But, of course, there have been exceptions."

One exception was Donna Shalala, who came to UW from Hunter College in New York and served as chancellor from 1987-1993.

Provost Pat Farrell, who has served as UW’s second-highest administrator since the spring of 2006, said he does not know yet if he would like the chancellor position and said "it’s hard to say" how important it is to hire an in-house candidate.

Dean of Students Lori Berquam said the leadership team of Wiley, Farrell and Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs Darrell Bazzell have made a "great triad."

"The next person will also really have to really make a great team and contribute to the team that’s already existing, because the other two are really strong and very good at working together and problem solving and communicating," Berquam said.

Bradley, though, said the next chancellor should carry similar leadership skills to those Wiley has displayed, including surrounding himself with the best faculty possible.

"What I’m looking for is someone who is going to hit the ground running from the standpoint of maintaining that strategy and also providing leadership," Bradley said.

David Walsh, a current regent and former president of the board, will chair the committee that will make the final recommendation for the next head of UW-Madison.

"First of all, we need someone who understands public education," Walsh said. "We need someone who understands the culture of Wisconsin and the Wisconsin Idea, and specifically the University of Wisconsin-Madison."

For his part, Wiley said he will not speculate or offer recommendations for who the next chancellor should be, but did say several people on campus now would do a fine job as chancellor.

 

— Carl Jaeger contributed to this report.


Anonymous (December 10, 2007 @ 8:24am):

Best wishes, Chancellor Wiley. We'll miss you.

Anonymous (December 10, 2007 @ 10:18am):

well thats unfortunate...you wont be missed

Anonymous (December 10, 2007 @ 10:29am):

Mike Leckrone for Chancellor!

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