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Texas Showdown

June 15, 2009

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An unusually public battle between the president of Texas A&M University's flagship campus and her boss, Chancellor Mike McKinney, ended Sunday as the president announced her resignation, effective today. Elsa Murano's job had been in limbo since McKinney, the system head, gave her a particularly stinging evaluation.

The resignation came the day before the Board of Regents was scheduled to meet in executive session – over lunch – where regents were to have discussed “personnel matters” widely believed to be tied to Murano’s employment.

Underlying the bureaucratic wording of the board’s agenda is a controversy that has gotten downright nasty. Faculty say the now public feud is driven in large part by Murano’s unwillingness to allow McKinney to micromanage the university. Those faculty concerns were heightened upon the public release of McKinney’s evaluation of Murano, in which the chancellor criticized the president for working on behalf of faculty instead of on behalf of the regents.

“Should work WITH faculty not FOR faculty,” McKinney scribbled in the margins of the evaluation.

In a written response to the evaluation, Murano called McKinney’s claims “ludicrous.”

“Incredibly, Dr. McKinney also rated me a 1 [the lowest rating on a 5-point scale] in terms of being a team player,” she wrote. “Does this simply refer to the fact that I question ideas and plans that cross my desk that are troubling and which I consider as potentially damaging to the university?”

VP Hire May Be Root of Conflict

As talk of Murano’s imminent ouster spread across campus last week, faculty attached increasing significance to McKinney’s handwritten notes. Of particular interest is McKinney’s criticism of Murano’s failure to execute board directives.

“Refused to carry out her commitment to BOR or chancellor (VPR; Research foundation),” McKinney wrote.

To an outsider, the acronyms might not mean much. For faculty at A&M, however, there’s little mystery about McKinney’s beef. “VPR” is thought to refer to the recent hiring of a vice president for research. Unlike a previous vice presidential search for student affairs, which ended with the appointment of a former college roommate of Texas Gov. Rick Perry, the vice president for research was chosen after a national search.

Bob Bednarz, speaker of the Faculty Senate, said the president made it clear early on that she’d handle the vice president for research appointment in a more transparent manner than she had the student affairs job.

“I know that the president at one point said she was committed to having a nationwide search to find a vice president for research, and I think she made that statement publicly,” said Bednarz, a professor of geography. “And certainly people heard that and thought she was encouraged not to do [a national search], which is why she said she was determined to do it.”

The influence Perry and McKinney have had over Murano’s short presidency has become a source of concern and frustration for faculty and at least one noted alumnus. John Hagler, who has given $5 million to Texas A&M -- among other considerable gifts -- told The Eagle newspaper that the politicization of the campus is giving him second thoughts about continuing to support A&M financially.

"I cannot speak for other former students, but I can say this: it is inconceivable to me that I could continue to financially support a university whose governance has been so politicized and convoluted that its presidency is selected and dismissed with such callous disregard for due process or thoughtful community involvement,” he said.

Some faculty trace the schism between Murano and her politically-appointed boss – McKinney was Perry’s chief of staff – to the search for a vice president for student affairs. With some coaxing from both men, Murano appointed retired Lt. Gen. Joseph Weber, a longtime friend of Perry’s, to the post. Student criticism of the move was so intense that Murano rescinded the offer, only to later hire Weber.

The vice president for research search played out differently -- some say to Murano’s ultimate peril. A committee of campus stakeholders engaged in a national search, and declined to recommend the hiring of Brett Giroir, a Perry ally and former official of the Pentagon's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. But when Murano opted instead to hire Jeffrey Seemann, a University of Rhode Island dean, McKinney simply carved out a new position for Giroir, naming him vice chancellor of research for the system.

Neither McKinney nor his press office returned calls for comment Friday.

Murano similarly declined an interview request, but issued a statement citing her commitment to the university’s strategic plan, known as Vision 2020.

“The documents that I provided to the Chancellor both prior to and following his evaluation are self-explanatory and speak to the tremendous progress we have made in terms of re-energizing Vision 2020 and continuing Texas A&M’s legacy of service to the state and country,” the statement said. “It is the university’s long-standing practice not to discuss personnel matters, and staying consistent with this practice, I will decline to comment further.”

Chancellor’s Move Viewed as Power Grab

A number of the chancellor’s recent actions, including Giroir’s appointment in the system office, have prompted criticism that McKinney is consolidating power, taking particular ownership of the research enterprise. McKinney’s own public statements haven’t discouraged such speculation, given a recent comment that he might like to simply merge his job with that of the A&M presidency. The idea hasn’t been a hit with A&M faculty, and others in Texas are similarly skeptical. In an online poll with 875 faculty participants across three campuses, 85 percent expressed opposition to merging the positions, and just 8 percent said they supported the idea.

Charles Miller, former chairman of the University of Texas Board of Regents, says the chancellor has plenty of work to do on the political front without taking on additional responsibilities as A&M president.

“In the case of UT and Texas A&M they definitely should be [separate],” Miller said. “I don’t think many people would argue with that inside or out of the schools.”

Supporters Rally Around Murano

As the sword of Damocles hung over Murano Friday, the A&M Faculty Senate’s Executive Committee and Council of Principal Investigators put forward an open letter, expressing “a deep concern for the reputation and the future of this institution.”

“What message do we send our students if they perceive that questioning authority results in humiliation or dismissal? Imagine the consequences if our faculty treated students who challenged their ideas in a hostile fashion or failed to provide students with guidance to improve their performance,” the letter states.

“Recent events have diminished the Office of the President of Texas A&M University and are likely to destabilize the University and erode its ability to hire the most qualified administrators and faculty,” the letter goes on to say. “What talented administrator or faculty member would move to an institution where decisions are made unilaterally, disagreement is viewed as disloyalty, and transparency is not valued?”

It is ironic, perhaps, that faculty have so readily defended Murano, a former A&M dean of agriculture whose initial hiring was criticized by some of the very same people who are now rallying around her. Murano, who in late 2007 became the first woman and first Hispanic to lead A&M, was not hired on the recommendations of a search committee, and was instead handpicked by the very board that is thought to be seeking her ouster today.

Despite the rocky beginnings, however, Murano has proven to be an able and collaborative leader, according to Doug Slack, who chaired the presidential search committee. She has been committed to the strategic plan, and successfully encouraged some 400 faculty members to compete for research dollars for interdisciplinary projects, he said.

“That’s the first time so many faculty members have been involved in a strategic process that I’ve seen in my years at A&M. Period,” said Slack, a professor of wildlife and fisheries sciences who joined the faculty in 1973.

Hispanic groups like the Texas A&M Hispanic Network have similarly voiced support for Murano.

Henry Ortega, chairman of the 300-member alumni organization, told The Eagle the board had some “growing up” to do when it comes to diversity issues.

"There is a need for this university to come to grips with a little bit of growing up and become more open to the issues of diversity," he told the newspaper. "We only have praise for the way that Dr. Murano has handled her assignments at the university. She has been a symbol -- a breath of fresh air at A&M as far as I and the organization I represent are concerned. Our focus is the issue of diversity, and she's been very positive in promoting that."

The last several weeks of turmoil on campus have a familiar feel for students and faculty, who have cringed as power struggles continue to unfold at A&M. Bednarz says he’s just as concerned about controversies that may yet emerge as he is about the present one.

“Eighteen months ago the regents appointed Elsa Murano, and she was not one of the finalists identified by the search committee. And now here within a year she was given a really bad evaluation and now it appears that she might be replaced, and there’s no guarantee the process will be any different than it was last time,” Bednarz said. “It would seem to me that there is a danger of repeating the process again and again. Faculty are concerned about the impact this has on being able to attract good people and the reputation of the university.”

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Comments on Texas Showdown

  • Murano's Resignation
  • Posted by Dr. Robert Brown , Dean, College of Natural Resources at North Carolina State University on June 15, 2009 at 8:30am EDT
  • Elsa Murano became Dean of the the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences when I was a department head in that college. She was a capable administrator. After I left, she was appointed Presedint. That was a surprise, but what I hear from my colleagues at TAMU, she continued to be an able leader. No doubt with her resignation, other administrators at A&M will leave or be demoted. It is a sad day for Texas A&M, the state of Texas, and higer education nationwide. The reputation of Texas A&M and the A&M System has been diminished. It will be a long time recovering. The Chancellor and the Governor need to step aside now and let the Board and the faculty choose the next leader of Texas A&M.

  • outrageous!
  • Posted by Jim on June 15, 2009 at 9:00am EDT
  • A national search to find the best qualified for a very important high level university position? Egads! I am sure the governor had some more family that needed a job.

  • former student, TAMU (Class of 1993)
  • Posted by JJR on June 15, 2009 at 9:30am EDT
  • It seems like Nepotism and Cronyism are alive and well among the Board of Regents at my alma mater, Texas A&M, and that the new president was ousted for actually trying to find qualified personnel rather than the governor's personal favorites, as pushed by the Chancellor. His evaluations of the outgoing President are petty, vindictive, and unprofessional. Shameful episode, but alas probably business as usual in the corridors of power.

  • Where's David Horowitz?
  • Posted by Jonathan Dresner on June 15, 2009 at 10:00am EDT
  • If these were Democrats doing this, it would be national news.

  • National Search Process
  • Posted by Keith D Kulper , President at KULPER & COMPANY, LLC executive search on June 15, 2009 at 10:15am EDT
  • This morning's article appears to be the culmination of a search process gone wrong from the outset. When a national search for a president, VP or Dean is conducted in a the right way by a search committee charged by a board of regents or trustees and assisted by a professional search firm with a solid track record, the predictability success is greatly improved. The search process must begin with a well-wrought position specification in which the key decision makers and search committee members take an active hand in crafting. It is during this crucially important part of the process that differences of opinion come light and are debated and then resolved before the search gets underway. Finding candidates who will be interested in the Texas A&M presidency will not be hard --even after this very public and embarassing episode. Clearly developing a slate of candidates who closely meet a new position specification will improve the chances of success.

    Effective search consultants act as "guides" for the search committee and work with the hiring decision makers to help assure that the right hiring outcome occurs. It takes courage and determination to make certain that the job specification has real integrity and is not simply a statement of job responsibilities that bear the same platitudes applicable to any institution. What was missing from the job specification for Texas A&M presidential search that culminated with the hire of Dr Murano? I think this would be a very good place for the board of regents to begin their work in finding a new president.

    From the article, which appeared to be well written and balanced, it appears that the real position specification for the presidential job was not the one that president Murano saw when she interviewed for the position. Why not? Who benefits when the candidate does not meet the real job specification? Clearly, no one in the case of Texas A&M. Now the board of regents has a big job ahead not only recruiting the right new president but overcoming marketplace skepticism that could serve to make candidates who are indeed "right" for the presidency, question the wisdom of going into a job fraught with such apparent risk.

    A well run search, conducted in a manner that will seek out and value the opinions/input of the various constituencies of the university will help reduce the risk of a failed search and at the same time shine light on the real "key performance indicators/by when", of the position.

  • Corruption, Pure and Simple
  • Posted by Budget Guy on June 15, 2009 at 10:30am EDT
  • As a Texan and a UT Grad, I have to say that it is sad to see how far Texas A&M has fallen. It is even more sad to see how far the politics in my home state have fallen with political self-interest infecting and degrading one of the great academic resources of the state.

    As a university administrator with an MBA in Finance I admit that I have certain differences of opinion with the faculty vision of proper management and financial stewardship of the complex institution that is a modern university. Nevertheless, there is no "corporate" or "business" rationale would recommend such pathetic mistreatment of the faculty and the institution.

    The behavior as described here and in the Chronicle appears to be corruption, pure and simple, even if the Governor and his ilk couch it in management jargon.

  • Superman Where Are You Now?
  • Posted by Observer on June 15, 2009 at 11:15am EDT
  • So, let me get this straight, in Texas more weight is given to cronies than competence? I’m shocked.

    All sarcasm aside, this is not just a Texas issue. Based on what I read on IHE our colleges and universities are tearing themselves apart over internal power struggles and cronyism. The outcome is that the U.S. continues its slow decline in quality.

    Why? Where will this end? What can be done to return the focus on campus to education?

    I know these are big questions but what can each person do to stop this type of behavior from destroying our institutions of higher education?

    "Superman where are you now? When everything's gone wrong somehow..."

  • Psychology & Organizational Behavior
  • Posted by Kampechara Puriparinya , Lecturer at www.chandra.ac.th on June 15, 2009 at 1:15pm EDT
  • About woman President story at Texas A&M, an outstanding world class university with a large amount of students of US higher education institutions(HEIs), and multi-campus; the story of conflict should be solved by organization behavior modification (OB-Mod.). Performance evaluation, 360 degree of feedback of administrative staff, faculty members, general staff, alumni & students, and the stakeholders concern. The Board, or University Council is a must to be assessed annually. I think the story is a case of high conflict because of political issues in higher education contexts.

    Kampechara Puriparinya, PhD.

     

  • When You're Up Against Dumb . . . .
  • Posted by Chris Pantuso , Principal at Pantuso Enterprises on June 15, 2009 at 1:45pm EDT
  • As a former Ag, my financial support ends today. My "spiritual" support will never end. My money will flow once again when Dr. Murano - or someone of her stature - returns to LEAD Texas A&M.

  • Dresner
  • Posted by DFS on June 15, 2009 at 2:15pm EDT
  • I'm glad to see that you are worried about Horowitz's upcoming response.

    No doubt it's not immediate since he always believes in proferring facts, instead of the usual bullshit you regurgitate from people like Arianna.

  • Chancellor McKinney
  • Posted by H , Poli Sci at Ocak Universitesi on June 15, 2009 at 4:15pm EDT
  • Is it not suspicious to anyone that on her evaluation report all of the "x"s and the handwritten, scribbled annotations are by the same hand -- McKinney's? McKinney is playing Cromwell to his own inner Henry VIII. She should work WITH the faculty but not FOR them, he scratches down the margin of a page. Is this stipulation in her contract. A Power-Monger he is, indeed!

  • Hiring of President Murano was not the problem
  • Posted by John S on June 15, 2009 at 4:30pm EDT
  • In Kulper's response (which by the way, seems half self-serving ad as much as it is a posting), he asserts that the problem goes back to having a poor search process in the hiring of President Murano and that perhaps she was not a good match for the position. He writes:

    "What was missing from the job specification for Texas A&M presidential search that culminated with the hire of Dr Murano? I think this would be a very good place for the board of regents to begin their work in finding a new president. . . From the article, which appeared to be well written and balanced, it appears that the real position specification for the presidential job was not the one that president Murano saw when she interviewed for the position. Why not?"

    Here's what was missing from the job description that made President Murano unfit in the eyes of the Chancellor:
    * serve as spineless, yes-person and just execute politically-motivated and nepotistic decisions by the Chancellor and Board of Regents
    * ignore and demonstrate disdain for faculty input and concerns since faculty should simply obey orders from the Chancellor, after all faculty work "for" the chancellor and board, not for students, the state, or the pursuit of knowledge

    The problems at Texas A&M are not the result of failure to construct the right job description for the president. The problems point straight to the Chancellor. Students, faculty, and alumni of Texas A&M as well as citizens of Texas ought to demand his resignation!

  • VPR; Research Foundation
  • Posted by Window with a View at Texas A&M University on June 18, 2009 at 10:30am EDT
  • In my humble opinion, each article about this quote in the Chancellor's eval of the President is terrible wrong! It is true that the Chancellor wanted A&M to hire his Bud for that position; however, that quote is in reference to the consolidation of research administrations between the TAMU research foundation, Texas A&M's VPR office and other components of the Texas A&M system! If you want additional proof, you need only look at the mandate given to the Chancellor at the Board meeting where the President's resignation was accepted to begin the process of Phase One of the consolidation of services between TAMU System and TAMU, and listen to what is covered in Phase 2 - consolidation of services by other system components in CS.

    Follow the MONEY! Research Administration and the Indirect Cost monies is the Ball in Play here! Follow the MONEY!