Weber State University president stepping down after 5 years in Ogden, says he’s being considered for out-of-state jobs - news latest update today

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Weber State University president stepping down after 5 years in Ogden, says he’s being considered for out-of-state jobs

The shuffle of Utah’s university presidents continued Thursday with the announcement that Weber State University’s Charles Wight will step down in June.

Wight, known as “Chuck” on the Ogden campus, disclosed his plans to members of the school’s Faculty Senate. He told faculty members that he is currently being considered for presidential positions at multiple schools across the country.

“He wanted to let our campus community know before they learned it from any other source,” WSU spokeswoman Allison Hess said.

Wight is third president of a public Utah university to step down in the past year, following similar announcements by University of Utah President David Pershing in May and Utah Valley University President Matthew Holland in November.

The Utah Board of Regents is expected to vote on a replacement for Pershing on Thursday evening, while a search continues for the next president of UVU.

Wight was named president of Weber State University in January 2013. Prior to that, he worked as associate vice president and dean of the graduate school at the University of Utah.

In a letter to Weber State’s campus community, Wight called the university a “special, even magical, place” and praised its academic mission.

“That mission is bigger than any one of us, but Weber State owes its success to each of you,” Wight wrote. “Regardless of who leads this institution, I know you will continue to make Weber State great, great, great.”

Hess said she did not yet know what schools are considering Wight for president positions, but that Wight believes his candidacy was soon to be made public.

She said his plans were not known to the school’s administrators until his Thursday announcement.

“It’s no surprise that at the end of five years a president would being looking around for other opportunities,” she said.

Melanie Heath, spokeswoman for the Utah System of Higher Education, said it’s unlikely that the selection of a new president will be completed prior to Wight’s departure in June.

“We anticipate there will be an interim [president],” Heath said, “They should be named this spring.”

Interim presidents are typically selected from among a school’s existing administrative team. Nolan Karras, chairman of Weber’s Board of Trustees, said he is confident in the university’s ability to transition between leaders as Wight was effective at empowering and delegating authority to his vice presidents.

“There’s two or three people there that I think could be the interim,” Karras said. “He has a very strong team.”

Like Hess, Karras said he did not know what schools were looking at hiring Wight.

An announcement of Wight’s candidacy at another university could have made things uncomfortable at Weber, Karras said, and Wight was wise to give advance notice of his plans to the campus community.

“He must be pretty confident that he’s going to land somewhere else,” Karras said. “But I really appreciate his approach.”

In a written statement, Board of Regents chairman Dan Campbell thanked Wight for his work as president.

”Under his leadership, the university has completed a comprehensive fundraising campaign which surpassed $125 million, broke ground on several new buildings, including the Tracy Hall Science Center, and has elevated key priorities in order to keep Weber affordable,” he said. “We wish him success as he starts this new chapter.”



from The Salt Lake Tribune http://ift.tt/2mP6IKJ

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