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UNL Chancellor Rodney Bennett Resigning Next Week

Alum-Ni

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Rodney Bennett will step down as chancellor of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln next week (Jan. 12), he said in an email to the campus community on Monday.

Bennett, 59, who previously led the University of Southern Mississippi for a decade before he was named UNL's 21st chancellor by former NU President Ted Carter in 2023, will depart UNL after roughly two-and-a-half years.

NU President Jeff Gold said Katherine Ankerson, who retired as UNL's chief academic officer at the end of 2024, would return to serve as interim chancellor.

Monday's announcement follows months of speculation about Bennett's future. Last September, to help close a $27.5 million budget deficit, Bennett proposed eliminating six academic programs and merging four others at the state's flagship university. The plan was met with widespread criticism from faculty, students and alumni, who said the rationale guiding the proposed cuts was based on faulty data and used a flawed process that violated university policies.

By November, the blowback reached its peak when the UNL Faculty Senate passed a resolution of no confidence in Bennett's leadership in a lopsided 60-14 vote.

The overwhelming vote was the first no-confidence resolution passed in UNL's history.

The NU Board of Regents later approved much of Bennett's plan to eliminate four academic programs -- Earth and Atmospheric Sciences; Education Administration; Statistics; and Textiles, Merchandising and Fashion Design.

But the board never brought Bennett's contract back for a renewal as the budget-cutting process oved forward.

The chancellor was given a three-year contract with an annual base salary of $720,000 along with other perks and benefits awarded to top NU administrators when he was hired in May 2023.

Bennett's departure also comes weeks after the university's governing board authorized Gold to finalize a plan of joint accreditation between UNL and the University of Nebraska Medical Center. The move places the University of Nebraska on a more equal footing with its Big Ten Conference peers, as well as with other members of the prestigious Association of American Universities, regents and administrators said.
 
  • Shocked!!
Reactions: Toe
What does this mean for Nebraska?

Seems he was quite unpopular with the faculty, as one typiclally is when forced to make major cuts. So I am not sure if that means he was doing a bad job or not.
 
What does this mean for Nebraska?

Seems he was quite unpopular with the faculty, as one typiclally is when forced to make major cuts. So I am not sure if that means he was doing a bad job or not.
Good observation. And frankly I have no idea, except Gold thought he was doing a good job.
 
What does this mean for Nebraska?

Seems he was quite unpopular with the faculty, as one typiclally is when forced to make major cuts. So I am not sure if that means he was doing a bad job or not.
Even before the cuts there were murmurs of his unpopularity almost faculty and staff

I’m not sure how accurate this is but I heard he hired/spent more on admins than any other chancellor. Essentially making his own job easier. Which I don’t necessarily think is wrong but then when it came to cuts he refused to eliminate those positions and get rid of several programs that were successful and somewhat popular.
 
Someone here had the goods on this guy a while back. Like he was the designated fall guy to make some unpopular decisions and take the heat for them with the knowledge that he'd be taken care of, but then have to be out of here.

Can't remember who that was.
 
Someone here had the goods on this guy a while back. Like he was the designated fall guy to make some unpopular decisions and take the heat for them with the knowledge that he'd be taken care of, but then have to be out of here.

Can't remember who that was.
It was @nja13 :

 
It was @nja13 :

I'm willing to be unpopular for $700,000 a year. Heck, I'd even do it for $650,000 to help the Huskers.
 
unimpressed morgan freeman GIF
 
What does this mean for Nebraska?

It was @nja13 :

Interesting, if that's the word for it, that I answered my own question almost two years ago.
Pay more attention, @nja13
 
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