statusquOblinger Resigns (Updated 3:35pm – Easley Fired)

What are we going to do now that we are losing one of the all-time best nicknames SFN has ever originated?

NC State University Chancellor James Oblinger resigned effective immediately. Former UNC Charlotte Chancellor Jim Woodward will take over. This link will take you to a great profile of Woodward from a 2004 article.

It was a typical mission for Woodward, an aerospace engineer and MBA who mingles academics with big business and backroom finagling. The man Broad calls “the best manager in the system” recently announced that he will retire next year at 65. Major growth has marked his 15-year tenure–the longest of any chancellor in the system. Enrollment is up nearly 50%, the $84.5 million endowment is six times what it was, there are 12 doctoral programs where there were none, and there are nine new buildings, with another nine under way. The school’s research has spawned 24 companies.

Despite what he sees as his greatest accomplishment–hoisting the school into the ranks of Ph.D.-granting research universities–others laud his prowess as a diplomat, working effectively within the 16-campus UNC system, ever mindful of the concentric circles of statewide politics surrounding it, while at the same time cementing the school’s ties with Charlotte’s business establishment. This feat is akin to climbing a greased pole, and Woodward has demonstrated an uncanny knack for knowing when to press on and when to slide back.

I was kind of hoping that General Hugh Shelton would get the nod for interim; and, I also thought that the recent appointment of fellow Edgecombe County native, Norris Tolson to the Board of Trustees was a step to Shleton’s appointment. Oh well. No biggie. Chancellor Woodward appears to be a fine choice based on what we have gathered to this point.

BJD95 & SFN UPDATE: Here’s an e-mail from Bob Jordan regarding SQ’s resignation:

To the Students, Faculty and Friends of NC State University:

In a few moments, we will be announcing that James Oblinger has chosen to resign as chancellor of NC State. I wanted you to be the first to hear this disappointing news.

Chancellor Oblinger cares deeply for NC State. He has devoted 23 years to our university and his leadership will be greatly missed.

One of things I admire most about Jim Oblinger is that he has always put the university’s interests ahead of his own. He is resigning because he does not want the ongoing controversy surrounding the university’s hiring and employment of Mary Easley to continue detracting from the important work of our faculty and staff. He wants the university to move forward, and that is what we must do.

A copy of the official announcement of the chancellor’s resignation, along with a copy of documents that NC State submitted to the U.S. Attorney’s office today, can be found on the university’s Web site at 9:30 this morning at www.ncsu.edu.

I will continue to keep you informed about these developments and our search for a new chancellor in the coming weeks. If you have questions or comments, you can send them to me at: [email protected].

Bob Jordan, Chair of the NC State Board of Trustees

Yep, this beacon of embarrassment loves and cares about NC State so much that he plans to NOT work for six months at full salary, in the midst of an unprecedented budget crisis. This is also a guy who most certainly does NOT need the money. Selfless. Honorable. Almost saintly.

How can this man resign wanting this money while simultaneously condeming Mary Easley for demanding the money she is legally due because of Oblinger (and Larry Neilsen’s) very own decisions and approvals?

We harken back to many of the comments that we made in this definitive entry on the topic. When you don’t have any genuine convictions and when are not truly driven by a tangible/measurable set of goals of achievement for your institution, then you will inevitably be exposured by gross hypocrisy.

This is what happens to people who do not any true convictions and passively ‘manage’ by avoidance and without driving to reach stretch goals. If the Chancellor and the folks at NC State were actually executing against a well-defined strategy, then all behaviors under that strategy can/could be explained and justified as supporting that strategy. But, when the bulk of your daily behaviors are construed by everyone around you as ‘risk avoidance’ and wanting to ‘do as little as possible to upset the status quo’, then you cannot truly strive for excellence or have any guiding barometer for decisions.

[snip]

You see – it is all about being comfortable with the status quo all around you in Raleigh. Why would NC State dare bring in someone from the outside when the Chancellor can live in luxury along side his local buddy? Of course, you can’t really blame Chancellor Oblinger; it is the ‘NC State way’ to ultimately promote a food chemist from campus into the steward and leader of the entire University after the ‘good old boys’ and the tenured faculty had been pushed by someone who actually had drive and ambition to leave the zip code every now and then (Marye Ann Fox).

Does it surprise anyone that Oblinger is one of Bob Kennel’s heroes? Old Kennel sure has has kept a low profile on the internet in recent months. For years we’ve been leactured that any dissent against the leadership at NC State is atrocious since these leaders are so great. Yet, in the middle of all the *#($ hitting the fan the cheerleader has been muted. Maybe the evil internet made all of this happen? To his credit, I only count eight uses of the word ‘I’ in Kennel’s 100+ word letter to the N&O. That is SIGNIFICANTLY below the usual minimum standards of a 1:10 ratio of I:all other words.

Here’s a link to WRAL’s take.

Here’s a link to some developments from the weekend.

Here is a link to one of our definitive posts on this topic.

——————————————————————————————-

UPDATE (3:35): The NC State Board of Trustees has fired Mary Easley.

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95 Responses to statusquOblinger Resigns (Updated 3:35pm – Easley Fired)

  1. RegularExpression 06/08/2009 at 11:11 AM #

    It will be very interesting to see how the next chancellor search is conducted. Most are done in relative secrecy, ostensibly to protect those who may want to be considered but don’t want that fact widely known. I don’t know if we will have that luxury with the events of the past few months.

    Also, if we conduct a “nationwide” search and then hire from within, I’ll be done with this university for a long time.

  2. packalum44 06/08/2009 at 11:15 AM #

    “One of the most popular– and most fallacious– explanations of the very high salaries of corporate executives is ”greed.” But when your salary depends on what other people are willing to pay you, you can be the greediest person on earth and that will not raise your pay by one dime. Any serious explanation of corporate executives’ salaries must be based on the reasons for those salaries being offered, not the reasons why the recipients desire them. Anybody can desire anything but that will not cause others to meet those desires.” – Thomas Sowell

    I for one am a greedy mother f***** because one of my life goals is to amass as much wealth as possible. For some unbeknown reason, I also have given a considerable amount of money to the WPC, V Foundation, and College of Management without expecting anything in return. Calling someone greedy is like calling an 18 year old male horny.

  3. GAWolf 06/08/2009 at 11:19 AM #

    In completely unrelated news: some guy named Jimmy Oblinger just won the NC Powerball.

  4. packalum44 06/08/2009 at 11:22 AM #

    MAF got a 100K pay bump to move to San Diego. Ironically, one of the reasons NC State has trouble finding a good Chancellor is that we’re too cheap! Also hurts we can’t pay professors top money either. Our endowment is peanuts compared to the big boys.

    Hell, Davidson’s endowment is comparable to ours. $506 million versus $535. By comparison, UNC $2.36 billion.

  5. beowolf 06/08/2009 at 11:23 AM #

    SFN, your graphic is perfect. It’s not just that dominoes are finally falling, but also that not all of them that need to fall have yet.

    As for the crap about Mary Easley being a fine fit for the position, that’s utter hogwash. It was political favoritism from the get-go; the bullshit raise made it plainly evident to everyone. It doesn’t take a six-figure salary to attract top names to the state’s largest research university; NC State being the state’s largest research university suffices. She was doing intern-level work. Her teaching is also done by a far more qualified individual for a pittance (adjunct faculty pay). Screw her and the jackasses she rode in on.

  6. GAWolf 06/08/2009 at 11:24 AM #

    I can’t imagine an interim chancellor would undertake the job of replacing an athletic director anyway, but this gives *some* concern if he should (though despite the Tennessee connection and the hire from within that scares many of us, Charlotte has done about as much as we have, if not more, with much less mind you, in the last decade):

    Director of Athletics Judy Rose

    Judy Rose
    Director of Athletics

    Charlotte 49ers Director of Athletics Judy Rose is one of the most successful and well-respected athletics directors in the nation.

    At the time of her appointment, she was just the third female to be put in charge of a Division I program. In 1999-2000, she became the first female to serve on the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee.

    At Charlotte, she has overseen the 49ers’ moves from the Sun Belt Conference to the Metro Conference and ultimately to Conference USA. She has helped raise monies for new athletic facilities, including the Barnhardt Student Activity Center (Halton Arena), the Irwin Belk Track and Field Center (Transamerica Field) and the Wachovia Fieldhouse. She has been instrumental in attracting national sports events to Charlotte, including the 1994 Men’s Final Four, the 1996 women’s Final Four, the AAU Junior Olympics and the 1999 and 2000 NCAA Men’s Soccer College Cup.

    And at the same time, it has been under her leadership that the 49ers athletics program has enjoyed its most success. From the men’s basketball program’s five NCAA bids in the ’90s, to men’s soccer’s five bids, including a trip to the national semifinals. From baseball’s first-ever NCAA bids to the first individual NCAA qualifiers in indoor and outdoor track and field and cross country. From first-ever conference championships in men’s golf to first-ever league titles in women’s soccer. In the decade of the nineties, eight of the school’s 12 programs have either won league titles or been represented in NCAA play, or both. In addition, the ’90s saw the addition of women’s soccer and men’s and women’s track and field to the 49ers athletic roster.

    Along the way, Rose has reaped her share of awards, including the Pegasus Award in 1999, the 1996 Bob Quincy Award by the Charlotte Sportsman Club, and the 1996 Charlotte Regional Sports Commission “Sixth-Man” Award for city-wide athletic achievement. She was selected the 1996 Woman of the Year in Charlotte and was named the 1997 Citizen of the Year by the University Chamber of Commerce. In 1986, she became the first female inducted to the Blacksburg (S.C.) Hall of Fame and she received her 20-Year Service Award from the university in 1995.

    THERE FROM THE START
    Chancellor Jim Woodward appointed Judy Rose director of athletics at UNC Charlotte, July 1, 1990. But Rose’s commitment to Charlotte’s athletic program started well before that.

    Rose joined the program in 1975 as women’s basketball and tennis coach. She was promoted to assistant athletic director in 1981 and was named associate director of athletics in 1985 as chief administrator to then-athletic director and men’s basketball coach Jeff Mullins. In 1990, Mullins was asked by the UNC Board of Governors to relinquish his dual role. Upon that recommendation, Dr. Woodward promoted Mullins to Associate Vice Chancellor/men’s basketball coach and Rose was named director of athletics.

    Rose became the sixth person to head the athletics department and is the second individual at Charlotte who was not also men’s basketball coach to become the department’s CEO. She was the third woman, ever, to spearhead a collegiate program.

    SINCE THEN
    In her first year as director, the program left the Sun Belt Conference and joined the Metro Conference, the athletic department’s D.L. Phillips Athletic Complex, home of the varsity baseball, soccer and softball fields, underwent dramatic change, and plans were finalized for the James H. Barnhardt Student Activity Center and Dale F. Halton Arena.

    The athletic program received a construction facelift as two major projects were unveiled in 1994. By 1996, the 49ers had the $5.7 million Irwin Belk Track & Field Center: a 4,000-seat stadium complex which includes a 400-meter track, Transamerica Field for soccer and 11,000-square feet in field house space. Tennis courts were relocated to make a 15-court venue in the Phillips Complex. The Wachovia Athletic Field House, a 10,000-square foot locker room and office complex for baseball, men’s soccer, women’s soccer and softball was opened, October, 1994.

    The multi-purpose $26 million Barnhardt Student Activity Center and the 9,105-seat Halton Arena hosted its first athletic contest, December 2,1996. Rose attracted the largest gift in Charlotte history in naming the Barnhardt Center and a second substantial gift in naming Halton Arena.

    The Barnhardt Center is the home of the men’s and women’s basketball programs and women’s volleyball. It houses the offices of athletics administration, varsity locker rooms, intramural playing space, a jogging track, two weight rooms, an aerobic center and a magnificent game room and video arcade.

    From July 1993-96, UNC Charlotte athletics received monetary gifts that totalled a record $15 million-plus.

    In 1995, Rose and Dr. Woodward led Charlotte into a newly formed Division I-A league, Conference USA.

    Rose coordinated the 49ers’ effort as host institution of the 1991 and 1993 NCAA Men’s Basketball Southeast Regionals, the 1994 NCAA Men’s Final Four, the 1996 NCAA Women’s Final Four and the 1999 and 2000 NCAA Men’s Soccer College Cup. Charlotte joined Kentucky and Minnesota as the only programs to host both basketball Final Fours.

    EARLY IN HER CAREER
    Rose served as coordinator of women’s athletics from 1976-82. She built the women’s basketball program from scratch as its first head coach from 1975-82. Rose produced heralded success on the AIAW Division II level and built a career record of 93-56, which included three 20-plus-win seasons and two AIAW All-Americans.

    In 1982, the 49ers women’s program left the AIAW for NCAA Division I, and Rose was named assistant athletic director.

    Since her appointment as A.D., Rose added an associate A.D. for compliance, revamped the athletic academic advising program, hired a full-time strength coach and developed a goals and objectives program for the head coaches, administrative staff and student-athletes.

    Early in her administrative career, Rose pioneered the department’s most successful fund raiser, the annual Great Gold Rush Auction. The one-night extravaganza began in 1984 and generated in excess of $1.87 million in its 17-year history, including more than $100,000 each of the last 14 years.

    PERSONAL
    Rose graduated with her B.S. degree in physical education in 1974 from Winthrop, where she lettered in basketball. She received her master’s in physical education from Tennessee in 1975. At UT, Rose was an assistant coach under Pat Head Summit.

    Rose is active on numerous boards and is a popular guest speaker.The NCAA and Conference USA each list her on numerous committees.

    Rose is on the Executive Committee of the Charlotte Regional Sports Commission; serves on the Board of Directors of the N.C. Sports Hall of Fame and with USA Basketball; is on the Board of Managers for University City YMCA; and the N.C. High School Athletic Association Foundation; has been a member of the NCAA Women’s Committee on Committees; the NCAA Division I Task Force for Restructuring; and the NCAA Task Force for Marketing and Licensing; and chaired the NCAA Walter Byers Postgraduate Scholarship Committee. In 1996-97, Rose served as Chair of the C-USA Athletic Directors and in 1998-99 she chaired the league’s Championship Committee.

    A native of Blacksburg, S.C., Rose and husband Ken were married July 19, 1986. They live in Denver, N.C.

  7. beowolf 06/08/2009 at 11:27 AM #

    “MAF got a 100K pay bump to move to San Diego. Ironically, one of the reasons NC State has trouble finding a good Chancellor is that we’re too cheap!”

    That is also horseshit. Cost of living differences in San Diego and Raleigh are such that MAF took essentially the same pay:

    “Still, there is enough reason to doubt whether salary concerns really were the motivating factor driving Fox out of Raleigh and into San Diego. Key to this is purchasing power. Any sensible person considering a move from one area of the country to take a job in another would want to know how the new salary compared with the old. You wouldn’t take the same salary in downtown Manhattan that you have in Raleigh, for example, because everyone knows the cost of living in Manhattan is markedly higher than in Raleigh. A dollar in Manhattan has far lower purchasing power than a dollar in Raleigh.

    “What about San Diego and Raleigh? Well, according to cost of living data for San Diego and Raleigh published in the ACCRA Cost of Living Index, Third Quarter 2003, the cost of living in San Diego is much higher than it is in Raleigh. In fact, it’s so much higher that Marye Anne Fox’s purchasing power under her Raleigh salary ($256,696) is slightly higher than that under her new one in San Diego ($253,623).

    “This suggests that salary concerns might not be the sole motivating factor for Fox’s decision to leave. Other factors would, of course, be known to Fox. It’s certainly worth speculating that Fox’s run-ins with N.C. State administrators and the censure vote she received last year from the Faculty Senate played a role.

  8. Sweet jumper 06/08/2009 at 11:28 AM #

    I find it ironic that V was forced to resign by the “holier than thou” administration over rumors and heresay, and the NCAA found no evidence of activity to warrant probation. Now the corruptness of the administration is coming to light and the trail leads all the way to the governor’s office. The dominoes are falling and it sounds like the FBI is going to find a lot more wrongdoing in academia than the NCAA discovered in hoops 20 years ago.

    Congrats to Matt Hill for the Nicklaus Award as the nation’s top collegiate golfer!

    Emphasis provided by SFN

  9. ryebread 06/08/2009 at 11:29 AM #

    packalum44: Hammer, nail, head. I’ve argued for a long time that if people wanted to really do good for the school (and see athletics pick up), they’d give to the endowment and not to the Wolfpack Club. Ours is pitiful and is the main thing that really kills us across the board (Academic rankings, capital projects, attracting top notch staff, etc.).

    I understand the argument that athletics is a way to get into the pocket books of the well heeled who can really help the endowment. At the same time, the Ivy League schools (and lots of other smaller private schools like Davidson), don’t need or have good athletic programs and have endowments much larger than ours.

    For those in doubt, do a quick comparison of the endowment of NC State versus other BCS schools. I did that once and it was shocking.

  10. beowolf 06/08/2009 at 11:36 AM #

    I also can’t imagine an interim chancellor forcing out an athletic director.

    Sincerely,

    James T. Valvano

  11. bigjohn 06/08/2009 at 11:42 AM #

    I work at another university, and hear the “contract” excuse / reason / justification thing all the time. When you are outed for playing fast and loose with the money, then the contract should be null and void. They skirted University and System policy,and diverted 100’s of Thousands of dollars. Forget the economic times….it’s fraud and mismanagement. Being allowed to resign without being “Fired” is the gift that allows them to go forward and seek another job.

  12. CStanley 06/08/2009 at 11:45 AM #

    It is quite ironic to see all of this after what happened some 20 years ago.

    In the words of the Reverend Wright…”NC State’s chickennnnnnsssssssss…have come home…to ROOST!”

  13. WV Wolf 06/08/2009 at 11:45 AM #

    And he would have gotten away with it too if it weren’t for those meddling kids.

    With all the attention and scrutiny this whole mess has been getting, did Oblinger really think he would get away with bumping up Nielsen’s severance package the day before he resigned and nobody would have a problem with it?

  14. GAWolf 06/08/2009 at 11:47 AM #

    Good point, Beowulf. Good point.

  15. beowolf 06/08/2009 at 11:52 AM #

    The N&O now reports that Gov. Easley was directly involved in the Mary Easley hire. This is very big news:

    New documents show that the Mary Easley job at N.C. State was orchestrated at the highest levels of state government, and included the direct involvement of then-Gov. Mike Easley.

    Email messages show the creation of the job for Mary Easley was orchestrated in April and May of 2005 by the governor and that her job formation also included his wife, Mary; the chancellor at N.C. State, James Oblinger; a key trustee, McQueen Campbell; a senior adviser to Easley who now heads the Golden Leaf Foundation, Dan Gerlach; and an NCSU lobbyist at the time, Andy Willis.

    Until now, officials have all denied any involvement in the hiring other than by former Provost Larry Nielsen, who the records show was also involved in creating the position that gave Mary Easley an $80,000, three-year contract to oversee a speakers series and help teach a class.

  16. primacyone 06/08/2009 at 11:52 AM #
  17. GAWolf 06/08/2009 at 12:14 PM #

    I gained some insight this weekend from a staple individual in NC politics for many, many, many years on other issues that are the logical next step for this “probe” into the former governor. It had nothing to do with the news that broke today, though we discussed this too. I did not know this was how today would evolve, but when I hinted that maybe Easley shouldn’t resign as soon as those in charge at NC State, he simply said: “Oh, Easley should resign.”

    The other insight was about a completely separate issue involving the governor’s influence on other positions in other arenas of government around the State. Rest assured… this is the tip of the iceberg. What we discussed has been slightly eluded to on blogs but has yet to hit the mainstream media. However, with the N&O’s target firmly on the former Governor’s back it will all come out in good time. As you can see, he was too conspicuous with the arms of his influence purposefully stretched far and wide.

  18. packalum44 06/08/2009 at 12:16 PM #

    Beowolf: I know there are many factors why MAF left but you missed the point. The point is we don’t pay enough to attract the best talent at not only the Chancellor position but all faculty. Not to mention the Chancellor’s mansion is second tier to other similar schools. I can also tell you the cost of living comparison doesn’t take into account retirement or raises. If the school matches her 401K contributions I can guarantee she’s saving alot more for retirement making 100K more not to mention any raises on a 100K difference in salary is substantial.

    Example of 5% raise on 250,000 compared to 350,000:
    $262,500
    $367,500
    That 100,000 difference just became a 105,000 difference in 1 year.

    Year 2:
    $275625
    $385,875
    Now we’re looking at a $110,000 difference.

    Similarly, her 401K is rising disproportionately. Bottom line, if you look at cost of living in a vacuum, you can argue its the same but I would disagree as these cost of living comparisons are not all encompassing or perfect by any means. 100k is a 100K.

    Ryebread: My hope is that Goodnight will leave the majority of his fortune to NC State when he leaves, else Uncle Sam will happily gobble up half of it. His wealth could single-handedly bump NC State into an elite status. He’s the 35th richest man in America and worth around 10 billion (not liquid, tied up in SAS) based on estimations by Forbes. He could cash out by selling the largest private software company in the world to the likes of Microsoft or Oracle in what would be a blockbuster deal on Wall Street.

    Columbia: $7.1 billion
    Cornell: $5.4
    Emory: $5.4 billion
    MIT: $10billion
    Princeton: $16 billion
    University Michigan: $7.5 billion
    Notre Dame: $6.2
    USoCal: $3.6
    Brown: $2.7 billion
    UVA: $4.5 billion
    Harvard: $25 billion

    According to wikipedia, there are 77 schools with over a billion.

  19. old13 06/08/2009 at 12:17 PM #

    Seems to me that the governor should take action to investigate the entire UNC system/BOG as it would seem that the BOG should have had some oversight function that would have picked up on these events much earlier.

  20. GAWolf 06/08/2009 at 12:30 PM #

    Erskine Bowles is the head cheese. He’s done little but suck on the government “teet” for many, many years. Read his bio on wikipedia (I realize this is possible to not be necessarily 100% accurate):

    Since 2005

    On October 3, 2005, Bowles was elected by the University of North Carolina’s Board of Governors to succeed Molly Corbett Broad as President of the system, even though some suggest that the Board of Governors broke the law in not holding public hearings in the hiring process.[1] One of his most significant appointments thus far has been that of Holden Thorp as the tenth chancellor of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Bowles also spoke at the campus memorial service in memory of slain student body president Eve Carson.

    Bowles is also a member of the board of directors of General Motors, Morgan Stanley, and North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company and serves on the North Carolina Advisory Board of DonorsChoose.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erskine_Bowles

  21. packalum44 06/08/2009 at 12:32 PM #

    ^ That would be a mistake. Chances are she’s as crooked as any of them. Sounds like the UNC System needs to be reformed. There are huge gaps in their internal controls in the form of management override.

    Mary probably should have resigned and done so as quickly and quietly as possible. The more this unfolds it seems the dominoes in this case stretch far and wide indeed and are not limited to NC State or the Easleys.

  22. Noah 06/08/2009 at 12:35 PM #

    That is also horseshit. Cost of living differences in San Diego and Raleigh are such that MAF took essentially the same pay:

    Are you forgetting the free house she gets in La Jolla?

  23. GAWolf 06/08/2009 at 12:36 PM #

    Oh the irony….. NC’s Sunshine Laws broken by UNC Board in selecting Bowles who supported a bill to give exemptions to University compliance with Public Record Laws.

    http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0WMX/is_25_22/ai_n16372347/

  24. 61Packer 06/08/2009 at 12:55 PM #

    So the Big O will still be paid while not working, just like Nielsen, and basically just like Mrs. Mike Easley.

    What recession? OINK OINK!!!!!!!!!!!!

    SFN: Hell, Lee Fowler has been getting paid to not work for almost a decade! Everybody else just got jealous.

  25. StateFans 06/08/2009 at 12:58 PM #

    I don’t think that our small endowment is a very relevant data point since statusquOblinger has had five or six plus years to work on growing it. IIRC, Marye Ann Fox was making pretty good headway on growing the endowment as well as our academic standing in many fields.

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