logo
Does University of Florida have a permanent ‘interim' leadership problem?

Does University of Florida have a permanent ‘interim' leadership problem?

Miami Herald08-07-2025
Last August, the University of Florida's then-Faculty Senate Chair Sarah Lynne was hoping the school would have found permanent replacements for several of its temporary leadership appointments by the end of the academic year.
At her final meeting as chair on May 1, she offered a stark update to the faculty senators: 'Not a lot has happened in the last nine months.'
'I'd like to see a little bit less 'interim' in some of these titles,' she added. 'But we'll see how that goes.'
For several years, Florida's flagship university has faced top-level turbulence — from Ben Sasse's short and controversial presidency, to a brief return of longtime leader Kent Fuchs, and most recently, a failed bid to appoint Santa J. Ono, the former president of the University of Michigan. That volatility has rippled through the institution, affecting leadership at every level.
Sasse's 17-month tenure ended last July, leaving five of UF's 16 colleges without permanent deans — including four of its most prominent academic units: the College of Medicine, Herbert Wertheim College of Engineering, Levin College of Law, and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
UF's top academic officer is also there temporarily, with no clear succession plan for interim Provost Joe Glover. Four other high-level posts — including chief financial officer and general counsel — are held by interim appointees. And the director of UF's much-ballyhooed, GOP-backed Hamilton School for Classical and Civic Education is soon departing for the University of Texas at Austin.
Holding out for a permanent president
UF had pinned its hopes on Ono to stabilize its leadership crisis, offering him a contract with directives to hire academic leaders 'firmly aligned' with Florida's higher education agenda. But the State University System's Board of Governors rejected Ono's nomination last month in a 10-6 vote, citing his past support for diversity, equity, and inclusion programs.
More than a month later, UF has yet to announce a plan to replace interim President Fuchs, whose contract ends July 31. A university spokesperson declined to comment on the succession plan or the status of dean searches.
Days before Ono emerged as the sole finalist of UF's presidential search on May 4, Fuchs paused all dean selections until his successor was in office and scrapped the liberal-arts dean search amid conservative backlash to the final four candidates — even as the school was on the brink of making a final hire.
At the time, Fuchs said he froze hiring for positions including the liberal-arts dean to avoid drawing political scrutiny upon the presidential search.
'It would have been a mistake — an absolute mistake — for us to make a decision and to announce it and let the consequences flow,' Fuchs said at the May 1 Faculty Senate meeting. 'Letting things calm down, letting us then evaluate and specifically the next president — who, again, I'm absolutely convinced will have exactly the right set of values — is the right thing.'
The canceled liberal-arts dean search cost UF tens of thousands. Public records obtained by the Miami Herald in May show UF paid $29,208 to WittKieffer, the headhunting firm hired for the process, as part of a $146,300 contract. UF has not responded to requests for records that would show how much it paid SP&A Executive Search, the boutique firm that helped recruit Ono. SP&A earned nearly $293,000 for the search that brought in Sasse.
The leadership freeze has disrupted multiple colleges. The College of the Arts canceled its dean search without explanation, according to a June 27 memo from interim Dean Jennifer Setlow, who plans to stay another year. The status of the College of Engineering's dean search is unclear, though candidates were still scheduled to visit campus in May, according to the interim provost's remarks at that month's Faculty Senate meeting.
Meanwhile, interim deans are cycling out. The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is now on its second interim dean in a year, with Kevin Ingersent taking over from Mary Watt on Monday.
Engineering Dean Forrest Masters, who's held the interim role since 2023, is leaving this month to become dean at Oregon State University. Warren Dixon, chair of the mechanical and aerospace engineering department, will step in as interim dean on July 11.
Progress despite setbacks
UF's leadership churn has been so persistent that Fuchs has floated the idea of removing the 'interim' title altogether from some positions, according to Faculty Senate minutes from March.
The interim label often signals temporary stewardship, which can undercut authority and morale. Such leaders must juggle administrative duties with academic work — usually for significantly less pay than permanent appointees.
Melissa Johnson, interim director of the UF Honors Program for nearly three years, earns less than half of her predecessor's salary. Yet, students and faculty now view her as the program's de-facto director, she said in an interview.
Though her 'interim' title persists, Johnson takes pride in tangible progress — including a new strategic plan for the program.
'In a lot of cases, interim leaders are really seen as placeholders just kind of maintaining the status quo,' she said. 'That has never been anything I've been comfortable with.'
Other interim leaders are also pushing forward. Johnson pointed to the Levin College of Law, where bar passage rates rose by more than 10 percentage points last year under Merritt McAlister, who's served as interim dean since June 2023.
Still, UF's stop-start approach to leadership takes its toll. Johnson was a finalist for the permanent honors director position in 2023, but Sasse quietly canceled the search. Two years later, it hasn't resumed.
'There's definitely a sense of uncertainty after several years of high level leadership changes and competing priorities,' Johnson said. 'But there's also this sense of restlessness as we wait for more permanent leadership. We need that overarching vision to set UF in forward motion again. It's exciting to think about getting that spark back across campus.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Texas Rep. Jasmine Crockett considering running for different congressional district amid redistricting battle
Texas Rep. Jasmine Crockett considering running for different congressional district amid redistricting battle

CBS News

time5 hours ago

  • CBS News

Texas Rep. Jasmine Crockett considering running for different congressional district amid redistricting battle

The newly drawn and hotly contested congressional maps in Texas may prompt Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett, D-Dallas, to run in a neighboring district, instead of the one she currently represents. This comes as Texas House Democrats have made national news by breaking quorum for a second week to prevent the chamber from passing the new maps that are designed to give the GOP five new majority seats. In an interview for Eye On Politics on Wednesday, Crockett accused Republicans of intentionally drawing her home out of her district, District 30, under the newly proposed maps. Due to that, she said she is considering running in the newly drawn 33rd Congressional District, where her home will be if the new maps are approved by Texas Republicans. "I'm debating about where I will run where they put me, which is where I live, in 33," said Crockett. Crockett has served in the 30th Congressional seat since January 2023, and her district is mostly in Dallas County, but also has some constituents in Tarrant County. While the boundaries of her district would change, it's still considered a Democratic majority seat and will have a majority of Black Americans. The current 33rd Congressional District is served by Representative Marc Veasey, D-Fort Worth, and is in both Tarrant and Dallas counties. Under the proposed new map, the 33rd District would only be in Dallas County and include Congresswoman Crockett's home. Congressman Veasey lives in Tarrant County, and he would not live in this district if it were approved. This will become a Hispanic-majority district and will remain a majority seat for Democrats. The 32nd Congressional District, also in North Texas, would undergo major changes. Congresswoman Julie Johnson, D-Farmers Branch, represents the district. Under the newly drawn map, she will not live in the district. If approved, it will also become a Republican majority district because it will stretch out to East Texas. Crockett told CBS News Texas that she does not want to move from her home. Members of Congress are not required to live in their districts — they only have to be residents in the state in which they serve. Crockett said she wants to have a conversation with her current constituents and her Democratic colleagues in Congress about the situation they face. "Does Marc Veasey fit better into 30 now because it does have some Tarrant, or not. And does Julie just kind of fit better running in 33 than me? Is my district going to be OK with me running and being on this fixed government income, and therefore not buying a home in the newly constructed 30?" Crockett said. "Obviously, I don't have to live there under federal rules, but some people want someone who lives in the district. Obviously, I want to talk to my colleagues and see what kind of makes sense so that at least hopefully two of us have the best shot at going back." Crockett said she believes she still has a strong rapport with her current constituents, most of whom will remain in the 30th District. Last week, Congressman Veasey and Congresswoman Johnson told CBS News Texas that they are focused on fighting back against the Republican-drawn maps first and will then decide what to do about their races. Candidates can begin filing their paperwork with the Secretary of State's office on Nov. 8 and have until Dec. 8 to do so. Crockett said Republicans at the Texas Capitol will eventually approve the new maps once the House can establish quorum, which may happen later this week. Watch Eye On Politics at 7:30 Sunday morning on CBS News Texas on air and streaming Follow Jack on X: @cbs11jack

Scoop: Schumer courts Peltola for Alaska Senate race
Scoop: Schumer courts Peltola for Alaska Senate race

Axios

time6 hours ago

  • Axios

Scoop: Schumer courts Peltola for Alaska Senate race

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer is quietly pressing former Rep. Mary Peltola (D) to plunge into the Alaska Senate race. Why it matters: Schumer (D-N.Y.) is trying to recruit his way out of a bad map. Landing Peltola would give him a third statewide winner to cause problems for Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.). Recapturing the majority is still an uphill battle for Democrats, but when they squint — and make some favorable assumptions about tariffs and the unpopularity of the "one big, beautiful bill" — they are starting to see a path back to 51 seats. The focus of Schumer's current charm offensive is Peltola, the last Democrat to win a statewide election in Alaska, and one of just two Democrats to do so this century. Democrats want to convince her to challenge Sen. Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska), who is up for reelection next year. Zoom out: In New Hampshire and Georgia, the state's popular GOP governors both took passes on the Senate, disappointing many in the party. Schumer got who he wanted in Ohio with former Sen. Sherrod Brown (D), and in North Carolina with former Gov. Roy Cooper (D). The more states Schumer puts in play, the more resources he will drain from national Republicans, who will have to spend heavily to retain their incumbents. Zoom in: Democrats have been laying the foundation for a challenge of Sullivan. A group associated with a Schumer-linked PAC earlier this year spent more than $600,000 on digital ads bashing Sullivan. The spots focused on the GOP's tax and spending cut package. Alaska's unique ranked-choice voting helped Peltola win a special election in 2022. She received 40 percent of the first round votes, while her two GOP candidates divided the remaining 60 percent. But after former GOP vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin was eliminated for coming in third place, more of her supporters listed Peltola as their second choice, giving her a majority victory with 51.5 percent. In 2024, House Republicans worked to ensure that only their top vote winner in the primary — who ended up being Rep. Nick Begich — would stay in the race. Begich beat Peltola on the second ballot. What they're saying:"Chuck Schumer's best options in red state Senate races are losers like Mary Peltola," said the NRSC's Nick Puglia. "She would be a standout candidate, which is probably why Sullivan is going around town griping about how nervous he is about next year," said the Senate Majority PAC's Lauren French. The bottom line: Similar to the dynamic in Ohio, there are some Alaska Democrats who would prefer Peltola run for governor.

Scoop: Chuck's Alaska target
Scoop: Chuck's Alaska target

Axios

time6 hours ago

  • Axios

Scoop: Chuck's Alaska target

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer is quietly pressing former Rep. Mary Peltola (D) to plunge into the Alaska Senate race. Why it matters: Schumer is trying to recruit his way out of a bad map. Landing Peltola would give him a third statewide winner to cause problems for Senate Majority Leader John Thune. Recapturing the majority is still an uphill battle for Democrats, but when they squint — and make some favorable assumptions about tariffs and the unpopularity of the "one big beautiful bill" — they are starting to see a path back to 51 seats. The focus of Schumer's current charm offensive is Peltola, the last Democrat to win a statewide election in Alaska, and one of just two Democrats to do so this century. Democrats want to convince her to challenge Sen. Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska), who is up for reelection next year. Zoom out: In New Hampshire and Georgia, the state's popular GOP governors both took passes on the Senate, disappointing many in the party. Schumer got who he wanted in Ohio with former Sen. Sherrod Brown (D), and in North Carolina with former Gov. Roy Cooper (D). The more states Schumer puts in play, the more resources he will drain from national Republicans, who will have to spend heavily to retain their incumbents. Zoom in: Democrats have been laying the foundation for a challenge of Sullivan. A group associated with a Schumer-linked PAC earlier this year spent more than $600,000 on digital ads bashing Sullivan. The spots focused on the GOP's tax and spending cut package. Alaska's unique ranked-choice voting helped Peltola win a special election in 2022. She received 40 percent of the first round votes, while her two GOP candidates divided the remaining 60 percent. But after former GOP vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin was eliminated for coming in third place, more of her supporters listed Peltola as their second choice, giving her a majority victory with 51.5 percent. In 2024, House Republicans worked to ensure that only their top vote winner in the primary — who ended up being Rep. Nick Begich — would stay in the race. Begich beat Peltola on the second ballot. Between the lines: Similar to the dynamic in Ohio, there are some Alaska Democrats who would prefer Peltola run for governor.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store